imaginal suggests four areas of practice in order to live more fully from your soul and be in right relationship to the world
Practice 1: Being receptive and open
I feel it with my body, with my blood. Feeling all these trees, all this country. When the wind blows you can feel it. Same for country … You feel it. You can look, but feeling … that make you. Bill Neidjie, Aboriginal Elder
This practice is to open ourselves and create resonance with others; nature, people and non human others. This makes us available for communicative encounters with our surrounding world. Opening to nature requires that we become still, pay attention and be receptive to other voices. Stillness requires that we quieten our minds so we can hear and pay attention to the rich rhythms of nature, consonant with our own rhythmic breathing and heartbeat. Paying attention requires recognising the presence and support of many others in our lives. Being receptive requires that we become open to, and understand the voices of the natural world.
Practice 2: Being creative
There are a hundred ways to kneel and kiss the earth – Rumi
This practice includes rituals, ceremonies, chanting, creative practices (dance, art, song, and movement) to celebrate and participate in our connection to nature. Expressing gratitude to the world through rituals results in a more intimate relationship with nature.
Practice 3: Exploring the depths
You have to find what is genuinely yours to offer the world before you can make it a better place. Bill Plotkin – Soulcraft
This practice includes developing wisdom through conversations with elders and nature visionaries from various traditions (including nature philosophy and indigenous wisdom) to build knowledge, awareness and participation in the active presence of nature. The aim is to rediscover our proper place in the world as a participant in the Earth community, while exploring deep metaphysical questions and issues, such as: Where is my community? What is my true place in the world? Who am I in my depths?
Practice 4: Taking right action
From this mysterious place on not-knowing and no-doing he gives birth to whatever is needed in the moment – The Tao Te Ching of Lao Tzu
After listening to the wisdom and voices of the Earth, to elders, to the wisdom of our own bodies, we need to take action to heal and nurture ourselves and the Earth. We need to listen to and trust our direct experience and develop a stronger life urge. This action is urgent. We need to take actions that synergise with the larger patterns of the earth, rather than imposing our abstract ideas and actions on the world. We each need to find the right actions and paths that are uniquely ours.