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Meaningful Nature Experience 0

Catch of the day

By eyes4earth @eyes4earth · On March 17, 2013

Mardi shares her wonderful experience about the one that didn’t get away…but not without some precious assistance from above:

“It was an experience I had with a Brahminy Kite.” *

“I had a sense that the Brahminy Kite was a bit of, ah, my totem, if you like, and whenever I saw one it was always like my heart would always soar and I would feel like I was up there with it, y’know. And a lot of my paintings used to always be done with that perspective, of looking down from great height and looking down at landscape from up high. So I have lots of different stories about them [Brahminy Kites].”

“But one particular one was around the time we first moved to [this area]. I had been really busy all day, and all day I had been thinking, ‘Oh God, I really l feel like some fish, I really feel like some fish today’ but I had just had one of those days when I’d been busy busy busy. And finally, I went into [local town], which is near where I live and I went to the fish shop and they were just closing…”

“Sorry, we have closed the day.”
“Oh bugger – no fish.”

“So then I went to the [local] Co-op, by this time it was probably more like 4[pm] in the afternoon… I thought, ‘Oh fish, y’know, hangin’ out for it.’ But I went to the Co-op, and they had run out!… You know, I just couldn’t believe it. I thought, ‘This is really weird’. But I thought, ‘Oh well, I’ll survive.’ ”

“But on the way home I decided to go and have a swim. And it was one of those magic days where the beach was just [perfect] – we had a westerly [wind] and it was quite flat seas, but there had been these great dips in the ocean bed, so it was like these beautiful big baths were there…”

“And I had been swimming around in that and floating and looking up to the sky and then I saw the Brahminy Kite and I went, ‘Aaah hi! Hello up there!’ And was just mentally beaming out to him or her. And then, much to my amazement, I just saw it do this incredible dive – it dived into the ocean and came up holding this huge fish in both talons and I’m going, ‘Oh my God, oh my God what a moment!’ You know, to witness that. And then I thought, ‘Well, that was amazing – that was such a lovely moment.’ …But as he pulled it up from the water and was starting to fly away…he dropped it and I went, ‘Oooaww no.’ ”

Anyway, I got out of the water and was drying myself and I turned back and I saw what I thought was silver foil or something floating in the water and I thought, ‘Oh God, I’ve got to go and get that out.’ So I waded back into the water…toward this flickering light thing… [because] I couldn’t work out what it was. And I couldn’t believe it but it was the fish floating over this sandbar and into the pool where I was! [laughs] So I picked the fish up and I had to carry it in both arms and it was as big as a watermelon – it was huge!

And that night we had fish and I fed six people! [laughs] …It was amazing…

Brahminy Kite

That was my sense of connection with the Brahminy Kite and I guess with God and consciousness and all that. Y’know, here I was thinking, ‘Oh God, I really want fish, I really feel like I need fish today.’ And, yeah, I got the freshest fish ever. It was just wonderful.

And then whenever I used to go anywhere [travelling up the Australian coast]… and every time I went into a beach town there would be a Brahminy Kite there and it was like my sign that this was the right place to stop for a while – I had a really nice thing with Brahminy Kites.

References:

*Brahminy Kite: Haliastur Indus. A large distinctive white and chestnut-coloured bird of prey mainly found along the northern half of Australia’s coastline.
BirdsMammalsMarineMNEOceania
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… some will cast their gaze to the heavens to a …
some
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their gaze
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species: bluntnose klipfish
“One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.”
	- William Shakespeare 

This quote by Shakespeare speaks to the interconnectedness of all living beings through their shared natural essence. It suggests that a felt experience of ‘nature’ can transcend perceived cultural, social, and species boundaries. Nature, in its raw beauty and presence has, when given a particular kind of attention, the power to evoke universal emotions and stir a sense of commonality among beings. It offers a potent reminder of the fundamental bond that connects all living creatures. Irrespective of our individual backgrounds, ideologies or beliefs, we are all part of the greater tapestry of nature with our pulsing sensing animal bodies.

(So, go on, Mariah, touch it. I never would’ve thought your music would serve a purpose for me!)

Source: adapted from The Socratic Method
An unusual show of flair & bravado compared to mos An unusual show of flair & bravado compared to most octopus I encounter in Keurbooms estuary that are reticent, wary & tucked away . 

#octopus #keurboomsestuary
If you live near the Plettropolis come join us for If you live near the Plettropolis come join us for a  conversation about meaningful nature experiences.

Fellow Frisian descendant and percussionist @jamesvanminnen and I will be yarning about nature connectedness and what’s new in the decade since I completed my deep doctoral dive into the topic. We expect we might cover some tenuous terrain and beat around the bush. 

Details (see link in bio👆🏼):

Thursday 14th March 19h00-20h30 at The Harmony Centre at Kwendalo, Plettenberg Bay
Contribution: suggested R50-R100 (includes tea and refreshments)
RSVP by Wed 13 March: hello@kwendalo.co.za or
044 004 0366

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eyes4earth.org is a portal into meaningful nature experience and connectedness with nature. It draws on scientific research and experiential insight to explore implications for sustainability education and consciousness.
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The PhD research underpinning certain content on eyes4earth.org was completed in early 2014.

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