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By Bob Makransky
Plants’ experience of being in the world is very different from the
experience of us animals. Because plants cannot move about, they exist in a
state of profound acceptance and peace within themselves. Emotions such as fear,
hate, jealousy, possessiveness, etc. are wholly unknown to plants and would
serve no useful purpose. On the other hand, plants are capable of experiencing a
wide range of higher emotions the like of which we animals could scarcely
conceive.
At the same time, there are feelings which plants share with us animals, such as
love, pain, joy, thirst, etc. It is the feelings we share with plants which
provide the basis of our ability to communicate with them.
Feeling with plants is not so different from feeling with people. For
example, when we are about to have sex with someone who really turns us on, we
feel a palpable surge of sexual energy connecting us to that person. Similarly,
when we walk into a room to face someone who is madder than hell at us, we feel
connected to that person by a palpable wave of anger and fear. When a baby
smiles at us, we feel a rush of joy that has us automatically smile back.
However, most of our interactions with other people do not have this feeling of
connectedness and emotional immediacy. Most of the time we don’t even look the
people we are addressing in the eye, let alone feel with them. Because of our
social training, we tend to regard sharing feelings with other people as
threatening. We are taught to close up and defend ourselves, and to keep our
interactions as sterile and devoid of feeling as possible.
In order to communicate with plants (or people), you have to be able to
regard them as your equals. If you are afraid (ashamed) to talk with homeless
people, beggars, crazy people, etc. then you’ll also find it difficult to talk
with plants. However, it’s actually easier to communicate with plants than it
is to communicate with people because plants don’t have defenses and
self-importance agendas in place which engage our own defenses and
self-importance agendas. To feel with plants (or people) doesn’t mean to gush
all over them; all it means is to recognize them as beings whose feelings are as
important to them as your feelings are to you.
When first learning to communicate with plants, it helps to be in contact
with the same individual plants on a daily basis. Ideally you should go out,
preferably alone, to the same tree or meadow for at least a few minutes every
day. If you can’t do this, cultivating garden or house plants will work just
as well, although it’s easiest to communicate with large trees. This is
because from a feeling (light fiber) point of view, humans and trees are very
much alike – the light fiber (auric glow) configurations of both humans and
trees are quite similar, whereas that of insects, for example, is very different
from either. It is easier for humans and trees to communicate with each other
than it is for either to communicate with insects.
Now even the least psychic person, going up to a large tree, should be able
to pick up something of the personality (mood) of that tree. How does the tree
make you feel – happy, sad, loving, jolly, heavy? Can you pick up its sex:
sense a male or female presence – or its age: young and vigorous or old and
mellow?
This isn’t all that hard to do – you can call upon your senses to
buttress your feelings, as in the exercise of seeing pictures in the clouds,
except that you do it by feeling rather than thinking – by relaxing into the
process rather than controlling it. It’s exactly what a rationalist would term
“anthropomorphism.”
For example, spiky trees (like palmettos and Joshua trees) have a sassy,
masculine energy. Cedar trees tend to be clowns or wise guys. Banana trees are
joyous and loving. Weeping trees really do have a doleful air about them. Tall,
erect trees have proud and regal personalities. Trees that seem to be reaching
longingly for the heavens are reaching longingly for the heavens.
A good time to learn to connect emotionally with trees is when they’re
dying. The next time you see a tree being felled, pause and quiet down your
thoughts and watch it attentively. You should easily be able to feel the tree’s
agony just before it falls, since trees (and all beings) are filled with power
at the moment of their deaths and profoundly affect the beings around them.
Loggers triumphantly yell “Timber!” when a tree falls to cover their sense
of shame and disconnectedness – to block communication with the tree at the
moment of its death.
Another good time to pick up on plants’ feelings is when they are in
motion. Plants are happiest when they are moving – blown by the wind and the
rain. Wave back to them when they wave at you (it’s only polite). Watch how
they dance in the breeze. See how the trees which overhang roads and walkways
cast down blessings on all who pass beneath them. See how the young growing tips
are more alert, vigorous, and naively impetuous than the older and mellower
lower leaves. Be aware of the awareness of plants: when you walk through a wood
or meadow, feel as though you were walking through a crowd of people, all of
whom are watching you.
Some people pick up on the feelings of plants by seeing faces in the bark or
foliage. They impose that thought form (of a face with a giggly, dour, saucy,
etc. expression) over the feeling of the tree, since that’s how most people
are conditioned to interpret feelings – by associating them with facial
expressions.
What we’re tying to get at are feelings, which can be apprehended directly,
without any need for sensory cues. However, the senses can provide a useful
point of reference and serve as a bridge between imagination and pure feeling,
which is how they function in dreams. When you see with your feelings rather
than your mind, your visual attention isn’t focused on any one thing, but
rather everything within your field of vision strikes your attention with equal
impact (vividness), as it does in dreams. To see this way you have to have your
mind quiet, and you have to be in a joyous and abandoned mood. If you’re
bummed out or grumpy, you won’t be able to see what plants are feeling any
more than you’d be able to see a baby smile at you.
Much of our social training entails learning to stifle our senses – to not
see what is right before our eyes, to not listen to what our ears are hearing,
to be offended by smells, discomfited by touch. Cutting off our senses leaves us
feeling apathetic and disconnected from our world. Therefore, if we want to
renew our feeling of connectedness which we had as infants, we have to start
plugging our senses into our feelings again. And because they are so
nonthreatening, feeling with plants is a good place to start.
Not only do different species of plants have different feelings associated
with them, but also there is considerable individual variation in personalities
between different plants of the same species, between different branches on the
same plant, and even between different leaves on the same branch. By lightly
holding a leaf for a moment between your thumb and forefinger, you can feel
which leaves want to be picked for medicine or food purposes and which ones want
to be left alone. The leaves that want to be picked have a high, vibrant feel to
them, whereas leaves that don’t want to be picked feel dead in your hand.
Even if you can’t seem to tune in to the feelings of plants, you can still
telepathically “talk” with them. Plants can talk to you in thoughts, and
these (at first) seem indistinguishable from your own thoughts. That is, it will
seem to you that you are the one who is thinking these thoughts, when in fact it
is the plants which are sending you messages. That’s why it’s important to
have your own mind as quiet as possible – to be in a relaxed mood – if you
expect plants to talk to you; if your own mind is buzzing, there’s no way the
plants can get a word in edgewise. Any thoughts or feelings you have while
sitting under a tree or working with plants are probably messages from the
plants.
So how do you know if you are actually communicating with a plant, and not
just imagining it? The answer is: you don’t. You just go with your intuition
rather than going with your concepts, what you’ve been taught. Instead of
hypnotizing yourself into believing that the world of concepts is reality, you
hypnotize yourself into believing that the world of feelings – of magic – is
reality. The only difference between these two equally valid points of view is
that from one of them plants talk to you, and from the other they don’t.
If you feel self-conscious talking to plants, just remember that what you
have been programmed to call the “real” world is merely a figment of your
imagination also. And if you start calling something else the real world, then
that something else becomes the real world; it becomes as real as this one.
If you’re dubious, just ask the plant over and over, “Is this you, Mr. or
Ms. Plant talking to me, or am I just imagining it?” And if you keep getting
the same answer over and over, “It’s me, the plant! It’s me, the plant!”
– then just assume that it is indeed the plant talking to you, and listen to
what it has to say. You can ask questions and get answers, both questions and
answers coming as though you were holding a conversation in your own mind.
It’s easy to learn to talk with house and garden plants, since these are
particularly eager to discuss matters such as fertilization, watering, shade,
grafting and transplanting techniques, etc. But in addition to such mundane
affairs, plants (particularly large trees) can give you helpful advice on all
sorts of matters. Take them your problems; ask them what they think you should
do. Some of my best friends and most trusted advisors are trees.
Whether you are consciously aware of it or not, you are already communicating
with plants all the time. The soothing, healing, tranquilizing feeling that
comes when you are gardening or are out in nature is in fact your psychic
attunement to the joyous vibrations of the plants around you. To follow this
feeling one step further – to its source – is to put yourself into direct
communication with the plants. It’s as easy as smiling at a baby.
| Disclaimer:
Information presented here is for information and educational purposes only and not
intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any condition or disease nor to be relied upon as a substitute for your own research or independent advice. YOU
SHOULD ALWAYS SPEAK WITH A HEALTH CARE PRACTITIONER OR A SPECIALIST IN THE
SUBJECT MATTER BEFORE TAKING ANY ACTION. No responsibility
is accepted for any errors, omissions, or misleading statements on these pages or any site
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| Source:
Bob Makransky is a systems analyst, programmer, and professional
astrologer. For the past 30 years he has lived on a farm in highland
Guatemala where he is a Mayan priest and is head of the local blueberry
growers association. His website is: http://www.dearbrutus.com.
To subscribe to Bob’s free monthly Astro-Magical e-zine, send an e-mail
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