Editorial

"Zen teaches nothing; it merely enables us to wake up and become aware. It does not teach, it points." ~D.T. Suzuki

Saturday, December 15, 2012

The Science of One

One
The Science
of
One

Nothing & Something are One

Hon rai mu ishi matsu.
From the first, no-thing is.

Hui-neng
6th Patriarch of Zen Buddhism
Image credit: Leonard Eisenberg
It cannot be called void or not void,
Or both or neither;
But in order to point it out,
it is called "the Void"
Nagarjuna

Men are afraid to forget their own minds,
fearing to fall through the void
with nothing on to which they can cling.
They do not know
that the void is not really the void
but the real realm of the Dharma...
Huang-Po
To use the imagery of a Tibetan poem,
every action, every event comes of itself
from the Void
'as from the surface of a clear lake
there leaps suddenly a fish'
Allan Watts
Enjoy
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

Monday, October 22, 2012

Canaries of the Sea

or Canaries in a Coalmine
Belugas
(Delphinapterus leucas)
of the
St. Lawrence Estuary

Canaries of the Sea
or Canaries in a Coalmine?

Beluga means "white one" in Russian
Beluga whales have a very distinctive uniform coloration that changes with age. The male is larger than the female at an average length between 3-5m (10-16ft) but this varies between populations. Their weight is usually between 500 - 1,500 kilos or 5 - 1.5 tons and their lifespan is about 30-35 years although some do live much longer than that.

The adult Beluga is white but may appear yellowish at certain times of the year. The young are slate-grey to reddish-brown which changes to blue-grey at 2 years of age. Young animals may be similar in color to Narwhals (Monodon monoceros) but are only found in the company of Beluga adults. Very social and curious studies on belugas in zoological environments indicate that they seek out physical contact with other belugas.

Like the Narwhal the Beluga has no dorsal fin. Instead, a Dorsal ridge extends along the back for about 50cm (20in) and may form a series of dark bumps. Both have unusually shaped flukes with convex trailing edges. They seem to face backwards in the Narwhal and although not as pronounced in the Beluga the trailing edges do become more convex with age. Flippers are broad, short, paddle-shaped and highly mobile. Much of the Beluga body, although evenly colored, has a rough skin which may have creases and folds of fat.

A well-defined crease can be found behind the single blowhole. The blow is visible in the right conditions of light, humidity or temperature. The Beluga has a stout body with a small head and a short but distinct beak. Teeth are arranged in both the upper and lower jaws, 8-11 pairs of irregular often curved teeth in the upper jaw and 8-9 pairs in the lower jaw.

The Beluga feeds upon squid, fish and crustaceans. Occasionally, they will eat worms and molluscs by dislodging them from the bottom with a jet of water from their mouths. A highly flexible neck aids in the scanning of the sea bottom and the capture of mobile prey. It has a well-defined neck and a prominent rounded melon that resonates during sound production.

The Beluga is one of the most vocal of the toothed whales. It has a large repertoire of clicks, moos, squeaks, trills and twitters that can be heard above and below the surface. By altering the shape of its forehead and lips a Beluga can make a variety of facial expressions. It may appear to smile, frown or whistle and while this may be a form of communication it is related to sound production. It may also have the most versatile and sophisticated sonar system of any cetacean.

Beluga have a well-developed, acute sense of hearing and the auditory cortex of the brain is highly developed. They can hear sounds in the range of 1.2 to 120 kHz, with a peak sensitivity of about 10 to 75 kHz. The average hearing range for humans is about .02 to 20 kHz. Most sound reception probably takes place through the lower jaw. A beluga may also receive sound through soft tissue and bone surrounding the ear.

The fat-filled lower jawbone appears to conduct sound waves through the jaw to bones in the middle ears. The lower jaw of toothed whales broadens and is hollow at the base, where it hinges with the skull. Within this very thin, hollow bone is a fat deposit that extends back toward the auditory bulla (earbone complex). Sounds are received and conducted through the lower jaw to the middle ear, inner ear, and then to hearing centers in the brain via the auditory nerve.

A beluga has small external ear openings, a few inches behind each eye. Each opening leads to a reduced ear canal and an eardrum. Some scientists believe that beluga whales receive sounds through these openings. Others believe that a beluga whale's external ear openings are nonfunctional. Biologists have noted sensory areas in beluga whale mouths that may function in taste. Olfactory lobes of the brain and olfactory nerves are absent in all toothed whales, suggesting that they have no sense of smell.

Beluga whales have acute vision both in and out of the water. A beluga's eye is particularly adapted for seeing in water. In air, certain features of the lens and cornea correct for nearsightedness. Their retinas contain both rod and cone cells, indicating that they may have the ability to see in both dim and bright light. (Rod cells respond to lower light levels than cone cells do.) The presence of cone cells suggests that belugas may be able to discern colors. Glands at the inner corners of the eye sockets secrete an oily, jellylike mucus that lubricates the eyes and washes away debris. This tear like film may also protect the eyes from microorganisms and infection.

The Beluga is a slow swimmer, spending much of its time near the surface. It is well adapted to living close to shorelines, it can swim well in very shallow water and move around in depths barely covering its body. If stranded in the shallows it can often survive until the next high tide.

Belugas are circumpolar, mainly Arctic but extending to subarctic, occupying coastal and estuarine areas. They are found off the coasts of Scandinavia, Greenland, Svalbard, the former Soviet Union, and North America. Many Belugas winter in areas of loose pack-ice where wind and ocean currents keep cracks and breathing holes open. Summers are spent in shallow bays and estuaries while some populations swim 1,000km (620miles) or more up river.

Most populations do not make extensive migrations. The longest migration is by those that winter in the Bering Sea and summer in the Mackenzie River, Canada. Some make no migration at all, such as, the resident population of the St. Lawrence River Estuary, Canada. The waters being cold enough year round and rich in food, the St. Lawrence belugas are likely a population that remained in the area since the last glaciation.

The total world population is probably between 40,000 and 55,000. Most reside in Baffin Bay, Davis Strait, the Barents, Kara and Laptev Seas. The Beluga has been hunted by Arctic native people for hundreds of years but over-hunting by commercial operators during the 20th century is what has reduced their numbers.

At the beginning of the last century, the St. Lawrence River population was perhaps over 5000 thousand individuals. The population was decimated by hunting and threatened by pollution but with the continuing effort of researchers like Robert Michaud and his team, naturalists and government agencies, these belugas are protected and remain on the endangered list since 1983 when their numbers were estimated to have dropped to about 500. A 1997 aerial survey estimated there were over 600 individuals, today the estimate is that are perhaps as many as 1000 in the entire region.
Jean Michel Cousteau

Whales have always fascinated me, as they do for many people. They are so much like us... air breathing mammals that suckle their young and have strong caring bonds.

Several sightings of a wayward Beluga in the Old Port of Montreal in Quebec, Canada have been reported recently. This whale is considered wayward because it is a historic first Beluga that has been seen in Montreal. Nearly a dozen sightings since Sept. 28. See Map. As you will see below, this is worrying for marine researchers. Sadly, as of today Montreal's Beluga is still in town.
See News.

I had been to Tadoussac about a 6 hour drive, from Montreal, along the North shore of the St. Lawrence River as a "young buck" in 1978. But not yet to study the whales. I had gone there with my hang-gliding instructor and others in my group, to hang-glide off the high cliffs, fly over the river, learn to do a proper u turn and then land on the sandy beach below the cliffs. We would then winch the hang-glider up the cliff and go again. It was then that I  first became aware of the whales. I was smitten.

The next time was  while I was an ecology student in 1988, I returned for a week of camping and whale observation. A friend of a friend had told me to look up a whale researcher in Tadoussac named Robert Michaud (GREMM). He has since become an authority on the Beluga population here. I returned again for 2 weeks in 1989, this time meeting Ned Lynas (ORIS), a researcher of Minke whales. Minke and other whales migrate every summer to feed in the food rich and sheltered environment of the estuary. There are at least 5 species that do this, returning for an almost non-stop feeding all summer long since their winter location down south is not as abundant. They scarcely feed at all in those warmer waters.

My main focus has been on the feeding and foraging behavior of the baleen whales, not so much the toothed whales such as the Beluga. But they are still dear to my heart. Most of my observation are Minke, Humpback, Fin and Blue whales. I've had several great encounters with the Belugas. One is my favorite, a Blue whale in particular. The data I gathered  and some photos on each trip was shared with GREMM (Robert Michaud) and ORIS (Ned Lynas). My last time there was in 2000 and again in 2002. I haven't been since but was due. (Tongue in cheek) Turns out maybe a beluga came down to Montreal to see me and find out why I didn't come to them. :)

Here is one close encounter I had with a Beluga on Aug 14 2000. I was tandem kayaking just north of Tadoussac. From far off we saw a recognizable white back and each time it surfaced it was appearing a little bigger. It is forbidden to approach them. We stopped paddling and stayed still, just drifting. watching as it still keep approaching us. Amazed, I watched as it swan right up close to our kayak. We were eye to eye, it watched me from below as I watched it from above. It swam right under me and to the other side of the kayak. Surfacing again close by. Eventually it turned and then made it's way back out in the direction of the deeper water it had come from. I had the presence of mind to take a series of photos of the entire encounter. Here are a just two shots from that series of photos. One coming and one going.


This is the individual that swam under me.
Here is a photo of it coming towards us

then it came up the other side















And by the way, I'm shopping for a sea-kayak! 
Anyone giving them away?
.

This isn't me or my videos below.  
It's just to give you an idea, but
they are Belugas from the St. Lawrence Estuary.


Seeing Eye to Eye
It's almost exactly the same way it happened to me

A curious and playful species.
This video, well, it's awesome:

Retropropulsion
This beluga enjoys swimming along with the kayak
and even giving it a push along from behind.








It is a daunting challenge.

They are a fragile population showing no real sign of a strong recovery. The beluga adults and babies are dying at rates a small population can't afford. Add to this a low rate of reproduction, belugas have one calf at a time and raise them for several years but their reproductive health impairs this too. These all point to a community under some distress. The resident beluga population here still living year round in a toxic chemical soup. The same waters and environment that we use and get food from. What we see happening the belugas health should also be a warning to us. They are also canaries in a coalmine.

Dead belugas that are not eaten or carried down river to the gulf of St. Lawrence will often wash up on the shore. The bodies are so full of toxins that the corpse itself is classed as a toxin hazard site. Many autopsies have been performed and the health profiles of many of these individuals are not good. Chemical toxins concentrate in fat tissue. Given that about 40% of their mass is blubber the toxins accumulate and concentrate over their life span. Cancers are not uncommon.

A mother beluga suckles her young with milk that is 35% fat. In other words, every time a beluga mother feeds her calf, she is pumping her baby full of concentrated toxins. 

They are both...canaries of the sea and the coalmine. When they are healthy and happy, they are a cute, curious cetacean but if we are unable to solve the ecological problem of our environmental pollution by both industry and consumers, they are also a forewarning of environmental danger. 

For more read this COSEWIC Status Report
Have You Seen This Beluga Whale?

Seriously,
if you see anything unusual
involving a marine mammal...

Do Not Approach or Disturb!

Call the
Marine Mammals Emergency Network 
1-877-722-5346
Montreal’s beluga was seen three times
in the St. Lawrence River near the Old Port on Oct. 17. 
Photo: GREMM
Enjoy
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

Monday, October 15, 2012

We Are Sapiens

or Wisdom as a Valuable Virtue
We Are Sapiens

But What Does That Mean?
Is Wisdom A Virtue We Value?
"Our technological power has over run our spiritual power.
We have guided missiles and misguided men."
Martin Luther King jr
Wisdom may come from experience, but it may also be perceived in sacrifice
Bill Moyers: Why myths? Why should we care about myths? What do they have to do with my life?

Joseph Campbell: My first response would be, "Go on, live your life, it's a good life - you don't need mythology." I don't believe in being interested in a subject just because it's said to be important...But you may find that, with a proper introduction, mythology will catch you. And so, what can it do for you if it does catch you?

One of our problems today is that we are not well acquainted with the literature of the spirit. We're interested  in the news of the day and the problems of the hour. It used to be that the university campus was a kind of hermetically sealed-off area where the news of the day did not impinge upon your attention to the inner life and to the magnificent human heritage we have in our tradition - Plato, Confucius, the Buddha, Goethe and others who speak of the eternal values...

We're so engaged in doing things to achieve purposes of outer value that we forget that the inner value, the rapture that is associated with being alive, is what it's all about.

From the book The Power of Myth
Chapter 1 - Myth And The Modern World

I think we risk becoming the best informed society
that has ever died of ignorance.
Reuben Blades


Are We Arrogant to Call Ourselves Sapiens?

Value is not based upon cost
but that costs are paid because of value.
Kindness is the golden chain
by which society is bound together
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


We see technological knowledge as an asset but is wisdom still viewed as a virtue? And I wonder, if even considered a virtue... is it still valued? 

If it is, how? Where is our focus? Does our day to day life conform with our own "big picture" or is there a dissonance, and even that we try to deny? We already seem to be so plugged-in that the flood of information has washed out any hope of actually thinking much about the information's value. When was the last time you caught your breathe, stopped soaking up stuff and really took the time to digest and think about what you just took in? Sure, in today's world we make many decisions and quickly too... How many are wise?

You can't lead the people
if you don't love the people.
You can't save the people
if you don't serve the people.
Cornel West
Enjoy
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

Monday, October 8, 2012

The Fall Of Nature

Meeting
they laugh and laugh -
The forest grove,
the many fallen leaves

Zenrin

A priest was in charge of the garden

within a famous Zen temple


He had been given the job

because he loved

the flowers, shrubs, and trees

One day,
when the priest
was expecting
some special guests

he took extra care
in tending to the garden.

He pulled the weeds,
trimmed the shrubs,
combed the moss,

and spent a long time
 meticulously raking up
and carefully arranging
all the dry autumn leaves
Next to the temple

there was another
smaller temple

where there lived
a very old Zen master
As the priest worked

the old master
watched him with interest

from across the wall
that separated the temples

When he had finished

the priest stood back
to admire his work

"Isn't it beautiful,"
he called out
to the old master
“Indeed it is,”
replied the monk,

“but 
there is something
that is missing.

Here,
give me a hand
over this wall
and
I’ll fix it for you
After hesitating,
the priest lifted
the old fellow over
and set him down.

Slowly
the master
walked to the tree near the center
of the garden,

grabbed it
by the trunk
and shook it

Leaves

showered down 

all over the garden.
"There,"

said the old man,

"you can put me back now."
The 1400 Years Old Ancient Ginkgo Tree
Enjoy. 
Updated 2023 
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

Monday, October 1, 2012

Floraphilia

or Plants and Why You Want More
Floraphilia


Plants

&

Why You Want More
Silent Running
This is to get you to keep lots of indoor PLANTS. You'll be glad you did, even if you don't know why...yet.
Growing Clean Air

For all of our evolutionary history our survival has depended on the availability of plants in our surrounding environment. This goes further back to even before the first mammals. It was plants that turn our atmosphere from a reducing one to an oxygenated one. Plants grew the air we breathe. We eat and drink thanks to them.
We have shelter and more all thanks to plants

Our ancestors evolved in the forests. However as the climate changed eventually as the lush forests receded and the savannahs grew in their place. The surviving hominids may have begun having more opportunities to scavenge meat and supplement their protein.. Much later on, the remaining hominids, would hunt and fish, but vegetable matter, foraging and gathering provided most of the sustenance. Much later on, after domestic breeding, horticulture and agriculture were adopted. These continue to be the mainstay, it is still the plant harvest that is the bulk (no pun intended) of our diets. Either as fruits and veggies or as feed for our livestock. While we need high quality protein, our bodies are better able to resist the wear and tear of life with the flavins, anti-oxidents and other molecules that only plants produce. Many plants are medicinal and these can either maintain or restore health. The use of plants are varied, many and pretty much all beneficial.

Important for survival in a cruel and competitive world, the necessities of shelter, shade and water are also psychologically associated with plants. Any wonder then that humans love vegetation and lush green plants? Consciously or unconsciously plants make us feel good.

Healthy plants in our environment are good for us. And that's not just touchy feely stuff, there is evidence of a real effect on our health. Scientific research shows that hospital patients actually do better and recover quicker in plant filled surroundings.

Perhaps, in the spirit of Fung Shui or the Star Wars force, plants really do add a touch of "life" to any room. That's certainly ecologically true. Indoor plants not only gently humidify the air, thus making our breathing, our noses, throats, and skin more comfortable, they also remove and trap harmful air-borne pollutants.

In an age of growing concern over energy conservation and air-tight sealed buildings, the appearance of "sick building syndrome" is not all that surprising. Plants are a beautiful and cost-efficient remedy that can enhance well-being at home and boost office productivity.

However, remember this fact as it is becoming more and more important: Indoor plants clean the room's air. They take up the carbon dioxide we breath out and release the oxygen we need to the ambiant air. Toxic vapors from ordinary, everyday indoor solvents are efficiently removed from the air we breath by some common indoor plants.

Much of what the world's plants do globally, they can do for us in landscaping and indoors as well.





Plants Are Practical

You get physical, emotional
& psychological
benefits from having indoor plants. 

Dr. B.C. Wolverton has researched the air remediating properties of plants for use in enclosed systems like spacecraft. His research has found over 50 plants that are very effiecient at removing toxins from the air and giving back clean air in return!


Here's a quick run down:


1- Plants produce oxygen.
2- Plants take in carbon dioxide.
3- Plants are natural humidifiers.
4- Plants filter harmful air impurities.
5- Plants promote feelings of relaxation.
6-  Plants block and absorb noise as well.
7- Plants soothe the mind and body functions.
8- Plants provide humans health and wellbeing.
Clean Air Plants

* Weeping fig (F. benjamina)
* Rubber plant (F. robusta
* English Ivy (Hedera helix)
* Needlepoint Ivy (Hedera helix sagittaefolia)
* Spider plant (Chlorophytum cosmosum)
* Variegated Spider plant
* Lacy Tree (Philodendron selloum);
* Sweetheart plant (Philodendron scandens)
* Small Peace Lily (Spathiphyllum wallisii)
* Large Peace Lily (Spathiphyllum Mauna Loa)
* Chrysanthemum (C. morifolium)
* Gerbera (G. jamesonii)
* Boston fern (Nephrolepis exaltata);
* Kimberley Queen fern (Nephrolepis obliterata)
* Dragon tree (Dracaena marginata);
* Warnekii (D. deremensis warnekii):
* Corn plant (D. fragrans)
* Areca palm (Chrysalidocarpus lutescens);
* Lady palm (Raphis excelsa);
* Parlour palm (Chamaedorea elegans)

Sources Of Airborne Toxins Plants That Remove Toxins
Benzene

Detergents
Inks and Dyes
Petroleum products
Plastics
Rubber products
Synthetic fibers
Tobacco smoke


Chinese Evergreens
Chrysanthemum
Dragon tree
English Ivy
Gerbera Daisy
Janet Craig Dracaena
Peace Lily
Striped Dracaena
Formaldehyde

Carpeting
Cleaners
Foam Insulation
Furniture
Paper products
Plywoods and Particle board

Bamboo palm
Corn stalk plant
Devils Ivy
Ficus trees
Philodendrons
Snake plant
Spider plants


Trichloroethylene

Adhesives
Dry cleaning
Inks and Dyes
Lacquers and Paints
Varnishes



Dragon tree
Gerbera Daisy
Peace Lily
Chrysanthemum
Ribbon plant
Rejoice in the Sun Joan Baez
Enjoy
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

You may also enjoy: The Quiet Gardener

Monday, September 24, 2012

Funny Wonderful Life

Funny Wonderful Life


Physics equations?
Are you sure you want to be a cartoonist?

A Comment on Insight & Humor

As a small tribute to
"Science is an integral part of culture. It's not this foreign thing, done by an arcane priesthood.
It's one of the glories of the human intellectual tradition."
Stephen Jay Gould
Insight & Humor

The wit and humor in the recognition of a truth are often important inspirations and by-products of scientific insight (and other areas of human endeavor). Humility like science has a tendency toward self-correction. I've always believed you should take your work seriously, but not necessarily yourself too much. We often laugh at jokes or cartoons because of the surprising insight it points to, or to hidden faults in logic it reveals, especially by turning stale ideas on their head. The right twist will get you hooked. Being able to communicate these insights with wit and humor goes deeper than mere entertainment.

In my opinion there are no better communicators of  joyous science (and life) insights than Stephen Jay Gould and Gary Larson.  Both obviously passionate about science and life as well as masters at the art of communication. One by words and the other by images (with captions), they put forth revelations about nature, science and especially ourselves with warmth and humor. Sharing with us their precious view of our funny wonderful life!
Jokes can't be explained.
The enjoyment comes from just "getting it". 
However, when it's rendered with great talent
what you get are hilarious perspectives.

Why THE FAR SIDE is a masterclass in storytelling
Gary Larson
Species: Garylarsonus (beetle)
Serratoterga larsoni (Ecuadorian butterfly) 
Strigiphilus garylarsoni Clayton, (owl louse)
"I considered this an extreme honor.
Besides, I knew no one was going to write and ask to name a new species of swan after me. You have to grab these opportunities when they come along."
Gary Larson  The Far Side

My Personal Favorite



Strigiphilus garylarsoni
Stephen Jay Gould
 
From the Foreword of Gary Larson's Far Side Gallery 3

"...I also think I know why Gary Larson is numero uno by a mile among my colleagues - and that gives me something to write about. Being funny is surely a criterion, but simple chuckles do not explain why we have spontaneously chosen Gary Larson as national humorist of natural history. He has won by informal acclamation because he understands science so well. And I don't mean factual knowledge (this is available for the asking from textbooks and courses); I refer to the subtle nuances and insights - hundreds of them, sometimes several per cartoon - showing that Gary Larson knows the intimate details of our daily lives and practices...

Gary Larson is a natural historian. The foibles of human relationships with the natural world, and the bad habits of culture and society thus reflected, provide his central theme...

Everyone has a favorite based on his own career- and I expect that the items on doors of my colleagues are personal statements. I think we all feel that Gary made one just for us. In mine, a group of Protozoa are watching a slide show, and one says: "No wait! That's not Uncle Floyd! Who is that? Criminy, I think it's just an air bubble!" Why did this put me supine in the aisles? Well, when I took embryology in college, we had to make serial sections through a chick embryo. I made a technically perfect set of sections; I was so proud. But when I put my product under the microscope, I discovered that I had made a perfect serial section through an air bubble, and caught the embryo at some useless angle. I abandoned laboratory work and became a paleontologist.

One final comment that says it all. It is the caption of another Protozoan cartoon, but take it more generally as the real reason, not only for Gary Larson's success, but for the deep respect that he has won from us: Two amoeba are watching television, and one says to the other: "Stimulus, response! Stimulus, response! Don't you ever think!" Most of us live like the amoeba, but Larson won't let us. There is no more important intellectual lesson, however it be taught."


1986 Gary Larson interview on 20/20
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

The Quiet Gardener

or Universal Responsibility
Business Lessons From A Quiet Gardener


This post is an excerpt from the speech by William Rosenzweig
On the occasion of his receiving the Oslo Business For Peace Award in 2010

A gardener sees the world as a system of interdependent parts -
where healthy, sustaining relationships are essential to the vitality of the whole.
"A real gardener is not a person who cultivates flowers, but a person who cultivates the soil."
In business this has translated for me into the importance of developing agreements and partnerships
where vision and values, purpose and intent are explicitly articulated,
considered and aligned among all stakeholders of an enterprise - 
customers, employees, suppliers, shareholders,
and the broader community and natural environment.

The garden has taught me about patience
and persistence and the ethical principles of generosity and reciprocity.
It has illuminated the importance of
appreciating the cycles of life and decay.

For the gardener,
composting is a transformative act - 
whereby last season's clippings (or failures)
can become next year's source of vigor.
I've learned that it's not just what you plant,
but how you plant it that brings long - term rewards
in life, work and the garden.

Gardeners know that once strong roots are established, growth is often exponential rather than linear.

Also gardening, like business,
is inherently a local activity,
set within an ever - changing and
unpredictable global climate.

Showing up in person, shovel -
and humility in hand is essential.

Gardeners, like entrepreneurs
are obsessed with latent potential -
and can be known to be 
pathologically optimistic.
We can vividly imagine the bloom
and the scent of the rose
even in deepest of winter.
As the American naturalist
Henry David Thoreau once wrote:
"I have great faith in a seed.
Convince me that you have a seed there,
and I am prepared to expect wonders."

In essence, the gardener's work is a life of care. 

We cultivate abundance from scarce resources. 
We nurture, encourage, fertilize -
and prune when necessary -
while being respectful of the true
and wild nature of all things.

We know that creating enduring value
requires vision, passion, hard work
and the spirit of others.
I am just coming to understand
this work of business gardening -
and investing in keeping people healthy -
as an act of universal responsibility.

His Holiness Dalai Lama reminds me:
"Each of us must learn to work
not just for one self,
one's own family or one's nation,
but for the benefit of all humankind.

Universal responsibility
is the key to human survival.
It is the best foundation for world peace.
The Man Who Planted Trees
Story by Jean Giono, Film by Frederick Back
Enjoy
© 2012 MU-Peter Shimon

You may also like to see: My Hut in Spring / Evolutionary EconomicsOne Starfish / The Jar of Life