02 July 2023

Making meaning in mind or heart or in the world, indoors or outdoors

 

square photo of rain-washed bushes surrounding stump on which a plucked leaf holds 8 or 10 red berries for birds
Boardwalk to wetlands of Meijer Gardens - berries on leaf
Many walking paths and forest hiking routes seem to pass by a cairn, usually less than 1-foot in height. Sometimes it is near a camp site, other times at a river crossing, or by a log where people sit to rest. How this began (from ancient times in mountains of Scotland, Korea, maybe also in Himalaya routes, too) and why it should spread far and wide lately is a puzzle to figure out another day. But when it comes to marking a place (Biblical description of 'ebenezer' stone pile to mark an important event) physically or with a name, people seem predisposed to do so. Attaching language with land makes it convenient to refer to in conversation when others know that name and that location, too. It is a way to make meaning: give it a name, leave a mark. These days with digital devices a person can mark a location with a map pin or by taking a photo. So the many forms of making meaning now expands with each new way of interacting with the surroundings and with each other electronically.

This photo just an arm's length from the boardwalk fencing near the wetland area of Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park shows one person's mark: it could be a bit of artistic expression (all-natural elements; contrasting colors of red+green on a brown background), an act of well-intended kindness to an unknown wild creature to feast upon (or bait for a hunting animal to seize whatever ventures there to dine, or it could be altogether a mystery --somehow the person felt like doing this. Singly or in some combination these and other meanings could be part of the actions leading to this result. Of course, even without imposing human intentions onto the environment, there is preexisting meaning in the cycle of the day and night, the annual pattern of seasons, and the circle of life. A careful observer can see these meanings play out or interpret them indirectly when signs are there, something like reading a book or decoding a riddle.

Whether it is inserting human meanings and purposes into a scene or working to read the preexisting logic and tensions of the natural world on its own terms, people are hungry to make meaning or find it already there for them to discern. The lack of meaning or having no point seems worse than meaning that is misguided or interpretations that are incomplete or simply wrong; at least there is some form of meaning, out of tune though it may be.

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