Humans have a huge capacity for kindness, nurturing and forgiveness, but also a proclivity for violence when we feel that our survival is under threat. None of us is a single facet, we are many things simultaneously. So, even in times of destructive conflict when trauma threatens our humanity, nature and cultivation can work to rebalance us. Rebuilding our connections to others; healing our minds and bodies. This is the paradox of War and Gardening.
The Paradox of War and Gardening
The Paradox of War and Gardening
The Paradox of War and Gardening
Humans have a huge capacity for kindness, nurturing and forgiveness, but also a proclivity for violence when we feel that our survival is under threat. None of us is a single facet, we are many things simultaneously. So, even in times of destructive conflict when trauma threatens our humanity, nature and cultivation can work to rebalance us. Rebuilding our connections to others; healing our minds and bodies. This is the paradox of War and Gardening.