This photo of a total solar eclipse in Antarctica was taken in 2003 by an adventurous soul named Fred Bruenjes of moonglow.net. His photo and others of similar fascination appear on NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day site, which I often make my home page. Every few weeks I give my opening browser window a break from heavy news in the Middle East or the New York Times or International Herald Tribune or whatever else I’ve tuned into with great interest. After I give it a rest for a few days by viewing instantly-appearing wonders of the natural world or celestial sites like NASA on my desktop, I go back to my other love: news, news, and more news. That’s the joy of cyberspace. Once can wander all around, fill the mind with intoxicatingly wondrous things, spend a moment in Antarctica pondering a solar eclipse, come back to earth, or even visit the always-informative Dr. Mercola. I love the computer. It is such a joy. Check out NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day, every day, but in the meantime, learn more about this beautiful image of the Sun and the Moon converging in this icy photograph from 2003.
NASA’s astronomy pictures of the day
Published May 4th, 2008 in sunrise/sunset, Computers, Images, Stargazing, Solar Energy, Antarctic, Solar Eclipse, Visual Imagery, Middle East, Earth, Moon, Astronomy, Natural phenomena, Celestial event, Eclipses and Uncategorized. 0 CommentsThe waking up syndrome
Published April 28th, 2008 in Attitudes, Psychology, Change, Faith, Mental health, Education, Life, Environment, Health, Human World, Innovation, Body and Mind, Trends, Ideas and Uncategorized. 1 CommentI received this article over email recently, and I want to share it with the Earthsky community:
THE WAKING UP SYNDROME
by Sarah Anne Edwards and Linda Buzzell
“Humankind cannot bear very much reality.” - T. S. Eliot
Just dealing with our daily lives keeps most of us too busy to worry about whether or not the sky is falling. We focus on getting to and from work, paying our bills, doing our errands, and, if our time-stressed schedules allow, enjoying a little time to relax with friends and family.
But we’re deluged of late with dire pronouncements from high-profile newscasts, documentaries, and scientific reports about global warming, melting ice caps, dwindling oil supplies, and a looming imminent economic collapse. Closer to home, we’ve experienced climate-related disasters: floods, wildfires, hurricanes, wildfires, and severe droughts.
While the sky may not be falling, this day-after-day onslaught of alarming news is making it more difficult simply to overlook the triple threat of environmental, climatic and economic concerns. It’s leaving many of us feeling like Alice in Wonderland, being sucked down a Rabbit Hole into some frighteningly grotesque and unfamiliar world that’s anything but wonderful.
Few of us are eager to contemplate, let alone truly face, these looming changes. Just the threat of losing chunks of the comfortable way of life we’re accustomed to (or aspiring to) is a frightening-enough prospect. But there’s no avoiding the current facts and trends of the human and planetary situation. And as the edges of our familiar reality begin to ravel, more and more people are reacting psychologically. A noticeable pattern of behavior is emerging.
We call this pattern the Waking Up Syndrome, and it unfolds in six stages, though not necessarily in any particular order.
STAGE 1 DENIAL
When we first get an inkling of the shifting environmental reality and its potential impact on both the national economy and our daily lives, most people begin by denying it. We slip into one of four common ways to discount things we’d rather not deal with:
“I don’t believe it.”
We simply deny the existence of any such concerns and refuse to consider them. This might include latching eagerly onto any few remaining naysayers for confirmation and comfort. But as the number of reputable naysayers dwindles, more people are forced to face the fact that “something” is happening.
“It’s not a problem.”
We may admit there’s a change taking place, but deny that it’s significant, seeing such things as climate change and economic fluctuations as part of a normal pattern that is nothing to concern ourselves with. Or we may incorporate the changes we see happening into our spiritual and religious beliefs, regarding them not as a problem, but a test of faith, a sign of a global spiritual awakening, or evidence of a long-awaited Apocalypse. Some may believe focusing on such problems makes them worse and that we should instead visualize, meditate, or pray for the world to be as we want it to be.
“Someone will fix it.”
We may admit major problematic changes are underway but conclude that there’s nothing we personally can do about them and we needn’t worry because technology, scientists, the government, or some expert authority will come up with a solution in time to save us.
“It’s useless.”
We may believe there’s nothing anyone can do about macro-problems, so why do anything, except perhaps eat, drink and be merry. What will be, will be.
STAGE 2 SEMI-CONSCIOUSNESS
In spite of the various ways we may try to discount what’s happening to our environment (and consequently to our economy and whole way of life), as evidence mounts around us and the news coverage escalates, we may begin to feel a vague sense of eco-anxiety. Some express this as virulent anger at all this discussion about global warming. Others dissociate from their growing concern and misdirect their feelings toward other things in their lives, perhaps blaming family members or jobs for their undefined discomfort.
STAGE 3 THE MOMENT OF REALIZATION
At some point we may encounter something that breaks through our defenses and brings the inevitability and severity of the implications of our collective problems into full consciousness. We might read a particularly compelling article, learn more about the aftermath of Katrina, hear a news broadcast about polar bear deaths or rampant fires and flooding, see a documentary like “An Inconvenient Truth” or “The End of Suburbia.” Or - most dramatically - we might experience a natural disaster ourselves with all its personal and economic costs.
At such moments, suddenly we realize no matter how we try to explain away the changes that are happening, they are and will be accompanied by huge challenges to life as we know it and cause considerable pain and suffering for many, including ourselves and those we love.
Even if we believe all these disruptions are leading to a global spiritual awakening or a long awaited Apocalypse- even if we think some helpful new technology is going to emerge (hopefully soon)- we nonetheless begin to understand on a visceral level that the changes taking place will have dramatically unpleasant implications beyond anything we’ve faced in our lifetimes. In fact, we realize many of these uncomfortable changes are already underway and will be growing in coming months and years, affecting most of the things we love and cherish.
But like the character Neo in the 1999 movie The Matrix, even at this point we still have a choice. We can choose to swallow the metaphorical red pill and find out just how deep this rabbit hole goes and where it leads. Or we can take the soothing metaphorical blue pill and choose to “escape” from the nightmarish Wonderland of the rabbit hole we’ve fallen into by slipping back into the comfort of our favorite form of assuring ourselves that all is well.
But if, like Neo, we take “the red pill,” we wake up to the reality of our individual and collective situation. We get that the triple threat challenge facing us is a real Medusa monster. Once we’re awake, the problem is full-blown in our consciousness. It’s right in our face. It won’t let us turn away, and the force of it makes “waking up” incredibly painful.
The moment we realize - even briefly - that we’re slipping into a dangerously threatening new world that no longer makes sense according what we’ve always believed, our genetic wiring kicks in with predictable physiological and emotional threat responses that can take many forms.
Some of us become obsessive newswatchers, documentary filmgoers, internet compulsives or book readers, wanting to know more and more about what’s really happening. Loved ones may think we’ve gone nuts. Spouses may consider divorce; kids may decide mom and dad are hopeless cranks.
The more fragile or vulnerable among us may get depressed or experience panic attacks. If something about this current eco-trauma retriggers earlier traumas in our lives, we may have a Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) reaction. Even the more resilient may throw themselves obsessively into save-the-planet and other activities, soon to become exhausted and weary from trying to do what no one person can.
Others, once they realize what’s happening, see it as a new business or political opportunity. These green business ventures can sometimes be helpful and productive, but at other times can actively circumvent or sabotage the efforts of those who are trying to solve the problems.
STAGE 4 A POINT OF NO RETURN
Once awakened, especially as economic and environmental changes intensify, most of us find there is no turning back. We find ourselves traveling deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole. Whatever methods we’ve used to avoid facing the coming changes is no longer successful to quell our personal concerns. We can no longer help but notice the continuing rapid progress of the bad trends - more expensive energy, higher costs of living, a weaker economy, more species in trouble, rising temperatures, more devastating severe weather events, increasing political, economic and military competition (wars) over remaining resources, etc. It all starts to make a dreadful sort of sense as we let in the enormity of the situation.
One of the most difficult aspects of this stage is the profound but unavoidable sense of isolation and disconnection we may feel when living in a different world from most of those around us, a world we can no longer escape from, but one few others seem to notice. The result is a bizarre sense of surrealism. Interaction and communication can become a challenge. How do we relate to a world that’s no longer real to us, but is business as usual to most? Do we try to reach out to others about the ugly new reality and endure their defenses? Is it better to indulge those who don’t yet see the reality we’ve stumbled into and act “as if” nothing has changed just to get along? Or might it be easier to withdraw from life as we’ve known it and turn into a hermit?
STAGE 5 DESPAIR, GUILT, HOPELESSNESS, POWERLESSNESS
The realization sets in that one person or even one group or community can’t stop the effects of such things as climate change and peak oil and their economic consequences from impacting millions of people around the planet and at home. We see this thing spiraling out of control and realize that our species, and even we individually, are responsible for much of what’s happening! As the mayor of Memphis said to the Los Angeles Times when a major heat-wave hit his city and most of the Midwest and South last summer, “This is pretty akin to a seismic event in the sense that there is no solution that we here in this room can come up with that will take care of everybody.”
Some have suggested that this stage is similar to the traditional grief process, and indeed, this is a time of grieving. But there is a significant difference between this awakening and the normal experience of grief. Grief that occurs after a loss usually ends with acceptance of what’s been lost and then one adjusts and goes on. But this is more like the process of accepting a degenerative illness. It’s not a one-time loss one can accommodate and simply move on. It is a chronic, on-going, permanent situation that will not only not improve, but actually continue to worsen and become more uncomfortable in the foreseeable future, probably for the entire lifetime of most people living today. This is what author James Howard Kunstler calls “The Long Emergency.”
Our grief and sorrow are also amplified by having to bear the pain of upbeat acquaintances who go merrily along in their denial, discounting their own uneasiness about what’s happening and wondering why we’re so “negative.”
STAGE 6 ACCEPTANCE, EMPOWERMENT, ACTION
As we come to accept the limits of our general powerlessness, we also find the parameters of the power we do have in this strange new situation. We discover we no longer need to resist our current and emerging reality. We don’t need to feel compelled to save the entire world or to hold onto a world that no longer makes sense. We are freed, instead, to pursue what James Kunstler calls “the intelligent response, ” seeking and taking whatever creative, constructive action will best sustain those aspects of life that are truly most important to us in the context of the changes unfolding around us. At this point our curiosity and creativity kick in and we can begin following our natural instincts to find what is both feasible and rewarding to safeguard ourselves, our families, our communities and the planet.
And indeed, growing numbers of people are beginning to respond with a plethora of creative, socially and personally responsible actions along four paths that are similar to those identified by Joanna Macy in her book World as Lover, World as Self: Courage for Global Justice and Ecological Renewal and Richard Heinberg in Peak Everything: Waking up to the Century of Declines. We are finding individual and collective ways to:
Resist making matters worse.
What’s going on may or may not be inevitable, but we don’t have to speed it along. We can do at least one thing to ease or lessen the negative impact of these changes. We can join an environmental action group, plant a tree, bike to work, help with a protest march or write letters to our congressperson. Just doing our little bit to limit the damage eases the psychological distress we’re feeling, even if we’re not “saving the whole world.” Taking even a small stand for what Macy calls “the life-sustaining society” (as opposed to the life-destroying one) gives us back our dignity and sense of agency.
Raise our level of consciousness
so we can maintain some serenity and not burn out in the midst of all this change. We might adopt a spiritual practice of some kind, take up meditation, expand our understanding of ecology or history, or spend time reconnecting with nature, learning to live our lives in harmony with the rest of the earth.
Build a lifeboat for ourselves and our loved ones.
Many people are already taking steps to create a richer yet more sustainable way of life better suited to weathering the new economic and environmental realities. Some are moving to less vulnerable or expensive locales. Others are simplifying their lives, starting to lower their energy use, or creating personal and community permaculture gardens. Still others are changing into more sustainable careers, joining relocalization efforts to safeguard their local economy, or adopting alternative ways to exchange needed goods and services. Learning more about these positive possibilities is vital. Until we can see that there are options, there’s no way out of despair except to return to dissociating or denying, which only makes us more vulnerable to the difficulties around us.
Join with others in small communities for support and understanding.
Don’t try to cope with this enormous challenge alone! Find others who share your concerns and views. Some people have formed reading or study groups around books like David Korten’s The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community, Richard Heinberg’s Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World, Cecile Andrews’ Circle of Simplicity: Return to the Good Life, or Middle Class Life Boat by Paul and Sarah Edwards. Others are becoming active in relocalization efforts like those described on www.relocalize.net . Still others are joining together to turn their neighborhood into a sustainable “eco-hood” or exploring options for co-housing or eco-villages.
Taking some action
in each of these four areas prevents us from getting stuck in panic and paralysis. It energizes us and re-establishes a sense of confidence and security in life. Does it mean we will no longer be plagued with concerns, doubts or even fear at times? No. The threat of what we face is huge and relentless. There’s never been anything like it in human history. All who awaken to the enormity of the challenges before us still slip and slide somewhere along this continuum at times. One day we may feel encouraged with our forward action, the next we may be back to despairing. Or we many need to take a mental holiday altogether for a few days or weeks so we can come back refreshed and reinvigorated, ready to work again on the survivable future we’re creating for ourselves and our loved ones.
When asked in an interview with The Turning Wheel if there are times when she ever thinks “Oh, no! This is impossible,” even Joanna Macy, who has been a leader in championing ways to address these changes, replied, “Every day.” But she goes on to explain that while she does think this at times, such times pass because she can’t think of anything more engaging and enjoyable than addressing the most pressing issues of our time.
Such wisdom seems to be the secret to living positively while navigating the painfully difficult stages of awakening until we get to the point where we can enjoy the daily challenges our dismaying situation presents to our imagination, our creativity and our deep and abiding love for the most valuable aspects of life.
TO LEARN MORE
Books:
Circle of Simplicity: Return to the Good Life by Cecile Andrews.
World as Lover, World as Self: Courage for Global Justice and Ecological Renewal by Joanna Macy.
The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community by David Korten.
The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change and other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-first Century by James Howard Kunstler.
Middle-Class Life Boat, Careers and Life Choices for Staying Afloat in an Uncertain Economy by Paul and Sarah Edwards.
Permaculture: Principles & Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holmgren
Peak Everything: Waking up to the Century of Decline by Richard Heinberg.
Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World by Richard Heinberg.
Reconnecting with Nature by Michael J. Cohen.
Documentary DVDs:
The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of the American Dream. www.endofsuburbia.com/previews.htm
Escape From Suburbia: Beyond the American Dream
The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil
What a Way to Go: Life at the End of the Empire. www.whatawaytogomovie.com/
Crude Impact
Organizations:
The Post-Carbon Institute www.postcarbon.org
Sarah Anne Edwards, Ph.D., LCSW, is an ecopsychologist, author, and advocate for sustainable lifestyles. She is founder of the Pine Mountain Institute (www.PineMountainInstitute.com ), a continuing education provider for professionals seeking to empower their clients to respond to today’s challenging economic and environmental realities.
Linda Buzzell, M.A., M.F.T. is a psychotherapist and career counselor in private practice in Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, California. She is the founder of the International Association for Ecotherapy (http://thoughtoffering.blogs.com/ecotherapy ) and the co-editor of Ecotherapy: Psyche and Nature in a Circle of Healing (in press, Sierra Club Books).
**************************************************************************
“For a long-term solution to people’s mental problem, criminalization of politics and society must be stopped. Solving socio-economic problems and establishing a moral society would heavily reduce the need of anti-depressants.”
~Mohan Nepali, Kathmandu
***************************************************************************
Sunlight and mirrors - voila! electricity!!
Published April 16th, 2008 in Invention, Change, Climate, Technology, Future, Science, Solar Energy, Electricity, Cleanup, Ecosystems, Innovation, Energy, Earth, Global Warning, Ideas, Greenhouse Gases, Environment and Sustainability. 0 Comments
SOLAR THERMAL ENERGY. An article by Joseph Romm on Salon.com says “the solar energy you haven’t heard of is the one best suited to generate clean electricity for generations to come.” Eureka! That’s the kind of positive report most of us would like to hear more often. The article, “The technology that will save humanity,” says that sunlight concentrated by mirrors will replace carbon based power in the coming century, and that it will be adequate and efficient enough to meet the demands of the future.
Solar thermal power sounds like the answer to our anxieties, the way out of endless conflict over resources, the method to clean up our world, and, as the title says, humanity’s salvation. What could be better than sustainable, clean, efficient, abundant, inexpensive and renewable energy resources. Haven’t we always known that if we could harness the power of the sun, we would hold the key to everything?
With possibilities abounding for a world that is warm and wired, but clean and green, what could we be waiting for? READ ABOUT IT. Also, thanks to Editor Steve Anderson of Chile’s Santiago Times, who steered us to a video of German activist Hermann Scheer speaking about renewable energy.
Did you know? shift happens!
Published April 5th, 2008 in Invention, Change, Education, Evolving planet, Future, Technology, Attitudes, Electronic devices, Innovation, Earth, Ideas, Trends, Computers and Uncategorized. 0 Comments
When EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd told me recently that college kids today are being prepared for jobs that haven’t even been invented when they started college, and how many college graduates there are each year (as represented in the image), we both stared auspiciously into our respective bowls of posole at a local Mexican restaurant and shook our heads. A little later, she sent me an amazing presentation of facts from THE FISCHBOWL, a “staff development blog for Littleton, Colorado’s Arapahoe High School teachers exploring constructivism and 21st century learning skills.”
For those young souls among us who are under 25, maybe all this change and “cool stuff” that is happening in the world is commonplace, because they were born in times of profound change. However, for those of us over 30 (the age over which one was not to be trusted in the 1960’s) our heads are aswirl on a minute-to-minute basis, and it is impossible to know very much at all about even the tiniest bit of the slightest fraction of a slice of what all is going on in the world. Try as we might, we just have to surrender, if we will, to thrilling and exotic rides in our cybertravels and send dispatches from distant stops worth noting. DID YOU KNOW?/SHIFT HAPPENS is one of them that offers a compressed view of the present and future.
For instance, did you know that in 10 years China is predicted to be the number one English speaking country? Or, that it took 38 years for the radio to reach a market audience of 50 million, only 10 years for TV to reach that many, and a mere 4 for the computer to do so? And that third generation fiber optics has recently been tested that pushes 10 billion bits per second down a fiber, which is equivalent to 1,900 CD’s or 150 million simultaneous phone calls per second?!
You can see the brief presentation as a mind-boggling video packed with information with visual and audio embellishment on YouTube, or as a slide show that you can navigate yourself through this ocean of information.
Did someone recently say to me, “Who can keep up?” Well, The Fischbowl says, SHIFT HAPPENS!
Lunar eclipse in bozeman
Published March 21st, 2008 in Celestial event, Visual Imagery, Images, Stargazing, Lunar eclipse, Eclipses, Moon, Space, Astronomy, Natural phenomena and Uncategorized. 10 CommentsI received this beautiful image today over email with the following description:
“This image was made by Chad Trettin, a photographer based in Bozeman, Montana. His original message says: ‘This is last night’s total lunar eclipse (February 20) as seen from 8 miles west of Bozeman. It was 3.5 hours from start to finish. Hope all of you got to see it in person. For those of you on the other side of the planet or who missed it, there will be another one in about 3 years.’ ”
I’m trying to decide if this image is a photo-illustration instead of an actual photo. What I do know is that the arc of a full moon over a 3.5 hour period does not cover the entire horizon, so I cannot see how this image could be authentic. However, it makes a great illustration of a total lunar eclipse.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? And Chad, if you are out there, we hope to hear from you about how you created this image!
The worldwide telescope coming in march
Published February 29th, 2008 in WorldWide Telescope, Software, Stargazing, Virtual Observatory, Invention, Science, Education, Images, Photographs, Natural phenomena, Astronomy, Space, Time and Space, Ideas, Visual Imagery, Trends and Innovation. 0 Comments
***”We may be tiny, but we are truly, wonderfully significant”***
Roy Gould, researcher at the Harvard Center for Astrophysics, gave a presentation on TED TALKS announcing the arrival this spring of the WorldWide Telescope (WWT), sometimes called the Virtual Observatory, a new software capability created by Microsoft that takes the best raw images from all our most powerful telescopes and weaves them together seamlessly, producing an holistic view of the universe. This, on the 400th anniversary of Galileo looking for the first time at the heavens through a telescope. Seeing across the entire spectrum of light to worlds previously invisible, Gould says, is a transformative experience and we will soon have a very different idea about who we are within the context of the greater whole. Not surprisingly, he suggests that everything about astronomy and astronomy education will be changed. The best part for any and everybody: the software will be downloadable, and it will be free.
View this inspiring and exciting announcement of the WorldWide Telescope HERE on TED TALKS. And see some initial reactions to the WWT.
Whole Foods to quit plastic bags. need I say more?
Published February 15th, 2008 in Attitudes, groceries, Food, Ecosystems, Environment, Innovation, Plants and Uncategorized. 13 CommentsEclipse excitement building for february 20
Published February 13th, 2008 in Visual Imagery, Celestial event, Images, Stargazing, Science, Lunar eclipse, Eclipses, Earth, Space, Astronomy, Natural phenomena and Moon. 0 Comments
A great buzz is going around about the upcoming total lunar eclipse that will occur on February 20th, and just in case you can’t find news about it absolutely everywhere else as well as on this site, I thought I would add a little more to the excitement. We haven’t had a total lunar eclipse since August 28th of 2007, and it will be 2010 until there is another. Think back to last August and remember where you were, what you saw, and how you felt during the reddening of that late summer moon. I remember getting up in the middle of the night at about 3:30 am (in Texas) to see the progressed eclipse at its fullest, and I thought it was worth dragging myself out of bed and going out in my back yard for that special event. It was beautiful.
Maximum eclipse this time will occur at 10:26 pm EST, 9:26 pm CST, 8:26 pm MST, and 7:26 pm PST, and since we are still in the winter months, it will be easily visible across all four time zones in the Americas as well as elsewhere in Europe and Western Africa. Read more about it from NASA. You can find details there about the start, maximum and finish times, and what exactly to expect to see.
All eclipses are extraordinary events - some more so than others - but there is something romantic about a lunar eclipses that I find unique. Why? Perhaps because we can look straight at the moon with no visual protection, see the shadow of the earth moving across the face of the moon in real time, and then experience the awe-inspiring site of the moon actually turning red before our very eyes (NASA says sometimes it appears turquoise). This is mysterious and dreamy drama in my book, in contrast to the powerful and highly dramatic nature of a solar eclipse, which turns a bright day dark and cannot be directly viewed with the naked eye, lest the eyes be damaged. I’ve never heard that animals scramble around during a lunar eclipse like they do in a solar eclipse, and I’ve never really heard anyone refer to a solar eclipse as “romantic,” but I’d love to hear observations from readers who have stories of eclipses past you’d like to share.
Here’s another item found on Google Images from Denver’s Chamberlin Observatory showing the anatomy of a total lunar eclipse in 2004.

Modern ruins and urban decay
Published January 23rd, 2008 in Toxic wastes, Cleanup, Urban decay, Ecosystems, Images, Sustainability, Environment and Human World. 6 Comments
I received an email the other day containing a description and photos of an amazing urban phenomenon, the Michigan Central Station, a Beaux-Arts masterpiece designed by the same firm that designed Grand Central Station in New York. However, the now-defunct Michigan Central has been vacated and abandoned to the elements. The photo you see here is one of several that look more like paintings than photos, and the more I look at them, the more I think they are not Photoshopped portraits but legitimate photographic images of a mind-boggling and almost unfathomable urban ruin right here in the United States. Without further ado, check out this piece about Michigan Central Station, and for more information, read about it on Wikipedia. And if your visual curiousity gets the best of you and you want to see more, additional photos can be found on forgottendetroit.com.
What have you changed your mind about…and why?
Published January 11th, 2008 in World Thinking Center, Philosophy, Faith, Change, Attitudes, Body & Mind, Ideas, Mind and Uncategorized. 3 CommentsI ran across a very interesting item on the Internet recently, and I want to share it. Edge dot org calls itself The World Question Center, and presents many prominent voices from “the world’s finest minds,” each offering answers to such questions as: What are you optimistic about? What is the most important invention of the last two thousand years…and why? What do you believe is true even though you cannot prove it? One of the most interesting items is the Edge Annual Question for 2008, “What have you changed your mind about….and why? Edge offers the following statement on the origins of change: “When thinking changes your mind, that’s philosophy. When God changes your mind, that’s faith. When facts change your mind, that’s science.” 165 contributors have posted personal answers to this question on Edge, and their comments are fascinating.
I like the idea that there are no static answers, and that change is not only possible in physical reality but also in opinion — that a fixed idea can give way either to new evidence, re-thinking, or even to some sort of intuition. Like many, I struggle on a daily basis to re-evaluate my thinking, and the thing I’ve changed my mind about is, well, about changing my mind. Whereas I once thought “ok, that’s it,” I’ve become more maleable as of late, and have in fact changed my mind about some of my formerly held opinions. Privately, I must tell you, it’s about time and I feel grateful to be freed from the notion that I wouldn’t, couldn’t change my mind once it was made up. What a relief.
Someone told me once, “Situations change first, attitudes second.” Could it be the other way around as well? I see more and more evidence that it is so. Check out a few of the Edge contributors who have uprooted themselves from a formerly held notion, and then offer your comments here on E&S on how you might have experienced a similar change of heart, mind, or attitude.





