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like tumbleweeds. Things don’t really decay here. They shrivel, dry up or slowly rust, yet remain present, as they gradually erode into dust. A thick, dusty atmosph... itable to humans. “There were people here and now they are not”. The Hohokam tribe populated the Sonoran... ritual for these haunted utopias look like? Could they be transformed, or gradually reused and recycled,
like tumbleweeds. Things don’t really decay here. They shrivel, dry up or slowly rust, yet remain present, as they gradually erode into dust. A thick, dusty atmosph... itting sensory phenomena to mathematical scaling; they were embodiments of his relations with others and... itable to humans. “There were people here and now they are not”. The Hohokam tribe populated the Sonoran
elf. I cherish such experiences precisely because they take me beyond the bounds of detached observation... eurological programming. By the twentieth century they had drugs that could explode the 'I' metaphor, but they didn't have the conceptual framework to understand what they were doing. We have it. NeoShinto is just a techn
sert, which is our very ascesis. On the contrary, they inhabit it, they pass through it, over it
<cite>Gilles Deleuze, Dialogues</cite></blockquote>
To make... synonym for natural). Most people survive because they conform to these patterns, because they behave normally. […] But then suddenly you get a deviant which
ckquote>Deserts possess a particular magic, since they have exhausted their own futures, and are thus fr... vironmental politics." points out China Miéville. They cannot be separated from pollution, climate chang... eople, plants, plastics (etc) and the environment they live in? What peculiar futures or parallel presen... ctivity that would embrace more than just humans; they lent support to the view that all elements of the
s in the deserts of the North-American Southwest. They are written as a panexperiential travelogue throu... taneously descriptive, reflective and suggestive. They include contextual information alongside direct e... in critical questions and speculative scenarios. They deliberately incorporate the subjective vantage p... like tumbleweeds. Things don’t really decay here. They shrivel, dry up or slowly rust, yet remain presen
e fully aware of the duality of their lives, that they live in a public world that cannot, in principle,... d deeper world that claims their true allegiance. They are split and know it. Part of the force of their lives is that they must struggle heroically to heal this split throu
sts say to pay attention when plants come to you; they’re bringing you something you need to learn.
[..... You must follow the green ones, and find out how they live; for they are the clever alchemists who keep the world going. You must visit an ancient rainforest
llenge us in how we open our body onto the world. They ask something new of us and so we find something ... ude of things of the world ask something from us. They call for particular conversations which we respon... which are there before us, are there only because they awaken an echo in our bodies and because the body
ul things by chance. Strokes of good or bad luck, they lead us into byways and freeways from which we ma... een their ecological surrounds and the social. Or they are beacons of transmission and reception linked across space and time. They are born of geological time, stand currently with
(and certain truths), only reveal themselves when they are not clearly visible.
**The Rule of Slow App... y, other places behave like a director in chief – they accept you, but you will need to wait. We never a... whole eras and then awake into a period in which they are disorientated.
**The Rule of Reciprocal Awa
ochemical capacities of plants to produce images. They resemble photographic negatives, but they are created without optics or light. Instead, these ‘biochemi
an open-ended assemblage, not a logical machine; they gesture to the so-much-more out there. They tangle with and interrupt each other—mimicking the patchine
maginatively projected onto the things with which they perceive themselves to be surrounded. Rather it i... e for scientists to be in the very world of which they seek knowledge. Yet all science depends on observ
blade-like ovipositor on the flowers’ seeds. When they hatch, the yucca moth caterpillars eat the seeds—... imate change. The night time lows are higher than they have been, and daytime highs are getting higher,