Earth Day 2021 at Wonderwell
A group of sangha members gathered at Wonderwell to commemorate the intention of Earth Day (April 22)—to love and honor our sacred Mother Earth, to celebrate our unity with all life, and to walk with reverence upon the earth, under the sky, in the sun and wind. This gathering took place in solidarity with countless others around the world, as Lama Liz led participants in prayer, reading and walking meditation. It was a wild day, where morning blizzard-like conditions gave way to bright sun (although still very chilly!) by afternoon. New grass and budding plants poked up through the light covering of snow, clouds raced across the sky, and pine trees sang and sighed in the hearty breeze.
The reading offered by Lama Liz is presented here for all to share—a beautiful piece:
Thus I have heard.
That night the bodhisattva awoke and found herself surrounded by vines, branches, flowers, roots, sap essence of the plant world, and the wildness of nature, all supplicating her for a teaching that would illumine their minds.
The bodhisattva spoke: No, it is you, not I, who needs to speak; it is you, it is your voice that is needed to awaken the self-centered human species to the vast web of life and love and awareness that is the intimate birthright of us all. Your sap, your juices, your fibers, your chemistry.
We ask that all of you speak through and to our species, blood and bone, in a language that is unmistakable, unfettered by the intellect we have come to value so highly. Speak to us of our interconnectedness, teach us how to hold each other in love, teach us how to experience our own primal essence, true nature, teach us how to know the essence of each sentient being, trees, grasses, rocks, mountains, stars, clouds, animals, insects, spirits, other realms of existence.
We have lost our connection and wander here and there without center, unaware of the web that you sustain. It is from you that I learned from countless rebirths of the altruism of the natural world.
Teach us how to enter the stream, the stream of vows, the stream of wishes, the stream of the hearts and minds of our ancestors.
It is you who came forth and affirmed my nature when on that perilous night, I touched the Earth and called you to witness. . . Yes! Yes! You are worthy and it was your grace and blessings raining down from the spreading, unfolding branches of the Bodhi tree that sustained me on my journey; it was you, as the early morning star that affirmed my nature and the nature of all sentient life, all beings, just as they are, whole and complete, lacking nothing, soaked with wisdom and compassion.
We bow before you and ask for your teachings.