helen99: A windswept tree against a starlit sky (Default)
[personal profile] helen99
At first glance, rocks seem to be nothing more than chunks of planetary matter whose molecules have crystallized into rigid structures. They also seem to be relatively permanent, inanimate features on the landscape. Having observed the rocks in my yard for over ten years, though, I've noticed that they're by no means permanent. After several months, they dig little pockets for themselves themselves to rest in, and each year they slowly sink deeper into the pockets until they entirely disappear from view.

I've also observed a tendency of rocks to drift to new positions in the yard, especially after a severe storm.

Both the sinking and the drifting occur with the help of water, wind, and plant life. The water softens the earth, allowing the rocks to sink under their own weight. The wind buffets the rocks, perhaps moving them a few feet, especially if there is a heavy rain creating rivulets of water to further propel them. Vines grow up around the rocks, pulling them toward the earth.

It's probable that much of this activity is the result of random interactions between elements. However, sometimes the interactions between water, wind, plant life, and rocks seem to be a dance, inspired by the nature of the participants.

Rocks are among the oldest structures on earth, and are composed of hard elements and compounds, including silicon. Silicon is an excellent recorder and storer of information. Many rocks have been in existence for billions of years, and if they are able to record as well as I think they are, they will have stored a vast amount of information during that time. I believe that given enough time and enough information, anything can achieve sentience.

Rocks do not all have the same feel. To me, some feel "sentient" (not in the sense we understand sentience) and some do not. The ones with the sentient feel may be quite plain on the outside, or they may have intricately irregular surfaces that are twisted into interesting shapes.

Occasionally, I encounter rocks that appear to have faces, most of which feel quite sentient. Usually, a rock will have more than one face -- they've had enough time to develop many personalities, after all. The image below is a rock on the surface of Mars, which has remained undisturbed long enough to develop a rather interesting personality...



Whether these faces reflect the internal personality of the rock by some intentional dance between the rock and other elements, or if they are just the chance result of eons of erosion, is hard to say. Whatever the answer may be, I've kept a few of them with me for many years. One in particular (a little pinkish-white rock), has multiple faces. On one side, it's angry/scary but winking at the same time. On one side, it's sad. And in profile, it's laughing. I call it my laughing rock.

To the left is a picture of a bigger rock with many faces (not someone I know)... These rocks seem rather curmudgeonly, but then, what would one expect from someone over a billion years old.

The faces probably do not reflect any emotion I am familiar with, though, because a rock is not a warm-blooded, mobile, mortal creature with mammalian emotions. It is just a very, very old aggregate. On the other hand, they're born of the same earth that we are, so maybe there's more of a similarity than I'd initially suspect. Many of the rocks with faces come from the banks of the tiny creeks running through Maryland's wild places. Perhaps the water and the rock danced together to reflect the endless cycles of light, dark, and water that the rock "saw" for billions of years. Whenever I am in a wild place, I am the most fascinated by the deposits of rocks by the creek beds, where the rocks with faces like to dance with the water...

Some people believe that these are "Spirit Stones" (that nature spirits inhabit them). Maybe... But I think it's the intelligence of the rock itself, which is the intelligence of the earth. After thousands of years of information gathering, a rock may sink back to the earth's crust and return to the larger aggregate.

But before it does that, it may smile, frown, wink, or laugh in the direction of those who chance to see it...

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-29 04:09 pm (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
That's true - I didn't mean to imply that rocks never host spirits - just that it's not always a 'spirit' that people are feeling but rather the fact that the rocks do have a kind of intelligence which operates, as you said, at a different frequency.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-29 07:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iliandriel.livejournal.com
You are wise beyond your years dear friend. I am not surprised that you already know this and you are right not all rocks have spirits in them. Just their life flow.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 12:06 am (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
Oh dear! How old do I have to be before I'm wise? (Or more accurately, a wise guy?) I'm 57, you know...

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-06-04 08:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iliandriel.livejournal.com
Well I'm 56 so don't feel bad.lol We get wiser as we go. At least we are learning.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 12:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvaerina-tael.livejournal.com
I guess this is one of those obvious "well of course they have a different intelligence" moments. They operate on vastly different scales of time than we do, and they experience thing very differently than we do. I can only imagine what the formations, say, to the bottom of the Grand Canyon would say, never mind near the arctic (actually, I have a piece of rock from there, a rather nice of gneise (metamorphic). It 'feels' ancient.

Maybe we can tie this in to everything else we are doing with regards to sensing environments and working with the environment to get a better understanding of interactions. If you like, I have (somewhere) a workshop with a meditation that explores this concept. Might be interesting to see if people will bring a rock with them they have an affinity with.

Incidentally, as with what Jarin is doing, I think I may just have mine take place at the Faery Cairn.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 12:56 am (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
Sounds good! I'll add "bring a rock" to the description.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 01:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvaerina-tael.livejournal.com
That could work as an extension, though I was thinking of it as a separate workshop... And a visualization/meditation would certainly help, one hopes, make people more aware.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 01:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvaerina-tael.livejournal.com
I just thought of something else, possibly better than rocks. Seeds, soil, and inherent spirit therein. That is planting something, and nourishing it. This does not mean taking it home, but finding an area within the area, the Cairn if we do indeed do it there (I get the distinct impression that they would really like it, even from the distance of Halifax), and plant something people think will benefit the Fae, and can be used by those around, again encouraging that energy flow.

This is not to say that we shouldn't do something involving rocks, and their spiritual essence/intelligence, just not necessarily at this workshop. I'm setting myself up for two again, aren't I?

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 02:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yldann.livejournal.com
We can bring seeds, organic potting soil, etc, and anything else you decide. Let us know. [livejournal.com profile] silverbromide and [livejournal.com profile] dancinglights are bringing compost and clay to make seedballs and so they'll probably have more seeds than they can use as well (plus they may need some way to use the seedballs). When Orion (the original Cairn designer) lived at Moonridge (a tract of land he and two others owned for a while), they planted all kinds of beautiful flowering and fruiting vines and shrubs around it. The stones and the plants got along famously (they love each other). The fae that Orion worked with for whom the Cairn was built were definitely present there. If you feel up to doing two workshops, I'm all for it -- I'd say go ahead and prepare both, and then if you only feel up to actually doing one (after considerable travel, etc.), you can save the other one for next time.

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 02:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvaerina-tael.livejournal.com
Consider the request put in, especially seeds that will self propagate. I know the land gets trampled there a lot, perhaps there is something we can do about that as well. A bunch of kin beautifying the Cairn. Maybe we can do something also involving mushrooms. There are areas in and around the Cairn, I believe, that are secluded enough. And I'm sure that will be appreciated... Come to think of it, it will go a long way to rehab the soil, and they are already setting up perimeter.

Let me know what you think about amalgamating all these elements. It make one rather long workshop...

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 02:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yldann.livejournal.com
Our original description was,

"Ethical symbiosis with the land as a form/system of Elven magic: Being able not only to sense what is there, but communicating with it to determine how best to proceed. Working *with* our environments and not against them, creating a symbiosis that is more awake and alive than the sum of its parts."

Will this workshop be incorporated into the stuff we've just been talking about, or is that a separate thing altogether?

Here's what I've gleaned from what we just talked about:

"If we want to bring what is "out there" more in line with us, harmoniously one hopes, we need to work with it. And as we generally want to live in healthier environments ('cause they ain't) that means getting down and dirty with natural systems. As mundane as it sounds, soil is a wonderfully complex system, a living system. This means that it isn't purely "physical" either, that it does have rich energetics there as well. In order for us to better understand how we can shift the system, we have to work 'with' the system. This is one of the ways we manifest as go-betweens with the natural environment. "Go-betweens with the natural environment" is what various forms of fae are, after all - they dance between elements, and underly the interactions in nature... Encouraging life to flourish rather than beating it into one's own image or using it up. This is a workshop that explores this concept (includes guided meditation). Bring a seed to plant by the Cairn."

I'm probably describing a really long workshop in the above paragraph (a presentation, a meditation and a planting) but they tie in a lot... Describing what is going on, meditating with the seed (or or mushroom spawn) and sensing its interactions, and then planting the seed/spawn near the Cairn. I can get some edible mushroom spawn from Fungi Perfecti. You may want to decide how long you want to spend with the workshop(s) and decide what you want to include from these description and/or how you want to change them.

I'll leave the refining part to you...

Re: Rocks

Date: 2008-04-30 11:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvaerina-tael.livejournal.com
When you figure that species are a lot more interconnected that we originally thought, and that we really do come from the same stuff, whether it's from a universal or multiversal perspective w/r to the big bang, and further that we are capable of connecting up through that "subtle" medium in between, then perhaps we should combine everything up together.

And I am going to have to throw some physics stuff in got good measure anyway...

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