Thursday, August 19, 2010

Living with Nature

Our ancient civilization, or all traditional civilizations, I believe, see man as a part of nature. Usually, all ancient traditions teach us to conduct our lives so as not to destroy the balance in Nature and not to imperil our own existence. Some go so far as to nurture orphaned babies of wild animals, as this Bishnoi woman is seen doing.


Bishnoi woman feeding her baby and
an orphaned cinkara. Photo taken from Rediff.com

This reminds me of my childhood. The government did have the meteorological department, but given their capabilities now in terms of weather prediction, one can easily imagine what it could have been some 35-40 years ago. So, during the rainy season, if my mother had to take me somewhere, and was worried that it might rain, she would go to my aunt and ask, "Do you think it may rain?" Of course, this did not mean if it would rain the next five minutes, but rather if it would rain in the next 10-12 hours, a much more difficult question to answer. My aunt would look at the sky and the clouds (and remember, in those days in a suburban town, there were no apartment buildings and nothing hindering your view of the sky in any direction), and come up with her prediction. I do not have a statistics to show how often she was right. But we can assume that she was right a good fraction of time, otherwise my mother would not trust her.

I definitely do not have the ability to predict rain by looking at the sky. My son hardly ever looks at the sky. Somewhere, our civilizational progress is taking us away from our Natural roots!

1 comment:

sm said...

great post
and thanks for the pic
this is ancient India and true India