A Better World Is Waiting — Priscilla Stuckey

Priscilla Stuckey
7 min readAug 18, 2024

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When we shift our story of nature

Every once in a while it’s a good idea to sit down and figure out — again — why you do what you do. When I took up that challenge recently, I found that everything I write comes down, one way or another, to this: a better world is possible. It’s waiting. And we get there by changing our story of nature.

Welcome to Nature :: Spirit! Where we talk about relating to nature as family, kin, and friends. Where every part of nature is not an “it” but a “who.” Where we explore how shifting our worldview makes a different — and better — world possible.

When I was a teenager, sitting in the grass reading a book under the weeping birch tree in our yard, feelings its threads of branches brush my shoulders, I never dreamed that years later this same tree would teach me about deeper mysteries of Earth.

Slim white trunk with dangling thready branches and green lacy cutout leaves.
Cutleaf weeping birch, like the one I grew up with. This one was my neighbor decades later in Boulder.

I was brought up in the Protestant way of regarding God as separate from nature — up there, transcendent. By the time I’d become a feminist in my early twenties, I realized that God was going to have to be found down here as well, in my body, in the ground. Then in grad school I encountered the ancient philosophy of nondualism, and that changed me once again, moving my center of authority within.

Episode 39, The Knowing Inside; or how my center of authority moved within

But it was getting felled by a chronic illness in my early thirties that shifted my worldview the hardest. Dumped off the merry-go-round of life, spending days lying on a bench in our backyard staring at a redwood tree, I struggled to make sense of things. I was stuck at home, watching my friends move on with their lives. Yet trees and plants and birds came to offer their companionship. And lacking the hustle of deadlines and work, I was finally quiet enough inside to listen to them.

I will never forget the day the birch tree of my youth surprised me by visiting me in spirit. It was a farewell visitation, I found out later when I spoke with my brother, who said the tree was dying. My old friend had come to say goodbye.

Episode 4, Listening to Nature; or how I learned that trees can talk

The experience shifted me into a different way of perceiving; I crossed a threshold. After that day I could never again regard the beings of Earth as merely things, or the soil and plants and rocks as merely resources. I was thrown into a world of relationships, and I’ve been learning ever since what that means.

Not long after the birch tree helped wake me up, I encountered the words of Carol Lee Sanchez of the Laguna Pueblo.

Related: Episode 40, Trusting Inner Knowing

Sanchez wrote, “There are trees and grasses and flowers and birds and ants and bees waiting for you to . . . say hello to them-to call them sister, brother, cousin, or friend. They are your relatives; they hear your thoughts as you travel around your town or city.”

Her words took root in me, and they were blossoming years later when I wrote my first book, Kissed by a Fox: And Other Stories of Friendship in Nature (2012). It tells the story of the birch tree — and the bald eagle and the creek and the red fox and others — who nudged me toward seeing every part of nature as alive, as animate. As “whos” instead of “its.” And it tells the larger story of a Western culture that gave up on the intelligence and heart animating every part of Earth. It shows how the stories of nature we tell ourselves, in our science and religion, keep us locked in a way of life that is threatening our very survival on Earth.

Our story of nature needs to change.

Winner of the 2013 WILLA Award in Creative Nonfiction. For more info, see my Kissed by a Fox page.

At Nature :: Spirit we seek to walk in that change. Through podcasts and posts (up to twice a month) we deepen our connection to Nature-Spirit, and we explore how shifting our worldview makes a different — and better — world possible for all of us here on this precious Earth.

Indigenous traditions have had it right all along: the Earth, and every part of it, is alive. Indigenous peoples relate to all other inhabitants of Earth as kin, which is what has empowered them to steward the Earth with such care.

This is a hint of the better world that is waiting when we shift our story of nature — a way of life directed toward caring for the Earth and one another.

Episode 24, A Duty of Care: Four Indigenous voices on caring for land and people

When every part of nature is a “who” not an “it,” the world gets better in other ways too.

In a world of subjects, not objects, we humans are not more worthy than anyone else; we are just one part in the circle of creation. Nature has a radical commonality; it’s a web of kinfolk where all of us matter and all of us together are creating a future we will share. And we need to offer reciprocity and respect to others if we want to survive. These are values that Indigenous peoples have been practicing for millennia; the rest of the world needs to learn from them, and we need learn quickly. The Earth asks it of us.

Episode 45, What Does the Earth Ask of Us? From a talk by Robin Wall Kimmerer

If the world is made up of subjects, not objects, then owning nature or any piece of it violates the circle of kinship. As Native people say, “You can’t own your mother!” Right away the current system of landownership is called into question, and capitalism loses its ground — literally. Then we are free to imagine a world where nobody profits from owning land, and commodifying the others of the Earth becomes unthinkable.

Episode 48, What If Land Were Not Property?

The current Western worldview is taking us to the brink of destruction because it doesn’t make sense. It’s not aligned with how nature works. So the next question becomes, How did we get here? Trained in history, I often explore how our society’s worldview developed. You can find a whole collection of episodes on this at the Histories of Nature link on my Substack home page.

There’s the famous idea that Western society learned to dominate nature from the creation story of Genesis. It’s an idea so common it’s taken for granted. But does the real history bear this out? We talk about this in Episode 29.

Episode 29, Where Did We Go Wrong?

And we look at a law code from ancient Mesopotamia, which became one of the foundations of Western law. It shows a structure of inequality that remains all too familiar today, a system of law founded on protecting property, as systems of hierarchy often are.

Episode 34, Facing the Past; or, what does an ancient law code have to do with the current Supreme Court?

We learn too about systems of law founded on other premises, for example, how Aboriginal peoples set their law directly in the land.

Episode 17, The Law Is in the Ground

After Kissed by a Fox was published, I faced a reckoning — one of those times when Life catches up to you, sits you down, and makes you listen. At the time I wasn’t happy about it, but what I learned from it is precious beyond words. I entered a several-year period of spiritual retreat, spending time most days in shamanic-style meditation, listening to spirit by listening to nature.

One of the great gifts of a world where everyone is a “who” not an “it” is that everyone has things to say, and by training our hearts in openness and our minds to be carefully attentive, we can commune with the others of this Earth.

Tamed by a Bear (2017) grew out of my journals of the first year of that retreat. It shows me developing a relationship with an inner friend, a jovial, wise Bear who coached me toward living with clear eyes and a peaceful heart.

Book cover of Tamed by a Bear showing a brown bear sitting upright on a sandy landscape gazing quietly toward the camera.
More info on my Tamed by a Bear page.

A shamanic-style path was at first was hard for me to embrace, and I explain why in Episode 44.

Episode 44, You’re the Fish

I write often about the spiritual practice of opening the heart because it’s the first step in cultivating nature spirituality.

Episode 30, Cultivating Nature Spirituality

And I also offer help for others who wish to engage in shamanic-style meditations, or spirit journeys.

Episode 23, Going on a Spirit Journey

Life, it seems, is never done with us, so in my sixties I’ve revised my story of self once again: I learned I’m autistic. It brought a feeling of relief because it made sense of certain experiences that had puzzled me all my life.

Episode 38, With Autism It All Made Sense

And if you’ve made it this far with me, thank you so much! I live now on the land of the Kānaka Maoli, the Hawaiian people, and I take a lot of joy in caring for this land. Sometimes I write about the plants and people of this island, especially about restoring our native dryland forests here on Maui.

Caring for the Local Earth; with pretty pictures of Hawaiian plants

Again, welcome, and I’m so glad you’re here!

Originally published at https://priscillastuckey.com on August 18, 2024.

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Priscilla Stuckey
Priscilla Stuckey

Written by Priscilla Stuckey

Following the heart, listening to nature. Podcast: NATURE-SPIRIT, Exploring the Spirituality of a Living World. Books: KISSED BY A FOX and TAMED BY A BEAR.

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