An excerpt from "The Home Place" by Drew Lanham
Enjoy an excerpt of "The Home Place" by our wonderful guest this week, Drew Lanham.
Listen to the full On Being episode with Drew here: https://onbeing.org/programs/drew-lanham-i-worship-every-bird-that-i-see/
The ornithologist Drew Lanham is lyrical in the languages of science, humans, and birds. He’s a professor of wildlife ecology, a self-described “hunter-conservationist,” and author of the celebrated book The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man’s Love Affair with Nature. His way of seeing and hearing and noticing the present and the history that birds traverse - through our backyards and beyond - is a revelatory way to be present to the world and to life in our time.
TRANSCRIPT: Drew Lanham: "If teaching is preaching, I’ve become a warmer, gentler pastor, more like the clergy at my mother’s church. Maybe it’s appropriate that these years have given me new spiritual release, too. I’ve settled into a comfortable place with the idea of nature and god being the same thing. Evolution, gravity, change, and the dynamic transformation of field into forest move me. A warbler migrating over hundreds of miles of land and ocean to sing in the same tree, once again, is as miraculous to me as any dividing sea. Doing good things for and revering nature are just acts. There is righteousness in conserving things, staving off extinction, and simply admiring the song of a bird. In my moments of confession in front of strangers, talking about my love of something much greater than any one of us, I become a freer me. Each time, I’m reborn.
For all those years of running from anything resembling religion, and all the scientific training that tells me to doubt anything outside of the prescribed confidence limits, I find myself defined these days more by what I cannot see than by what I can. As I wander into the predawn dark of an autumn wood, I feel the presence of things beyond flesh, bone, and blood. My being expands to fit the limitlessness of the wild world. My senses flush to full, and my heartbeat quickens with the knowledge that I am not alone.”
STAY IN TOUCH
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/onbeing
Twitter: https://twitter.com/onbeing
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/onbeing/
Newsletter: https://onbeing.org/newsletter/
OUR PODCASTS
On Being with Krista Tippett: https://onbeing.org/series/podcast/
Poetry Unbound: https://onbeing.org/series/poetry-unbound
This Movie Changed Me: https://onbeing.org/series/this-movie-changed-me
Becoming Wise: https://onbeing.org/series/becoming-wise
Видео An excerpt from "The Home Place" by Drew Lanham канала The On Being Project
Listen to the full On Being episode with Drew here: https://onbeing.org/programs/drew-lanham-i-worship-every-bird-that-i-see/
The ornithologist Drew Lanham is lyrical in the languages of science, humans, and birds. He’s a professor of wildlife ecology, a self-described “hunter-conservationist,” and author of the celebrated book The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man’s Love Affair with Nature. His way of seeing and hearing and noticing the present and the history that birds traverse - through our backyards and beyond - is a revelatory way to be present to the world and to life in our time.
TRANSCRIPT: Drew Lanham: "If teaching is preaching, I’ve become a warmer, gentler pastor, more like the clergy at my mother’s church. Maybe it’s appropriate that these years have given me new spiritual release, too. I’ve settled into a comfortable place with the idea of nature and god being the same thing. Evolution, gravity, change, and the dynamic transformation of field into forest move me. A warbler migrating over hundreds of miles of land and ocean to sing in the same tree, once again, is as miraculous to me as any dividing sea. Doing good things for and revering nature are just acts. There is righteousness in conserving things, staving off extinction, and simply admiring the song of a bird. In my moments of confession in front of strangers, talking about my love of something much greater than any one of us, I become a freer me. Each time, I’m reborn.
For all those years of running from anything resembling religion, and all the scientific training that tells me to doubt anything outside of the prescribed confidence limits, I find myself defined these days more by what I cannot see than by what I can. As I wander into the predawn dark of an autumn wood, I feel the presence of things beyond flesh, bone, and blood. My being expands to fit the limitlessness of the wild world. My senses flush to full, and my heartbeat quickens with the knowledge that I am not alone.”
STAY IN TOUCH
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/onbeing
Twitter: https://twitter.com/onbeing
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/onbeing/
Newsletter: https://onbeing.org/newsletter/
OUR PODCASTS
On Being with Krista Tippett: https://onbeing.org/series/podcast/
Poetry Unbound: https://onbeing.org/series/poetry-unbound
This Movie Changed Me: https://onbeing.org/series/this-movie-changed-me
Becoming Wise: https://onbeing.org/series/becoming-wise
Видео An excerpt from "The Home Place" by Drew Lanham канала The On Being Project
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Jason Reynolds —Imagination and FortitudeArnold Eisen — The Opposite of Good Is IndifferenceSylvia Earle – Her DeepnessChristine Runyan — A Compassionate Body Scan“The Facts of Life” — written and read by Pádraig Ó TuamaResmaa Menakem — 'Notice the Rage; Notice the Silence'“Sanctuary” — written and read by Ada LimónKate Braestrup – Presence in the Wild"What Would Nature Do" with Janine BenyusOur episode with Kerry Washington is out now in all the podcast places.Martin Sheen – Spirituality of ImaginationRuth Wilson Gilmore — “Where life is precious, life is precious.”A New Season of On Being Is ComingFrances Kissling — What Is Good in the Position of the OtherIn the Room with Sari NusseibehPro-Life, Pro-Choice, Pro-Dialogue: The Civil Conversations ProjectKrista Tippett — Taking a Long View of Time, and Becoming "Critical Yeast"Amanda Ripley —Stepping out of our "zombie dance” and into good conflict that is in fact life-givingElizabeth Alexander – Words That ShimmerGreg Boyle – The Calling of Delight Gangs, Service, and KinshipRichard Davidson: Stillness with a Stone