
Reconnecting to the Wild
[Disorderly
Conduct #6 - $5
Bring
on the Ruckus Society
P.O.
Box 11331
Eugene,
OR. 97440
With civilization all around us, and the context most of us have
developed within, how can we reconnect with our wild selves? How can we begin
to go feral?
The way one can start to re-align oneself from the “civilized”
framework towards a more “wild” existence are infinite and can manifest
themselves in many physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual realities. Even
in the middle of an urban nightmare we can start to connect to a more natural
way of being. One can think of urban gardens and permaculture as methods to
understand natural cycles, feed one’s body with real nutrients, and free up
some land buried under the concrete of modern construction. There are many
plants that grow well in the cracks, which have a wonderfully destructive force
on the infrastructure of civilization. Urban hunting and gathering can start to
hone our diminishing survival instincts, as well as make us less dependent on
the system for our needs. Graffiti, broken windows, fire, and rubble can be
seen as ways to deconstruct the standardized aesthetic of the city, and of
course the spontaneous dynamics of a riot can do a lot to de-stabilize the
civilized mentality of ‘the trains always running on time’. We can start to
explore wild areas, re-learn our knowledge of wild plants as food, medicine,
and guides. We can start to acquire the primitive skills that all people once
used as the way to provide all the necessities of life. We can start to comfort
and care for one another as the naturally communal beings that we have always
been, despite the alienated and fractured “life” that this culture tries to
force upon us.
In a more general sense, the line between learned
behavior and unmediated experience is one which can be explored. For instance,
symbolic thought and linguistic communication can start to be seen as very
limited ways of thinking and modes of expression. We, as human-animals, once
lived and communicated and understood our world much differently. We depended
on instinct and direct experiences much more, and we relied much less on
symbols or abstract concepts like language. Our ancient ancestors must have
communicated with far more expressive qualities. Although we have moved to a
more symbolically-dependent and abstract way of communicating, there is still
some less-mediated experiences we can still have which offer a glimpse into
other ways of expression and understanding. More can be learned about each other
through non-verbal communication, like touch, smell, taste, body language,
sexual experiences, etc. than through endless conversations. More can be
learned about wild areas through experiencing them directly, than through a
biologist explaining the scientific significance and functional details.
Forming bonds with non-humans can be an important aspect of this re-learning of
our ancestral modes of communication or natural expressions. Relationships with
non-human companions can give great insight into the realm between the
domesticated and wild worlds, which we may often feel stuck between. We can
learn (without taking) from the many indigenous peoples who are still
earth-based, and still connected to the plants and animals around them and live
based on mutual respect and openness.
Many of these suggestions are in no way the end-all, or path towards
total liberation, but instead, ways for us to more deeply realize and go beyond
intellectual understanding of the limited condition that the human experience
has become, and to help one strive to become wild once again.
For
the Destruction of Civilization!
And For the Reconnection to Life!