On Indigenuity: Learning the Lessons of Mother Earth
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On Indigenuity - Daniel R Wildcat
Introduction
Let’s Get Started
Who am I writing this book for? My children and grandchildren, your children and grandchildren—our progeny, seven generations into the future.
Why do I care? For me, not caring is too lonely a space to occupy. Can you occupy that loneliness? I cannot, for I prefer to occupy love for all my relations. It is not easy, but it is easier than hate, meanness, and simply not caring … what exhausting work. Have you noticed how hard on the spirit it is? It’s exhausting—so damaging and dissatisfying to embody such feelings. People in that space always look so tired.
Who is my intended audience? Anyone who cares, anyone who gives a damn.
I suspect there are more of you out there than some cultural commentators would have us believe. While it is an easy pose—even a hip pose in some circles—to not care, dire situations tend to make people care. Albeit sometimes for the wrong reasons, but let’s not go there just yet.
I think we can do better for ourselves, our progeny, and the life systems in which we participate on the planet: what I will refer to as Mother Earth throughout this book—not as an expression of naive anthropomorphizing but instead as a statement of Indigenous Realism. So follow my words and see where they take you.
For Our Children
(A poem for all at Sacred Stone Camp composed nearly three years before the violence directed at the Standing Rock Water Protectors erupted.)
Stand down. Two words I like when directed at those whose hearts are filled with hate.
Stand down. A blessed command when directed at those just following orders
obedient to States both real and imagined.
Stand down. Words of hope that conscience emerges amidst violent chaos.
Stand down. A moment—a space—where the prayers of those sickened by blind obedience to authority are answered.
Sit down. Just rest and think about your children.
Sit down. Leave smothering fear behind.
Sit down. And lift the cloudy veil of hatred.
Sit down. Let us visit and speak not from fear, not from privilege, not from authority but for understanding.
Stand up. For those whose voices are silenced.
Stand up. For those with power like plants, with roots deep in the earth.
Stand up. For those struggling against the systems of oppression that weaken our souls and forbid mirth.
Stand up. With those who fight for justice unmoved by fear and moved by love.
—Eno Etoyoc, October 27, 2013
Let’s Stop Lying
Lying in most instances cannot be justified, especially when it results in harm to others or is selfishly motivated. Our Earth climate-change situation is made worse today by some who knowingly mislead the public with lies, half-truths, and by withholding the truth. Among the liars are corporations who continue to tell you they are green
when they continue to pollute and heat up the planet. Among those spreading half-truths are those who knowingly invoke factual claims without properly contextualizing or placing those facts in our current extreme global situation.¹ And as for those who withhold facts to protect their financial interests at the expense of biodiversity and environmental and ecosystem well-being, all while perpetuating human suffering, most recognize that omission plays a fundamental role in producing logical errors and distrust. Certainly, Exxon’s knowledge of climate change and the role that burning fossil fuels plays suggest that over the course of the last half century, Exxon officials used all three methods of misrepresenting the facts about how their activities have produced it.²
I start this essay with these difficult facts—difficult for what they say about Earth’s current situation—because as difficult as honesty can be at the present moment, I see it as the most important attribute of anything we do today. The distance between those who intentionally misrepresent what they think they know, and those whose error is based on what they honestly think they know, is vast. I want to make it clear that the lying perpetrated now by people who know better
is an important part of the climate crisis and other crises we face, but one only implicitly, not directly, addressed in this essay.
What is addressed in this book are the mistakes made by those who are honestly wrong, who misunderstand—as opposed to those who misrepresent—the world and our human place in it. Therefore, I hope the ideas offered here might cause them to rethink how they see and understand the world. Many of the problems we currently face, I believe, are associated with the dominant modern, overwhelming, Western-influenced worldview that has culminated in the age we now rightly call the Anthropocene, the age of humankind: a worldview that plays a large role in many of the global crises we now face and one not likely to produce any solutions.
As I have argued for more than a decade, we cannot successfully address the physical global climate change facing us until we have a cultural climate change. And here is the good news—there are better, more realistic ways of understanding the world in which we live. There are Peoples on the planet who see and understand the biosphere we live in very differently from those who created global climate change. Indigenous Peoples view the natural world through a lens that sees different features of the world we live in. My hope resides in the belief that a fair amount of humankind’s bad behavior is an artifact of the cultural lens through which most of modern humankind understands the biosphere and our—dare I say—natural role in it.
Therefore, a different worldview, or lens, is in order. What is offered in the following essay is a worldview—an Indigenous worldview, not the Indigenous world, for there is no such thing—different in fundamental respects from the dominant view manifest throughout the modern institutions of government/politics, education, economics, and science. The worldview, the cultural lens, presented in this essay sees and understands that the diversity of Indigenous traditions resides in the nature culture nexus (NCN). A lens that sees a symbiotic nature–culture relationship as opposed to a dichotomous or dualistic tension. A worldview grounded literally and figuratively in the Earth. Think of what follows as an Earth work.
Take the ruminations, indignations, and imagination shared here and the honesty with which they are offered as an invitation to critique, disagree, correct, and improve because, after all, hasn’t everyone found themselves honestly wrong many times in their life?
As with most of what I write, this is more a reporting from my experiences and the knowledge and wisdom shared with me by many persons—human and different-than-human persons. For as I have often repeated, I am rich in relatives. In fact, humanity in general has much to learn and relearn from the ecological communities in which we participate. Despite nagging fear and anxiety that rises when I get caught up in the room-full-of-mirrors world much of humankind inhabits, both subside when I step out-of-doors.
Indigenous ingenuity—Indigenuity—resides in a reengagement with, a mindfulness of, the larger-than-human community many people have forgotten, taken for granted, or romanticized. Indigenuity is an affirmation and realization that practical knowledges emerge when we take our membership in the ecological and kinship community in which we live. The deadly misstep in thinking that leads humans to think they are morally and cognitively superior to our animal and plant kin is a foreign idea to the Indigenous Peoples I have had the pleasure to meet and work with during the past four decades. Yes, we are indeed different, and it may be that our difference is precisely what requires humankind to be mindful of our relationships with the relatives, not resources, with whom we share the planet.
Given the reality of the Anthropocene, it makes sense that some of us humans need to make changes. It is not too late to address the most devastating consequences of our selfish and extractive behavior, and exercises of Indigenuity can play a large role in the remediative, restorative, and life-system enhancement work we need to accomplish, with the help of the eco-kinship communities where we live and that I hope may someday thrive, full of life.
I.
Beauty Surrounds Us
Beauty surrounds us, much ugliness, too.
Our wise ones tell us this
Both are real
But only one is true
The question is which one defines you?
There are many paths