Walk Through This World With Me
I think of two landscapes---one outside the self, the other within.
The external landscape is the one we see---not only the line and color of the land and its shading at different times of the day, but also its plants and animals in season, its weather, its geology---If you walk up, say, a dry arroyo in the Sonoran Desert you will feel a mounding and rolling of sand and silt beneath your foot that is distinctive. You will anticipate the crumbling of the sedimentary earth in the arroyo bank as your hand reaches out, and in that tangible evidence you will sense the history of water in the region. Perhaps a black-throated sparrow lands in a paloverde bush...the smell of the creosote bush...all elements of the land, and what I mean by the landscape.
The second landscape I think of is an interior one, a kind of projection within a person of a part of the exterior landscape. Relationships in the exterior landscape include those that are named and discernible, such as the nitrogen cycle, or a vertical sequence of Ordovician limestone, and others that are uncodified or ineffable, such as winter light falling on a particular kind of granite, or the effect of humidity on the frequency of a blackpoll warbler’s burst of song...the shape and character of these relationships in a person’s thinking, I believe, are deeply influenced by where on this earth one goes, what one touches, the patterns one observes in nature---the intricate history of one’s life in the land, even a life in the city, where wind, the chirp of birds, the line of a falling leaf, are known. These thoughts are arranged, further, according to the thread of one’s moral, intellectual, and spiritual development. The interior landscape responds to the character and subtlety of an exterior landscape; the shape of the individual mind is affected by land as it is by genes.
**: He Stopped Loving Her Today
Among the Navajo,
the land is thought to
exhibit sacred order...
each individual
undertakes to order
his interior landscape
according to
the exterior landscape.
To succeed in this means
to achieve a balanced state
of mental health...
Among the various
sung ceremonies
of this people---
Enemyway, Coyoteway,
Uglyway---
there is one called Beautyway.
It is, in part,
a spiritual invocation
of the order of
the exterior universe, that irreducible, holy complexity that manifests itself as all things changing through time (a Navajo definition of beauty).
--Barry López
Crossing Open Ground
When people ask me who my favorite country singer is,
I say, You mean besides George Jones?
--Johnny Cash
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