Nature's internet: how trees talk to each other in a healthy forest | Suzanne Simard | TEDxSeattle

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • This fascinating talk presents the scientific research that shows the interconnectedness of life in the forest ecosystem. It takes us beneath the forest floor where we learn how trees are communicating and exchanging resources. Going beyond the simple view of a forest as a resource to be exploited, it presents the forest as a complex network of life. Her examination of the relationships that make up the complexity of nature present compelling support for the idea that “We are all one”
    Suzanne Simard studies the surprising and delicate complexity in nature. Her main focus is on the below-ground fungal networks that connect trees and facilitate underground inter-tree communication and interaction. Her team's analysis revealed that the fungi networks move water, carbon and nutrients such as nitrogen between and among trees as well as across species. The research has demonstrated that these complex, symbiotic networks in our forests -- at the hub of which stand what she calls the "mother trees" -- mimic our own neural and social networks. This groundbreaking work on symbiotic plant communication has far-reaching implications in both the forestry and agricultural industries, in particular concerning sustainable stewardship of forests and the plant’s resistance to pathogens. She works primarily in forests, but also grasslands, wetlands, tundra and alpine ecosystems.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 163

  • @mcanderson0
    @mcanderson0 Před rokem +7

    this should be in the standard curriculum for all school age people, at all grade levels, and reiterated at each and every grade level.

  • @potatoboi8327
    @potatoboi8327 Před 3 lety +27

    out of all the ted talks i've watched -- which is, um, an ABSURD amount -- this is the only one to have ever made me cry :') beautiful

  • @lizzirountree93
    @lizzirountree93 Před 3 lety +14

    this video should have 6 billion views and likes. LOVE!

  • @rahulshadija
    @rahulshadija Před 3 lety +29

    So let's reestablish the relationship between nature and forests . To every person reading this comment I request to do as much as you can for nature and also share this talk as much as you can.

  • @drewchancellor9867
    @drewchancellor9867 Před 6 lety +130

    I clapped by myself at my house for this woman🤗🤗

    • @kapeliza99
      @kapeliza99 Před 6 lety +3

      yess, me too!

    • @stefanbachrodt7072
      @stefanbachrodt7072 Před 4 lety +4

      She's such a breath of fresh air! By far been one of my most favorite Talks!

    • @kouranko
      @kouranko Před 3 lety +3

      But you're never by yourself

    • @rahulshadija
      @rahulshadija Před 3 lety +1

      Me too . She deserves this

    • @elizabethflynn8455
      @elizabethflynn8455 Před 2 lety +1

      Just had my class of 11 year olds watch it. They clapped too.🙂

  • @michellebelcher5397
    @michellebelcher5397 Před 2 lety +24

    Read her book and it lead me here. So good. Put me through so much emotions, but so beautiful. People like her inspire me. I’m glad she never gave up.

  • @joalexsg9741
    @joalexsg9741 Před 3 lety +13

    Blessed be all the avant-garde scientists enlightening the world about plants' intelligence and sensitivity and how beautiful and precious they are. Their detractors are like all the past mediocre minds who tried to hinder the advance of science when the truly brilliant ones made the breakthroughs, and even laughed and scorned them, trying to downplay their finds or shut them up. Thank you ever so much for your brave educational activism and wisdom.

  • @olegog911ll
    @olegog911ll Před 4 lety +35

    Suzanne! You are fantastic! Thank YOU so much for your Science! You've made me cry because I love trees, I love NATURE! I feel connected with plants, animals, minerals...with the Cosmos. I try to respect them so, listening to you has been so motivating! I feel connected to you!
    THANKS so much for devoting your Life to the trees AND for sharing your great knowledge with us! Thanks for letting me know that I'm not alone!
    Suzanne WE ARE ONE! 🤗

  • @shawnfitzpatrick1961
    @shawnfitzpatrick1961 Před 6 lety +68

    Beautiful, Trees! If you've ever been in the woods, alone, and felt and understood the peace, it is because you are among natures finest friends. Providing you with the very air you breathe and the nourishment for your soul that just cannot be purchased from a retail outlet. And, it is natural, and it is free! Beautiful,Trees!

  • @PeepalBaba-Givemetrees
    @PeepalBaba-Givemetrees Před 2 lety +3

    respect your work so so much ☘️☘️ after working 45 years in forests, this is music to my ears. 🌿

  • @saraaranel
    @saraaranel Před 4 lety +18

    She is by far one of the most amazing people I've ever listend to.

  • @susanwale8887
    @susanwale8887 Před 6 lety +48

    Amazing talk. I just became a Treesister and I am proud of it. We are working to reforest the world. Our Mother Earth cannot do it alone. Thank you for this powerful message. ❤️🌲

  • @johnswan6759
    @johnswan6759 Před 3 lety +22

    I urge people to look up three things: Permaculture, Bill Mollison and Geoff Lawton. Permacilture growers have known about this stuff for years. Great talk. She's terrific

  • @yusefendure
    @yusefendure Před 5 lety +12

    I was overwhelmed by this woman! We humans can reconnect with nature, and we better do it quickly to save ourselves and the rest of animal life from extinction.

  • @emisode
    @emisode Před 2 lety +3

    As a child, I felt different personalities in trees! Some actually comforted me! Some trees were occupied with the work of getting water to the leaves... too busy to take notice of me

  • @perplexedprimate
    @perplexedprimate Před 6 lety +34

    Such an elegant and lovely distillation of so much important science. Thank you Dr. Suzanne Simard!

  • @TutuSainz
    @TutuSainz Před 6 lety +15

    Aloha Dr. Simard!
    Wiping away my tears right now
    Your research is so beautiful
    What a confirmation that mother earth takes care of all of us from the littlest sprout to the greatest elder
    I believe that nature is infinitely abundant and growing Food forests everywhere is a key to the health and restoration of Mother Earth and abundant well being for all life
    🌈💖🕸🌴🌳🌲
    Thank you 🙏

  • @highland3504
    @highland3504 Před 4 lety +4

    One of the most underrated Ted talks. Smh more need to see this

  • @Julie-bp1zf
    @Julie-bp1zf Před 6 lety +15

    Those kinds of people who restore your faith in humanity!

  • @leonardoortega1831
    @leonardoortega1831 Před 3 lety +4

    That was a heartfelt conversation that gave meaning to our existence ,mostly the subtle ones. Congrats Ma'm.

  • @nyx805
    @nyx805 Před 7 lety +23

    Amazing isn't it, how far curiosity has taken humanity

  • @unrespiro
    @unrespiro Před 4 lety +32

    Amazing talk! The speaker seems so passionate and kind, it's a pleasure hearing her story. The topic is totally mind blowing! Science continues to prove that the only way of survival is cooperation and not competition, but we, humans, are completely blind and deaf to this message, encouraging competition in all areas of life although it makes us utterly miserable. I'm amazed of how Avatar-like her findings are. At the end everything is connected and so we are, even though we never remember it.

    • @eeyjug9849
      @eeyjug9849 Před 2 lety +1

      Humans naturally partake in mutual aid, it's only relatively recently that strict hierarchies and competition became the guiding factor of society.
      This isnt a human problem, it's a societal problem.

    • @evasternak6228
      @evasternak6228 Před rokem +2

      ​@@eeyjug9849 it most certainly is not "relatively recently" re hierarchies - it's the entire history of societies and civilization. Even within tribes there were chiefs/leaders who gained and had more than the rest. And it was passed down rather than democratically elected. It's pretty crazy that we still adhere to hierarchies structured by people who knew nothing about the world or science.

    • @eileenrose1898
      @eileenrose1898 Před rokem +1

      You nailed it, cooperation not competition.

  • @jackbnimblezurc633
    @jackbnimblezurc633 Před 5 lety +9

    😱😍 my father talked to the trees when we were little wherever he saw one in the city or in the woods and now he passed it on to me....😍😱🤩🤗

  • @edgarpina2665
    @edgarpina2665 Před 7 lety +22

    Wonderful, gives a lot of hope in that we, as especies, have the capacity to re-balance our relationship with nature!!!

  • @nl4064
    @nl4064 Před 5 lety +3

    I love this woman she has given us so much. lets run with it and save our forests - and ourselves

  • @leonadrian7257
    @leonadrian7257 Před 2 lety +1

    I just ordered your book, Finding the Mother Tree. I'm surprised I could find your book in PAPERback...little joke there.
    But I really think you know what you are talking about, and i can't wait to read your book.
    I have recently become interested in Buddhism and Taoism, so this book will go right along with them i am sure, as Buddhism has a large belief in oneness, and Taoism holds a lot of respect for nature and how to work with nature instead of against it.
    Thank you for your Ted talk, and for your book, and all the research and time and energy to bring something so profound to the light.

  • @roberthiorns7584
    @roberthiorns7584 Před 5 lety +6

    Excellent Suzanne. Many of us are becoming connected. Keep up the good work.
    Kind regards.
    Robert

  • @ashleydaniels2717
    @ashleydaniels2717 Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you so much for your work. This talk was heartening.

  • @22Tomidjah
    @22Tomidjah Před 7 lety +45

    This is news, that I proved right. I cut down a lot of mother trees on my property, and all their neighbors died within a year. It's true... they communicate with each other... and they mourn too

    • @oliver.quantiles
      @oliver.quantiles Před 7 lety +6

      22rockymtn Similar thing happens to the old peach trees in the back yard of our old house, they died in the year when the village was going to be demolished. Even the meat inside of the last-season peaches were becoming red instead of yellowish white as usual, the threes were about 20 years old. I really miss them...

    • @dominusbalial835
      @dominusbalial835 Před 5 lety +2

      Mourn? Could you explain this further?

    • @sammilee2857
      @sammilee2857 Před 5 lety

      How do they mourn I’m curious ?

  • @m55155
    @m55155 Před 3 lety +5

    Simard is an amazing scientist + also the inspiration for one of the main characters in Richard Power’s novel: The Overstory.

  • @mizzomizz1640
    @mizzomizz1640 Před 7 lety +6

    the end of the talk really makes me cry

  • @josephbourque1032
    @josephbourque1032 Před 3 lety +2

    Nature, humanity, science, and emotion all connected and integrated by her education and feelings. Thank you and I lichens you too.

  • @deborahmendesempowermentco9901

    Thank you for this education. I never knew and now I do. I am a conversationist and campaigner now

  • @sarahbreen5722
    @sarahbreen5722 Před 3 lety +2

    Inspiring talk to go back to old ways of relating preserved by our indigenous people for centuries.

  • @tinrom9465
    @tinrom9465 Před 4 lety +4

    deeply moved by your inspiring story, thank you!!!

  • @jonathangaffin4752
    @jonathangaffin4752 Před 3 lety +5

    The "Elder" trees are the guardians of the Earth & do everything attributed to them. They also foster the microbes that keep the soil healthy. Some First Nation or American Indians practiced "Silviculture" which assures the Elders live to pass along the offspring & keep the forest & or woods vibrant & alive.

  • @JKen989
    @JKen989 Před 4 lety +7

    She is my professor!!! She is just amazing

    • @gabrielacordova-valdivia2271
      @gabrielacordova-valdivia2271 Před 4 lety

      Wendi Zhang what are you studying? And do they teach you this or related topics?

    • @JKen989
      @JKen989 Před 4 lety +2

      @@gabrielacordova-valdivia2271 Hi, I study forestry at university of british columbia, she did teach us some of her projects but not in too much detail though

    • @michelewalburn4376
      @michelewalburn4376 Před 4 lety

      You are very blessed.

  • @revolverheart8735
    @revolverheart8735 Před 2 měsíci

    One of the best Ted talks 🙏🏼♥️

  • @sherbjorkgren2769
    @sherbjorkgren2769 Před rokem +1

    Love this. Everything is connected. Humans are overpopulating the earth at phenomenal rates consuming forests and habitat for agriculture and housing.
    I live on the west coast and last year when I flew home from overseas the sight of deforestation from above was extremely sad to see. Trees replaced by agriculture and buildings Please notice no politicians will address overpopulation.

  • @MNT729
    @MNT729 Před 2 lety +1

    This is just an amazing speech ever I had seen!! What a presentation! This video is really learn me a lot of things!! Just wow!!!

  • @PeepalBaba-Givemetrees

    awesome ☘️ wonderful ☘️

  • @tejuskabadi
    @tejuskabadi Před 7 lety +42

    Anybody else got reminded of the tree of souls from the movie "Avatar" ? We had them here on earth all along! I wonder how much time it will take for us to develop a neural lace to connect with them!

    • @fatalmystic
      @fatalmystic Před 6 lety +2

      yeah :D ... and she's the real life grace augustine :D

    • @ckihooligan
      @ckihooligan Před 6 lety +2

      Try psilocybin mushrooms for chemically communicating with nature.

    • @ulthea
      @ulthea Před 6 lety

      Made my son watch Avatar a few days ago, such an awesome movie.
      I love animals, I love life, but I get annoyed at people who feel that its bad to respect human>animal life while themselves not valuing plant life the same as animal life. We do what we do to survive, but some of us (even while eating meat) appreciate the circle of life. Plants are sentient - just in a different way. Eating anything is immoral depending on your experience, why do vegans not understand this?

    • @marklewis4793
      @marklewis4793 Před 6 lety +1

      if you have a plant based diet,...compost toilets will complete the loop!

  • @Thekidofcolorado24
    @Thekidofcolorado24 Před 6 lety +4

    Absolutely amazing work. So critical to share these words with others.

  • @sarkaragha
    @sarkaragha Před rokem

    What a gentl voice. You are remarkable.

  • @edithrodriguez2998
    @edithrodriguez2998 Před 9 měsíci

    BRAVO !!! THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @oggy4418
    @oggy4418 Před 3 lety +1

    This lady is truly amazing just as her findings. Wow

  • @skye1230
    @skye1230 Před 7 lety +13

    Best Ted guest

  • @gunwrites6222
    @gunwrites6222 Před rokem

    And the thing that connects us and everything else together, running through us and everything else... WATER!

  • @annaawakens7300
    @annaawakens7300 Před 7 lety +7

    Wonderful! You were a joy to watch :-)

  • @justinnevins2499
    @justinnevins2499 Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing, amazing lady!!
    Thankyou 🙏

  • @Rockarollayeah
    @Rockarollayeah Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks Mrs. Simard.

  • @lindareese4579
    @lindareese4579 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for being brave to share this with me....and brave to keep up. Your truth with us...

  • @pallavidas5067
    @pallavidas5067 Před 6 lety +2

    grateful..

  • @MrAndrearagni
    @MrAndrearagni Před rokem

    So beautiful...thanks...

  • @bhuvneshkumar52
    @bhuvneshkumar52 Před 6 lety +7

    Mam this is really really amazing work....hope we will reconnect with nature and be a big happy family

  • @parepidemosproductions4741

    THIS IS BEAUTIFUL

  • @blisswkc3344
    @blisswkc3344 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank y'all so much dearest 🌹
    Y'all such an inspiration 🥰
    Appreciate y'all from the bottom of my heart 💟
    Be Blissful Eternally 🙏👼🌈

  • @MsCjansen
    @MsCjansen Před 3 lety

    Very beautiful and significant thank you for your work

  • @SundayCuppaCoffee
    @SundayCuppaCoffee Před rokem

    Thank you, I love your book - If we all love to breath, thats the value of trees.

  • @kingjaffe321
    @kingjaffe321 Před 2 lety

    This is mind blowing great talk

  • @chenoadove7422
    @chenoadove7422 Před 5 lety +3

    The best Ted talk. Thank you kindly

  • @nicolaablett7790
    @nicolaablett7790 Před 6 lety +2

    MAKES ABSOLUTE SENSE TO ME

  • @foxonyoutub
    @foxonyoutub Před 7 lety +12

    Someone else hearing this resonance with her voice?

  • @julianbarazzutti7960
    @julianbarazzutti7960 Před 3 lety +1

    God bless her

  • @toptradersays
    @toptradersays Před 7 lety +2

    Awesome

  • @selenaclarke
    @selenaclarke Před rokem

    Important stuff

  • @stefanbachrodt7072
    @stefanbachrodt7072 Před 4 lety +2

    17:15 I REMEMBER THE "BIRCH AND FIR SUGAR AND CARBON EXCHANGE" TALK!!!! =DDDD
    Ahhhhh you're too awesome Suzanne! Much love

  • @doctauglyd9861
    @doctauglyd9861 Před rokem

    It only took us thousands of years to realize nature is good yall on point ain't no fooling yall

  • @juadgamer
    @juadgamer Před 3 lety

    Esto es muy bueno, y ahora maso menos se puede ver como repercute en el inconsciente colectivo, soy tecnico Agropecuario, y en el 2018 no dieron todo el tema de micología, y monocultivos y demás cosas.. fue para bien una integración rápida de estos conocimientos

  • @annwachter5985
    @annwachter5985 Před 3 lety +2

    Humans will only survive if individuals are able to pass their positive energies and cultural legacies to their children. Saving ourselves from ourselves starts in the HOME!

  • @ryanstrenke9505
    @ryanstrenke9505 Před 7 lety +7

    I'm 34-year-old and one day i notes tree talking to me in movement's i thought wow so i looked up win trees talk to you and every thing you say is tru and believe me and their is more than you know

    • @jenniferspring8741
      @jenniferspring8741 Před 6 lety +4

      Hi Ryan I think I know what you mean-- like when the branches are moving and there is no wind? I like what you say-- talking to you in movements.

  • @tbrowntracyj
    @tbrowntracyj Před rokem

    Amazing daughter of the forest

  • @lilaclizard4504
    @lilaclizard4504 Před 7 lety +21

    We might think we're "advanced" but talks like this show just how far we still have to go & that in fact in many ways we're more primitive now than centuries ago! Sad really :(
    We, as a species, need to open our eyes!

    • @williamgreene4834
      @williamgreene4834 Před 5 lety +1

      Lilac Lizard
      That's because we don't look and listen to things around us like the primitives did. We have phones now so we are disconnecting from each other at an astonishing rate, though we think the opposite is true. It is sad as you say.

  • @teresawarnke999
    @teresawarnke999 Před 2 lety +1

    I talk with trees and in an area with many cornfields say they don't like the corn, it's turned into a monster.
    The trees a few hundred miles away know nothing of this.

  • @agamennone2009
    @agamennone2009 Před 6 lety +2

    Reminds me twin peaks 😍

  • @colinkelley6493
    @colinkelley6493 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks. This talk really touched and affected me. Question: Is it climate change that is killing the forests, or Acid Rain, or both. Could sick forests be causing climate change?

  • @rudraom9
    @rudraom9 Před 5 lety

    Welcome

  • @Prog4Prog
    @Prog4Prog Před 6 lety +4

    What special event does a tree store salmon nitrogen for centuries?
    Amazing

  • @marshacreary2442
    @marshacreary2442 Před 6 lety +1

    Note she said in a healthy forest

  • @godofhope
    @godofhope Před 6 lety +5

    Very nice presentation technique! Sounds like Steve Jobs! But unfortunately the people are more interested in iPhones than trees :(

  • @squito94
    @squito94 Před 7 lety +5

    I had to watch an ad about machines that destroy trees called fecon before this video. I thought it was ironic or perhaps deliberate on the part of the advertiser.

  • @elainekazimierczuk9379

    Read the book as soon as you can.

  • @dishingthedirt613
    @dishingthedirt613 Před 2 lety

    What study is it that she refers to? Can someone please post the DOI

  • @miguelbyrd2992
    @miguelbyrd2992 Před 6 lety +3

    Lol trees talk to each other through fungi and ergot fungus helped me FEEL trees!!!

  • @tiedupsmurf
    @tiedupsmurf Před 6 lety +1

    How quick does this happen though, are we talking transferring carbon water and nutrients in seconds or over a long period of years ?

    • @kapeliza99
      @kapeliza99 Před 6 lety

      If you write her name in PubMed or Google Scholar search you might find more details in the articles she and her team published

    • @Green.Country.Agroforestry
      @Green.Country.Agroforestry Před 3 lety

      Hours, according to the first experiment that she did with radioactively tagged CO2. I was impressed .. that's pretty darned fast.

  • @tinrom9465
    @tinrom9465 Před 4 lety +1

    and sharing it on facebook and twitter, people are waking up

  • @neelumahendra4695
    @neelumahendra4695 Před rokem

    it is like the movie avatar in real life

  • @kennethbynum4253
    @kennethbynum4253 Před 5 lety +1

    According to the records of arborday and american forest, I am the only american to ever plant a hardwood forest, you can see it on facebook, I keep it academic only

  • @emhem56
    @emhem56 Před rokem +2

    Indigenous wisdom is valuable, and I want my local government, and state government, and federal government, to get off their high horse, and ask for partnerships, and reciprocity, for a chance to show actions that could merit forgiveness of the overbearing and destructive hierarchies established in the (recent) past, that are our present, but need not be our future. Connecting with people in my neighborhood, in my community, in my local government, in my state and federal government, and with the wildlife, the plants--- this is my goal: to deconstruct the oppression by connecting and reciprocity. It is the law of nature to be creative and reciprocal, yet it is also in nature to be destructive and chaotic; the difference lies in the will of people, us with consciousness, and those who choose to overthrow balance. I believe that it is a cruel and maligned thing to actively choose to propagate ignorance in other conscious beings, like Exxon did with suppressing evidence that their actions as a large large corporation were causing damage to humans and our health and the health of the lands on which we live. I imagine that such a choice was made out of fear, and ignorance, but also cruelty, a motive to gain a surplus of money at the expense of life itself. Depriving other living creatures of their right to life, and the right to make choices for themselves, is not the kind of action that can be reciprocated and sustained as such. We are One in that there is the internet connecting so many of us to ideas, til they become our ideas, to consider as perspectives different from our own give us more detail to discern information from. Using the internet to educate ourselves is good, but not enough, because we must also find spaces that are safe for us to unravel our fears and comfort them, and to be accepting as we struggle to understand new knowledge, and we must do this carefully. Finding people who are willing to listen with nonjudgment and compassion is a difficult task, a task of a lifetime, but there will always be one companion: yourself. Make yourself a strong companion to your own being, to provide comfort as best you can, and trust that you will be okay, and that you will seek the new knowledge you need, and adapt your actions to fit it. Build a tribe, over time, by strengthening those around you, who reciprocate strength to you as well. If they do not strengthen you, there will not be enough strength for you to give to them and to yourself, and so you must move on, and believe that there will be strength reciprocated in different relationships. Humans are not like plants, in that not every human will protect each of their kin. Not every mother will honor the dignity of their child and give them the nutrients they need in the world. But there is enough to be shared between all of us in the world, enough for these children. Receiving strength is an honor, that benefits all, but robbing another person of strength leads to unsustainable suffering for all of us. Indigenous wisdom and ways of living have survived thousands and thousands of years; colonized ways have not... and they won't. Either the systems born of colonization are deconstructed, or they will destruct themselves, causing suffering for the colonizers and the colonized, all of us. We have all come from somewhere, and that place is the Earth, and to be granted the strength we need to live still, we must reciprocate the strength to the Earth, and more, than we have taken. No one can do this alone. We are all connected; we must choose whom we are connected to, today, tomorrow, right now. With cruelty? With ignorance? With capital? Or with Connection? Respect? Reciprocity? Balance? Kinship? Elders? Complexity? Resilience? The paths to destruction are clear, and the paths to healing are revealed here in this video, and more, by indigenous people. One who learned two languages, traveled to another hemisphere of the planet, is a person name Nixiwaka Yawanawa, and they presented a TEDx Talk that has 2.8M views at the time that I write this, the same day in which I saw this video; the message being, we are all connected with nature. I am going to plant native seeds in the soil around where I live when the season is right for it, and I am going to join a radical organization with local people near me; I learned of 3 names this morning by speaking to someone who openly showed that they believed in mutual aid as a political identity. So do I. So do people who are in touch with the Earth. People who want to be in touch with their own feelings have so much power; that is why many organizations seek to systematically deprive people of the pleasure of their senses, because a person who is aware of their senses is too powerful to control. Be wary of cults. Be wary of anyone who says, "this is the only right way to feel, I know it, you should know it." There are no "right" feelings, in truth, it is more complicated than that. Be wary of those who do not seem aware of their senses. Such people are in need of healing, but not every person will choose that path. Connecting with people who refuse to feel the discomfort of change will bring suffering, and it will not help them, either. Connection is not something that you owe everyone. I do not owe everyone that I meet a connection, and neither do you. Remember that. The right to choose with whom you make contact is sacred. And when someone does not choose to make contact with you, you must not rob them of their choice. If you do not choose to make contact with someone, but they choose contact with you, you must tell them that their contact is unwanted. If they do not listen, you must show them. If they do not accept this, then you must defend yourself. Can you imagine a healthy forest where the mother trees do not provide to their kin when they are threatened or injured? How could such a forest be healthy? When mother trees are injured, they disperse their nutrients to their kin, to pass along their legacy, because trees and their kin are in a sense very much like one organisms that grows and decays and grows over and over again. You have effects on every other connection in your life, in your network, and you always will. Protecting your boundaries by choosing which contacts and connections you keep is important! It is important for you, and for those around you. I hope that those of us who value connection, respect, reciprocity, balance, kinship, elders, complexity, and resilience will make one organization made up of smaller networks that are strong, so that we are protected from people who still choose to try to make contact when it is communicated clearly that it is not wanted. I hope that older, and younger generations, not just my generation, learn and continue to learn the values of connection, respect, reciprocity, balance, kinship, elders, complexity, and resilience. The value of one of us is not insignificant, when we are One. I am valuable, and my choices matter. You are valuable, and your choices matter. Our friends, enemies, and strangers are valuable, and their choices matter. May we heal together.

  • @saturndirect8085
    @saturndirect8085 Před 3 lety

  • @GhostWithSkin
    @GhostWithSkin Před 6 lety +1

    why do the ted talks always have the microphones set up to hear every sound going on in their mouth and nose? turn down the highs, you make everyone sound like a mouth breather

  • @yolandalieshout444
    @yolandalieshout444 Před 6 lety +2

    the lorax

  • @VelhaGuardaTricolor
    @VelhaGuardaTricolor Před rokem

    15:20 It is because of Anthropocentrism. We consider ourselves above nature. Which is the funniest and most ironical thing ever. The creature that consider itself the most intelligent is the only one that can't grasp the most basic of all truths. We are all one single living organism, we don't compete against other organisms, we regulate each other naturally by design.

  • @TheOrganicGuy
    @TheOrganicGuy Před 3 lety +1

    I Propose we stop eating plants too!

  • @TheFlyingBrain.
    @TheFlyingBrain. Před rokem

    When are humans going to wake up? Nature has known all along.

  • @Toddis
    @Toddis Před rokem

    What does "the dog's breakfast" mean?

  • @jamesduff6937
    @jamesduff6937 Před 7 měsíci

    Non scientist here. Can anyone explain.. "and if the mother tree is injured, she sends even more carbon to her kin seedlings". Can anyone explain why the mother tree would do this, as I would assume that the mother would need all the carbon she can get to re-heal.

  • @MichaelFingland
    @MichaelFingland Před 2 lety +1

    Ignore the naysayers. Keep going

  • @syrianman1292
    @syrianman1292 Před 5 lety

    I hope republish by arabic language