A spell for the sensuous*
*A nod to The Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram (1996). Good shit.
Speaking of good shit, this one’s a quick drop for the soil-lovers, the seed grinders, and those turned on by a fertile planet.
When was the last time you lay down outside, belly to the earth? Give it a go; inconvenience yourself if need be.
Fuck any and all norms that say grown humans should not lie on the ground outside, hip bones to the dirt, physically sensing the strength of gravity holding our bodies in a life-death embrace with this planet, its pulse circling through our soft animal hearts.
From inside this embrace, we are impossibly tiny yet perfectly formed. We are also giants, sky-high shadowers of beings that are smaller still: a ladybug on a clover leaf, the colouring of a rock, a miniature forest of ground cover, the multi-organismic creature that is living soil.
This vantage point is powerful in generating a sense of immediacy. For whatever reason, it allows us to temporarily override the forces of language. Perhaps the action of lying belly-down triggers deep, formless rememberings of infancy, of the time before we had language to process our sensing.
Or maybe it lights up the most ancient structures of our brains, remnants of our reptile ancestry that have stayed on for the ride. In a very real way, elements of these ancestors are built into us even as we speed into our next iteration. In the same fashion, our primeval ancestors carried stamps of a time when our being was materially undifferentiated from the earth, even from the very fabric of space - a time when the synthesis of elements making up organic life was a seed yet to germinate.
Or it could be simply that lying belly-down outdoors is, for many of us, an unusual thing to do, thereby opening up novel sensory landscapes and a fresh perceptual lens.
Enough talk. Why not give it a whirl? Try doing it for at least 5 minutes each day for a week, and see what happens.