This Sacred Earth: how to reconnect with Nature and one another

This Sacred Earth: The 2012 Phenomenon shows you simple ways to reconnect with Nature and others as humanity’s Golden Age unfolds. Shamans and scholars participate. Billie Dean and Andrew Einspruch direct this uplifting documentary.

The film is now streaming on various platforms as 2012: This Sacred Earth. The DVD is available at the film’s website.

Befriending Nature

“Nature is really, fundamentally, a relationship,” says Andras Corban Arthen, founder of the EarthSpirit Community.

It’s crucial to heal our relationship with Nature, Arthen says. Humankind’s problems originate in “the deliberate separation of human beings from direct participation in the natural world,” he believes.

“Mother Nature is yearning for us and we are yearning for her,” says Karen Ward, author and Irish-Celtic shaman. “We just have to get out and be. It’s that simple.”

Walking outdoors every day, sending love to the sun every morning and evening, and thanking the plants and animals that make up our meals are simple ways to begin. Irish-Celtic shaman John Cantwell notes that Nature can help us heal depression, stress and overweight.

Down to earth

Connecting with tree, animal and plant spirits has been “incredibly practical and useful,” says scholar and Celtic shaman Dr. Geo Athena Trevarthen. She feels she’s become a better mother, wife and friend.

Living simply doesn’t mean moving into a cave. It means living with less. Buying more “stuff” doesn’t bring happiness or fulfillment, insists author and past life regressionist Dolores Cannon. Watch less television, advises druid author Philip Carr-Gomm.

Grow a garden and share with others, suggests Lucy Cavendish, Australian author and white witch. “It’s a fantastic opportunity for us to fall back in love with this planet, our home, to fall back in love with each other,” she adds.

The New Human arrives

Homo Luminous is the new human that’s appearing today. We’re taking a quantum evolutionary leap,” shaman and author Dr. Alberto Villoldo believes.

He sees our natural human lifespan as 150-200 years. The new species will grow, heal and die differently. We will create “psychosomatic health” rather than psychosomatic illness, he says. Extraordinary relationships, spirituality and psychic abilities will become commonplace.

Villoldo recommends that we live peace and joy as a daily practice. “You act from courage not from fear. You act from love not from reactivity or rage. You act from truth, and not from a set of lies that we’ve internalized and confused with reality,” he explains.

“For me it’s like being rewired,” says Ward. The way we think, feel, live and love are continuously evolving.

 Preview of the Golden Age

The world after December 21, 2012 will still contain horror and beauty, says Haleaka Solari Pule Dooley, a Hawaiian Kahuna. We each decide what to tune into. It’s a time when “our true priorities will be brought forth,” she says.

“Inner change is happening today, tomorrow, the day after tomorrow,” says Villoldo. The New World will be as different from this world as this world is from Neanderthal times, he notes.

The Golden Age will be filled with “spontaneous mind-to-mind, heart-to-heart communication, anticipating events before they occur, living synchronistically so you’re living in the symphony of creation,” he notes. Negativity and trauma will be replaced with beauty and wonder, says Cannon.

Co-creating a new world

The 2012 turning point gives us “a deadline to make important changes, and to change how we’re relating to the Earth,” says Lucy Cavendish, Australian author and white witch.

“With awareness, I think this truly is the Golden Age,” says Trevarthen. “What we focus on expands,” according to Billie Dean, shaman, author and co-director of the film. “So if we want a different kind of world, then we have to think about the sort of world we really want.”

Spiritual practice

Ward envisions accessing our ancestors’ wisdom, knowledge and ancient ways. “Bring it into a modern context, evolving as a spiritual community.”

Praise and bless what’s true and beautiful in the world now, advises Trevarthen. Shamanic ceremonies are shown in beautiful, natural surroundings.

Embrace and create change

We can turn our world around with a light heart, creativity, imagination, pride and audacity, Cantwell notes. Optimism and hope comprise this world view.

Grassroots people create change by following their hearts. World people are already standing up to injustice by saying: “We won’t allow this.”

Life as spiritual art form

“Doing your work is about forgiveness,” Dean notes. It’s about loving yourself, loving others and the Earth. It means walking the Earth with impeccability and “making life a spiritual art form.”

Aliens won’t be swooping in to save us, says photojournalist and investigative reporter Paola Harris. Meaningful change must come from within.

We must live with intention and reverence. Those who don’t change will simply become extinct, Villoldo cautions.

 

Be peace

Overall This Sacred Earth is very mature, heartfelt and insightful. It simplifies spirituality with humor. It opens with a remarkably clear summary of the 2012 galactic alignment and related issues. Excellent music includes the song Spiral Dance by David Pendragon and Tribe World Ensemble.

“Be peace. Be love. Be beauty. And walk in beauty,” says Dean. (4.5 out of 5 stars)

If you like This Sacred Earth: The 2012 Phenomenon, you might enjoy:  Earth Whisperers; 2012: The Odyssey; Anima Mundi.

 

This Sacred Earth  /   2009  /  NR  /  53 min

Cast Overview:  Dr. William Bloom, Dolores Cannon, John Cantwell, Philip Carr-Gomm, Lucy Cavendish, Andras Corben Arthen, Billie Dean, Haleaka Solari Pule Dooley, Paola Harris, Anne Hassett, Minmia, Janet Ossebaard, Dr. Geo Athena Trevarthen, Dr. Alberto Villoldo, Karen Ward, Robert Wakeley Wheeler, Angelika Whitecliff

Directors: Billie Dean and Andrew Einspruch

Genres:  Documentary, Nature, Spirituality

Earth Whisperers: 10 visionaries preserve, restore wild lands

In Earth Whisperers, 10 visionaries pay homage to New Zealand’s diverse landscapes. Every place on Earth has a soul and is restorable, you’ll be reminded. Kathleen Gallagher directs.

The landscapes are introduced by fascinating New Zealanders dedicated to preserving Papatuanuku, Mother Earth. The experiential documentary is now available at WickCandle Film.

Natural treasures preserved

One-third of New Zealand’s forests, wetlands, coasts and mountains are protected in perpetuity thanks to decades of citizen activism. It’s a stunning achievement.

Cinematographers Alun Bollinger and Mike Single give you a direct experience of simply being with these trees, plants, lands and waters. Some areas have never felt a human footprint. Occasionally a brilliant bird appears.

Be an earth whisperer

The earth whisperers are plain-spoken and direct, living simply and in tune with Nature. They love the land. Ordinary and sometimes quirky, they share their wisdom gained by living mindfully. Often, there are no words as native music sets a mood of honoring.

Their message is that you too can be an earth whisperer, wherever you are right now.

Activism saves forest, lake

Craig Potton, environmentalist and photographer, recalls 20 years of political activism to save the forest now called Paparoa National Park, Westland. “Almost all social change occurs with very few key individuals,” he notes.

There are areas of nature and within our own lives that we cannot and should not control, Potton believes. Thoreau said, “In wildness is the preservation of the world.”

Conservationist and botanist Alan Mark participated in the Save Manapouri Campaign to save Lake Manapouri, Fiordland from developers. The area is now a World Heritage Site.

Nature, the great restorer

Nature, if given the chance, will restore itself, says Hugh Wilson, bird and tree farmer and botanist. He cares for the Hinewai Reserve, Banks Peninsula, Canterbury. Formerly a rundown farm, it’s being reclaimed by the bush (wild forest).

“Even the rarest of the rare are coming back,” says Wilson, pointing out cabbage trees that are now spreading. He feels tremendous peace and satisfaction living here.

Wilson walks and rides a bike to neighboring towns. Motor cars are bad for the environment and promote lack of exercise, he says. He refuses to own one. “We’re addicted to cars like drunks,” he declares.

Birds bring forest back to life

Bird caller and forest gardener Gerry Findlay shows a forest regenerating just seven years after a fire. Birds carrying seeds played an important role in bringing the area back to life, he says.

As he walks through the Franz Josef, South Westland World Heritage Area, his bird calls are melodious and haunting. Although some areas have been milled, Findlay marvels at how well the forest is carrying on.

Reclaiming a farm

“There’s absolutely no reason for anyone in the world to be hungry,” says Jim O’Gorman, organic farmer and founder of Dirt Doctor. In Kakanui, North Otago, he bought a farm that had been treated with chemicals.

Using woody waste and hedge clippings from neighbors, he turned the stone-hard land into rich, fertile soil. As he plants five crops a year, his soil grows healthier. He uses only hand tools.

“The intent was to create a garden from nothing with nothing,” he says, because so many world citizens have few resources.

 

Building food security

If we want to survive, “we have to look at what we’re eating and how it’s growing” says Kay Baxter, a seed saver and permaculture teacher in Whitianga Bay, East Cape. When we eat food from shops instead of from our own gardens, it limits us as human beings, she believes. She shows off a handful of New Zealand heritage radishes.

The Chernobyl nuclear disaster was a wakeup call for Baxter. She learned that most of New Zealand’s seeds came from Holland, which at the time was covered by a radioactive cloud.

Baxter and others marched across New Zealand in a seed hikoi, speaking with communities and building support along the way. Government officials were compelled to listen.

Conserving ancient and wild plants

Baxter saves the best seeds each year and replants them. Living on old seed fruits and vegetables for 25 years nourishes her physically and spiritually. She discovered “parts of me I didn’t even know existed.”

Trust your intuition, says Baxter. Indigenous cultures say there is no separation between our bodies and Papatuanuku. “When you grow your own food, you start to feel the connection between your body and your food plants and the Earth.”

Isla Burgess, an herbalist and wild plant conservationist, uses the plants of Wainui, East Cape for healing. “All of us have a plant that’s especially for us,” Burgess reveals. Stinging nettle surrounds her home. She began drinking its tea every day.

Stinging nettle nourishes the blood, according to the herbalist. It contains minerals and vitamins A and C. She also enjoys dandelion leaves and roots, which are believed to assist digestion.

Natives connect with Gaia

Rita Tupe is a Tuhoe Healer in the bush of Waiohau, Urewera Mountains. Gathering rongoa (medicinal plants), she takes only what she needs and gives thanks. Tupe prays, honoring all humans, trees and animals. How we conduct ourselves is important, she says.

Charles Royal, a Maori chef and food gatherer, walks through the forest near Lake Rotoehu, Rotorua. He forages for ferns and mushrooms. He prays and makes tea from heart-shaped kawakawa leaves. They are said to help thin the blood.

A way of peace and love

At the sacred Wharariki Mountains, Whitecliff, Canterbury, the female elder of the Kurawaka people of Waitaha speaks. Holding back tears, Makere Ruka Te Korako, Kuia, envisions a haven of peace here.

“Let it be a place for teaching and healing and being that would be self-sustainable,” she says. As a heartbeat for the world, it will provide “a place of safety and beauty and celebration for grandchildren.”

If you like Earth Whisperers, you might enjoy:  Water Whisperers; Dirt! The Movie.

 

Earth Whisperers  /   2009  /  NR  /  1 hour, 13 min

Cast Overview:  Rita Tupe, Craig Potton, Isla Burgess, Alan Mark, Gerry Findlay, Hugh Wilson, Jim O’Gorman, Charles Royal, Kay Baxter, Makere Ruka Te Korako

Director: Kathleen Gallagher

Genres:  Documentary, Earth, Nature