Nature Religion and the Tum to Metaphysics
Transcription
Nature Religion and the Tum to Metaphysics
50 Reconsidering Nature Religion 24. Taylor, "Earrh Firsrl's Religious Radicalism," 198-99. 25. For brief anrhologized summaries of rheir views, see Kerry S. Walrers and Lisa Porrmess, eds., EthicaL Vegetarianism: From Pythagoras to Peter Singer (Albany: Srare Universiry of New York Press, 1999), 11-45. 26. See Walters and Portmess, eds., EthicaL Vegetarianism, for discussion passim rhar supports rhese generalizarions. 27. Michael Allen Fox, Deep Vegetarianism (Philadelphia: Temple Universiry Press, 1999), 175-76 (emphases in original). 28. Peter Singer, AnimaL Liberation (1975; reprinr, New York: Discus, Avon Books, 1977),7,163. 29. Tom Regan, The Case for AnimaL Rights (Berkeley: Universiry of California Press, 1983), 352-53 (emphasis in original). 30. Andrew Linzey, AnimaL Theology (Urbana: Universiry of IlJinois Press, 1995), 125-37; Carol J. Adams, The SexuaL PoLitics of Meat: A Feminist- Vegetarian CriticaL Theoryl (New York: Conrinuum, 1991). 31. Fox, Deep Vegetarianism, 61. 32. Robbins has recounred this rale, wirh wry humor, in countless oral presen rarions of his work. 33. John Robbins, Diet for a New America (Walpole, N.H.: Srjllpoinr Publishing, 1987). 34. Robbins, Dietfor a New America, xvii. 35 Ibid., 380. 36 Ibid., xiii. 37. James D. Procror, unpublished lectures, Universiry of California, Sanra Barbara, December 1999 and Ocrober 2001. A power-poinr version of rhe firsr is available online ar rhe following websire: http://www.geog.ucsb.edul ~jprocrorljdp/ralks/ESR/Index.hrm.See, also, hrrp:/lrea.l.geog.ucsb.edu/esr. 38. Henry D. Thoreau, Walden, ed. J. Lyndon Shanley, The Wrirings of Henry D. Thoreau (Princeron: Princeron Universiry Press. 1971), 17. 3 Nature Religion and the Tum to Metaphysics Horace Bushnell (I 802-1876) was a nineteenth-century American of a different son from natutalist John Muit or osteopath Andrew Taylor Still. Intellectually uncomfortable with the Calvinism of his day by the time he entered Yale College, he experienced the religious awakening when it came there and felt the power of the evangelical hean religion of the era. He also absorbed at Yale a passion for language, especially in its analogical and metaphorical uses. Well inro his ministerial career in the Congregational church, he felt the power of another religious awakening and a personal sense of the presence of Christ thar led him, perhaps surprisingly, in lirerary directions. In a period of intense creativiry, he was drawn increasingly ro rhe problem of rhe relationship of language to spiritual and theological truth, and the work that he produced became a lasting testament ro views of the analogical imagination he had begun ro form at Yale. Bushnell came ro rhink of all theological language as approximate and not exact. Language for him was an "instrumenr"-an instrumenr that, however usefUl, could never render precision. "I see not how anyone, who rightly conceives irs nature," he declared, "can hope any longer ro produce in it a real and proper system of dogmatic trmh." 51 52 Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics All things our of sense getmeir names in language through signs and objects in sense that have some mysterious correspondence or analogy, by which they are prepared befotehand to serve as signs or vehicles of the spititual things to be expressed.... Inmis view ... the outer world is seen to be a vast menstruum [solvent] of thought or intelligence. There is a logos in the forms of things, by which mey are prepared to serve as types or images of what is inmost in our souls; and then there is a logos also of construction in the relations of space, the position, qualities, connections, and predicates of things, by which mey are framed into grammar. In one word, the ourer world, which envelops our being, is itself language, the power of all language.' The second direction to be taken returns to me late-century osteopam Andrew Taylor Still, whose quaintly Enlightenment vision of nature, examined in Chapter 2, made of nature a more rigid and mechanical reality man me Romanticism of eimer Emerson or Bushnell would allow. It is Still, me later figure, who, wim his "cargo of indispurable trurhs" regarding remedies wimin me human body, more man eimer of me earlier two signals a marriage between nature and dogma.! Moreover, it seems no accident mat, as a co-signed letter to me spirirualist Banner a/Light reveals, me Osteopamic founder was a reader of that well-known journal of me age, which was oriented toward spiritualism and magnetic healing, or mesmerism: Still's world skirted me edge of meosophy, me Gilded Age system of metaphysical belief and ptactice mat finds direct heirs and progeny in tOday's New Age movement. His reliance on natural healing brought metaphysical law into practice to change and shift the seemingly set and hardened matter of bones and body. He pointed, merefore, toward a body mat was ultimately malleable and manipulable under me power of mind. The third direction this chapter takes joins me first twO in examining a contemporary movement that links me Romantic analogical imagination exemplified in Bushnell and Emerson wim me mechanical translation into a quasi-Enlightenment dogmatism pursued by Still. This movement is a case study of how an unstable and noninstitutionalized Romantic religion of nature can transmure into a form of teligiosity that deserts me lived world of physical nature for me satisfactions of me metaphysical mind. The phenomenon I consider is me present-day and evolving animal communication movement, and I explore it in an introductory way in what follows. Once upon a time, say some traditional peoples, humans lived with animals in harmony and peace, and they understood animal language. But after some "primordial catastrophe," only shamans could speak the animal tOngues. In Mircea Eliade's classic work Shamanism (1964), being able to speak animal language was a standard part of the description ofshamanic powers. Moreover, such animal language, said Eliade, was an indicator of me "mystical solidarity berweet1 man ;lIid ;ll1i1ll~1' and "oilly :l VJl1<lllt of \l'llil LlI1gliagc."" Set in me context of a concern for nature religion, Bushnell's wotds are suggestive of connections between ourer and innerbetween world and mind-that preoccupied many nineteenthcentury Americans besides him and mat continued to preoccupy later Americans. That Bushnell is often labeled a Christian Romanticist or the "American Schleiermacher" is perhaps a clue to the intellectual and spiritual company he kept. It is, at least, a pointer for some directions to be raken here. The first direCtion leads to an earlier Ralph Waldo Emerson who, as we saw in Chapter 1, in his little book Nature (1836) articulated a theory of language that, however much it owed to Swedenborgianism, became a hallmark ofTranscendentalist minking. Words, Emerson thought, were "signs of natural facts," even as "particular natural facts" were "symbols of particular spiritual facts," and nature itself was "the symbol of spirit.'" Spirit, for Emerson and his followers, meant the transcendent, bur it also especially led within-to the realms of intuition and ancient memory. Hence, as Emerson's admiration for Platonic categories already acknowledges, his nature was a decidedly metaphysicalized version. As for the later Bushnell, for Emerson the path of analo~y led to the hlll1l~n Illlagin.llioll JIlJ It, inner landsc:Jpe,. 53 Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics Far removed from Eliade's paradisiacal age and irs re-presentarion in shamanic cuJrures-and seemingly far removed, roo, from rhe age of Andrew Taylor Srill-a number of modern-day Americans say rhey undersrand animal "speech.» They claim ro ralk ro animals, quire ofren wirh rhe animals physically absenr, and ro ger answers, somerimes pragmarically, somerimes reflecrively, and somerimes ecsTarically. Markedly differenr in rone and rrapping from rhe shamans of religious and anrhropological lirerarure, animal communicarors don no symbolic garb or gear, use no hallucinogens or sonic driving (drumming) rechniques ro alrer consciousness, and ease in and our of rrance srares wirhour rhe roughness and rirual drama reponed in shamanic lore. They employ visualizarion, ofren using phorographs of animals rhey aim ro reach; or mental projecrion; or gendy inducrive sound rapes; or rhe quier and openness of medirarive srares." To summarize rhe argument for rhis specific case, rhe animal communicarors described here begin wirh experiences of communing wirh animals rhar poinr ro one version of narure religion. 7 Thus, exploring rheir world can show much abour rhe essenrial fragility of American narure religion as a symbolic consrrucrsomerhing rhar rhe various inducrion rechniques, which so prominendy involve rhe mind, already begin ro rell. As rhe case of rhe animal communicarion movemenr surely demonsrrares, a Romanrically endowed narure religion, wirh irs characrerisric aversion ro insrirurionalizarion, is always ready ro deconsuucr inro somerhing else. Once again, American narure religion is chronically invesred wirh rhe marerial for irs own collapse-eirher inro polirics (forms of environmenral advocacy) or inro erhics (vegerarian food pracrices) or inro meraphysical discourse (rhe New Age movemenr in general and, in rhe case in quesrion, a meraphysical rheology of rhe animals). Firsr, rho ugh, whar is rhe animal communicarion movemenr? How did ir arise, and where can ir be found roday? Whar are irs general dimensions, and whar is irs likely furure? To speak of animal communicarion is nor, as some mighr be inclined ro rhink, ro speak of visual cues and asrure readings of animal body language (alrhough in cases some of rhis may be present). Nor is ir ro speak of advanced rechniques of behavior modificarion using new and benign forms of obedience uaining (alrhough pracririoners say rhar behavior modificarion may resulr). Rarher, rhe rerm refers ro claims of releparhic communicarion wirh animals, in many, if nor mosr, cases wirh rhe animals physically absenr. These animals may be rhe favored domesric four (cars, dogs, horses, birds); rhey may be more exoric domesrics (hamsrers, rabbirs, snakes, llamas); rhey may be uJ1[amed species from land and sea (e1ephanrs, whales, dolphins); rhey may even be insecrs (anrs, spiders, flies). The ancienr seer of rhe movemenr is probably]. Allen Boone, a journalisr who became head of a Hollywood srudio in rhe 1930s. Among his several books, Boone's Kinship with All Lift, originally published in 1954 and srill in prinr, is repearedly cired by communicarors as a kind of gospel sraremenr. The book, which may be read as a collecrion of essays, opens wirh a series of medirarive recollecrions of a celebrity movie dog of rhe period, a German shepherd named Suonghean, and closes wirh a sequence of anecdores abour Boone's relarionship wirh one Freddie rhe Fly." Suonghean, rhe dominaring figure in rhe work, had been a champion German war dog. He belonged ro Hollywood producer Larry Trimble, who acquired rhe animal because he believed rhar rhe dog, rhen Erzel von Oerengen (Suonghearr's German kennel name), had rheauical porenrial-a porenrial consummarely realized in a series of Hollywood films in which Srronghean became rhe hero and darling of rhe movie-going audience of rhe rime. More ro rhe point here, rhrough a complicared ser of circumsrances Srronghean came ro live wirh Boone for a year. Ir was during rhis rime rhar Boone came ro believe rhar he was having experiences of releparhic communicarion wirh Suonghearr afrer whar for Boone were a series of inner changes. He learned, he said, ro be quier, open, receprive, ever more deeply appreciarive of Suonghean's characrer and quality, and no longer governed by assumprions of his own human superiority. As Boone explained rhe phenomenon, he repearedly used meraphysical language ro describe whar had happened. "We would liSlt~n ro rhe Voice of 54 55 56 Reconsidering Nature Religion Existence as it silently spoke in that language which knows no barriers of time, space or species," Boone remembered. He and Srrongheart, he said, had shared "in that silent language which the Mind of the Universe is constantly speaking through all life and for the greater good of all life. . . . Thus did we cross each other's boundaries, only to find that there were no boundaries separating us from each other, except in the dark illusions of the human senses." Or again, as he declared, Strongheart was "spoken through by the Mind of the Universe."" Boone's affirmations as he recollected his experiences with the famous dog of the movies were so many Straws in the metaphysical wind, and they pointed the way toward a furure in which experience speedily became reflection and reflection became metaphysical theology. Sometime in the 1980s, the animal communication movement as it exists today constellated around a number of individuals, largely women, who became professionals in the business of aiding mostly the "companions" and "guardians" (in the language of the movement) of domestic animals in their dealings with their charges. For the most part, the communicators dealt with tl1tee sortS of issues. First, they addressed behavior problemsthe cat that would not use the litter box, the dog that chewed the rugs and furniture, the horse that kept trying to throw a rider-and they claimed success in saving situations and saving animals from, in some cases, the fate of euthanasia. Second, they tried to find lost animals, although most communicators agreed that this was exceedingly difficult, and some refused even to try. Third, they dealt with separational circumstances-illness, death, and communication with animals after their passing. For physical illness, they often sought to identifY emotional causes of disease and tried to clear them through various forms of nonmedical therapy, flower remedies strong anl0ng them. For death, they advised whether or not an animal desired "assistance," that is, euthanasia. For the afterlife, they reassured owners of their former pets' conditions and also carried messages declared to be from the Other side to alleviate human guilt and grief. Thus, in general, the communicators aimed ro act as go-bet ween~ for pcnph' and their pets. Tlll:Y brought. thtoy Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics 57 said, an animal's poim of view to a human, allowing the animal to release pent-up emotions and feelings around old or current concerns, and getting animals to understand what owners wanted. There were enough good results after their interventions that they were kept busy. The now-defunct Tiger Tribe magazine, a holistic journal devoted to cats and their care, became a place where communicators advertised their services. Later, Natural Pet magazine, published by Fancy Publications, the producers of Dog Fancy and Cat Fancy, printed communication advertisementS until it, too, died. Other publications continued to offer venues in which to publish ads. It was clear that communicators were working on a fee-for-service basis, with averages ranging from fifty to eighty dollars an hour. It was also clear that they were making ample use of the telephone to do their work--oftemimes with the guardian/owner waiting at one end of the line while the communicator tried to establish contact with the designated animal at the OtheL'O In the early 1990s, Penelope Smith, without a doubt the leading animal communicatOr in the United States today, began publishing her newslener Species Link. Smith's workshops to teach animal communication attracted a network of women who began to teach stlldents of their own. Other communicators independently offered classes, toO, mostly about how to contact and communicate with animals and somerimes about sound busines5 practices.' I Ranks swelled, and the movement grew, bringing more and more communicators and clients together. Although Smith and several other Californians became well-known leaders, there were also East Coast stars, and no region of the nation seemed to be without practicing communicators. By the late 1990s, a small cottage indumy in books on animal communication resulted, and communicators were 5elling audiotapes of their lectures and instructions as wcll.'~ Anbur Myers had published a nationwide list of the forty-two communicators he had interviewed for his book on the mowment, and Penelope Smith's Spaie' I ink reg\darlv carried advntisemenrs (some sixtV-t\vo in thL Wimer 2000 edit ion) f rom rq~i()l1~ i IlLIIilI i ng nunherll anel Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics southern California, the western United States excluding California, western Canada, the American Southwest, the Midwest and South, the East, and even one from Switzerland by 2000. '3 By the year 2000, toO, Smith had gone on line with animal talk. net. And significantly, the San Francisco Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals sponsored a July conference at a fashionable San Francisco hotel under me title "Kinship with All Life." Sharon Callahan, a well-known animal communicator from Mt. Shasta, California, was an organizer and featured speaker. Meanwhile, skirting the edge of me movement, Susan Chernak McElroy, author of Animals as Teachers and Healers (1997), which had earlier climbed to a place on the New York Times bestseller list, was also an active organizer and speaker at the San Francisco conference." It became easy to predict mat the animal communication movement would continue to gain converts in the near-term future. Earlier, Smith and other communicatOrs had already pondered the ethics of their interventions, and Smith had produced a code. Formulated in 1990, the "Code of Ethics for Interspecies Telepathic Communicators" was published at least once annually in succeeding issues of Species Link. It pronounced the motivation of movement members to be "compassion for all beings" and especially the restOration of "the lost human ability to freely and directly communicate with other species." It declared the importance of spiritual growth on the part of communicators to keep the work "as pure and harmonious as possible." Still further, it explained that it was not the job of communicatOrs "to name and treat diseases" and mandated referral "to veterinarians for diagnosis of physical illness." It closed affirming that "the goal of any consultation, lecture, workshop, or interspecies experience is more communication, balance, compassion, understanding, and communion among all beings. We follow our heart, honoring the spirit and life of all beings as One," the code asserted. IS With itS lofty goals and high aspirations, beyond itS substantive recommendations the official code hinted broadly at changing views of animals an10ng interspecies communicators. There were tensions and ambivalences to be sure. Overall, however, communicators showed a progression from relationships in which humans as superiors tried to communicate with animals on, especially, behavioral matters, to relationships in which the animals achieved parity and were considered equals, to still other relationships in which me animals were regarded as superior beings imparting ancient wisdom that humans had forgotten or had never known. Here certain species of animals especially emerged as wisdom bearers-whales and dolphins in the ocean and elephants and llamas on land. By tracing reported interactions by communicators with domestic animals who speak as peers and something more, and then with extraordinary nondomestics, it is possible to see how human imerspecies COntaCtS move, apparently inelUCtably, from brief, "illumined"and orren mystically tinged-moments of nature reLigion to longer cultural moments of a minimally varying metaphysics. Examples of this process are virtually everywhere in movement literature. Consider, for example, from the domestic side Dawn Brunke's account, in the Winter 2000 issue of Species Link, of the death of her dog Barney one early morning before she awoke. For a week or fWO he had been sick and then had stOpped eating, a process that seems a gentle slide into what might be called a good but "ordinary" death. What Brunke claimed next, however, was surely nonordinary-in fact, evoking the kind of illuminism, communion, and communication that Boone had described with Strongheart, dog of the movies. For the previous six weeks, Brunke declared, Barney had been having conversations with her about "shapeshirring" and the art of dying, telling her that he had been working to achieve a "conscious deam." Barney was an "old soul," she was quick to add. And then she quoted from his final conversation on the day before he died. 58 59 You are right to apprehend that death is actually much more of a group process than you have been inclined to believe. Humans tend to pomay death as a solitary journey, but that is not a truth I know.... Death is a journey of becoming and, as such, there are alwa\'~ helpers along the way. I think al rimes humans desire 60 Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics [Q make it a separate experience in order not [Q open [Q the shared commonaliry of our ever-becoming.... Once you pierce or go beyond the veils that hold ... fears [of death], you will see that death is a momenrary switch from one mode of realiry [Q another. In order [Q shapeshifr, you must become familiar with death, undemanding of itS nature and ways in the world. This is the "big fear" that must be worked with in order [Q approach the deeper layets of shapeshifring, and it is why 1 caU death an arc.. . As one becomes more familiar and adept at this an, one soon becomes an apprenrice [Q death, and death begins [Q reveal her secrets and her majestic smile. 'G aware of how each species and each being plays a unique role in the communif)l of life." Later, words came [Q her mat seemed [Q caprure some of me experience: "Through whale wisdom / Reimroducing me ra all of God's glory / I rest in my deepest cemer of creation / And know that all is well." 17 Yet even as Smim brearhed her excitemenr in the midSt of experience, she fitted what she saw inco patterns of New Age orthodoxy. Awakened in her whale-watching boat on the night of February 24 [Q witness a nighttime light show in the sky, she saw, as she later raid, "me vast white light arching in the shape of me Egyptian Eye of Horus," and it "formed a giant whale in the midnight sky. A portion of the light shaped itself spermlike." The conclusions she drew were irrevocably metaphysical. The sperm like configuration of light "appeared [Q pour energy imo the ocean. I became aware that mis was nunuring the whales and seeding new populations of whales and dolphins on the Earth .... It was a starseeding of whale energy inco me ocean to assist the evolurion ofhumanlcind and the whole planec." Thus the whales, wim rheir allies me dolphins, emerged as wisdom teachers ra warn and save me eanh. "The whales let me know that mey and their dolphin kin would be appearing in places they had never appeared before and in new varieties of whale and dolphin forms. They would visit pOftS and shores in ever increasing numbers. There would be many beachings as needed co increase human awareness of oceanic and planetary pollution. Their proposed population increase could insure mat their role as evolurionary guides would be fulfilled."" As if the New Age environmencal warning of rhe denizens of tbe sea was not enough, mere were land warnings as well, couched in rhe metaphysical rheraric of movemenr panicipants. Take, for instance, the accounr given by Sharon Callahan, the prominem imerspecies communicarar from Ml. Shasta earlier cited. She reponed a series of imeractions with a female Asian elephant named Barbara, a wounded survivor of years of circus performance and abuse, in which she (Callahan) merged mystically with the animal and felt overcome with Barbara's pain and sadness. Mer sixteen months of work \Vim the elephant, Cdlahan \\J.S able co As Brunke recounrs the animal's death, it is clear that Barney in some sense had moved from pet co peer: Brunke and Barney were having daily ralks on metaphysical subjects. But it is even clearer mat the relationship had advanced still funher ro a state of inequality, in which Barney "<1;; insrructing Brunke in spiritual wisdom. He was affirming the naturalness of death but also the docrrinal tenets of dawning rwenry-flrSt-Cenrury American New Age metaphysics, which, apparendy, he shared with his caregiver. Brunke, afrer all, is the one who assened confidendy that Barney was an "old soul"-a theosophical concept and complimem abour the extended series of r",incarnations ;:l.nd spiritual lessons learned by the individual so described. More than that, Barney's evocations of group process, rravel beyond the veils, death as an, and the like, poinr coward the venerable language of American spiritualism. More expressive of the ur momenc of mystical communion, there is Penelope Smith's experience swimming with humpback whales in their breeding grounds off me coast of the Dominican Republic in February 1998. "As they downloaded meir records inro my receptive cellular srructure," she r<:p0r1ed, "1 reeled [Q hold ir in my form as a vessel. I could not verbally communicate the vasmess of these communications in a hundred years." She wem on [Q speak of being "in a perpetual srate of wonder and gratirude at the inrer.tnion of the whole wcb oflife here 011 F~lrrh," ofb<:ing "proFoundly 61 Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics articulate a composite statement of what she believed Barbara had said. The being who emerged from Callahan's report seems a far cry from the scarred creature who did not trumpet like other elephants and whom Callahan had been hired to help to heal. Sad and depressed Barbara may have been. Bur over the months, it was clear that Callahan saw her animal client as also consciously the bearer of a higher wisdom, self-conscious of her role as a divine emissary to help save humans in the transition from a former to a transformed age: "I speak now as a single manifestation of the great ones you call Elephant. I have been sent as an emissary during this enormous time of planetary transformation to speak for those of my kind who have no voice, and for those who have gone on into the realms of White Love." "Ir is true that an elephant never forgets," she affirmed, "for we are the earth's historians." A long message detailed the pain and scars of ''the Great Mother Earth," recounting "the tears of her great rivers as they attempt to remove impurities from her quivering form, the clouds of brown particles that surround her glittering countenance, impeding the inflowing of the great central sun."19 Even more, if human environmental abuse had created the suffering of the earth, it was the elephants on land, akin to the whales and dolphins of the ocean, whose spiritual mission was to "balance, soothe, and nurture her." Callahan's Barbara knew consciously and specifically of the role of the whales, explaining to her human friend that "the great whales perform the same function for the oceans of the world," by "sounding a note of very high frequency that balances and tones." Alluding to her own condition, the animal noted the depression of captive elephants who were "robbed of their ability to sing their deep note." Ir took five elephants "together in one place to create such a resonance," Callahan's Barbara told; and often captive elephants were "forced into solitary living." "Please hear us," she begged. "The elephants hold the frequency, the framework, in which all of the other animal species hold their own. We speak not for ourselves, but for Mother Earth and all of life upon her."20 There is wisdom and counsel within Brunke's account of her dog; and, even more, there is a poignancy about the Smith and Callahan messages. But recognition of the counsel of the former and rhe poignancy, and even urgency, in rhe latter twO environmental messages should not deflect from noricing the syntax of contemporary culture in each animal's talk. Theosophy and spiritualism come together for Brunke's Barney. Both Smith's whales and Callahan's elephant convey messages that agree with the ecofeminist rhetoric many communicators share, and the messages surely reflect their discourse community. StiJJ more, rypicaJJy, broad and expansive wisdom about death and warnings about the environment give place to far more specific and detailed instances of New Age language and conceptualization. These are pervasive within the movement, inteIWoven into public accounts and private conversations. 21 62 63 A good place to see this distinctly metaphysical discourse in operation is in Penelope Smith's book Animals . .. Our Return to Wholeness (J 993), both because she clearly leads the movement and because her articulation of themes is so strong. In this volume laden with New Age orthodoxy, animals emerge incontrovertibly as forms of spirit. Dawn Brunke's "old-soul" dog Barney, it may be seen, has had innumerable companions, for they have freely chosen to enter their animal bodies where, as part of the cycle of birth, death, and reincarnation, they work our accumulated karma. Sometimes they have been humans in previous lives, and sometimes, as in the case of Smith's own Afghan hound Pasha, they return to their previous owners in new animal bodies. Indeed, Smith's effUsive dedication page for her work signals what is to come: "This book is dedicated to PASHA I dearest friend and spiritual brother I who graced the earth in Afghan hound form I from August 12, 1978 to January 20, 1993. I In gratitude for his rebirth on February 14, 1993, I returning to us as TAILOR, "Buddha Boy," Afghan hound, I to continue to help many in their return to wholeness."22 Animals have a kind ofgroup leader, or oversoul, for each species. They are sometimes walk-ins-souls or spirits who take over the physical body of another animal that is choosing to vacate. And, as in the broad hints in the account of the light configuration over the humpback whales off the coast of the Dominican Republic, they 64 Reconsidering Nature Religion are sometimes beings sent from outer space. Smith, for example, felt that she had become aware of the original background of Mghal1 hounds. "Their original group landed thousands of years ago in spacecraft in Egypt, to dwell on this earth and help in human evolution," she recorded. Llamas, by comparison, have outer-space "visitors" and "observers" in almost every contemporary herd. In one account of a premature baby llama named Chimu, Smith recounted that she "felt almost repulsed" even though physically the llan1a was a soft and cuddly baby. "He had no aura," she said, as she told how she perceived his body being controlled by beings "in outer space." ''A group of aliens, or nonincarnate beings, decided to operate his body as an experiment, a lesson in how to experience life on earth," she explained. Smith believed that her communication helped, because later, when she checked on Chimu from afar, the aliens had decided that a single spirit was bener than a composite and had selected one of their number to reside in the body. Chimu was doing wel\.1' In Smith's metaphysical system, different species are also described as having different work-as, for eXalTIple, the orange tabbies in the "Orange Cat Contingent"-cats, she has affirmed, who all know and communicate with each other even though they are thousands of miles apart. These are cats with common characteristics of friendliness, love of the outdoors and of watet, athleticism, and humor, but for Smith they have a collective "spiritual mission unrelated to genetic inheritance." "They seem to be a group of spirits with a mission to help people love themselves and to remind them, by example, of who they really are." Roosters, in turn, with whom Smith also connected, "were responsible for bringing up the sun." She realized, she declared, that "many folk tales were true about the animal's [sic] different functions, no matter how bizarre it seemed to our Western analytical mode of thinking. I knew totally that without the roosters crowing, the sun would not rise."" Smith's life with animals, as it unfolds in her book, is replete with miracles-surprising coincidences and reincarnations, warnings of danger, and experiences of grace :lnd salvation. Her confidence in Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics 65 the reality of the messages she receives and in the need to honor animal wishes is striking, and even shocking. In one case that she recounts, for exan1ple, she became convinced that her ten-year-old Mghan hound Popiya desired to die. She was in "good health," Smith told, but wanted to leave in order "to be human again." After trying unsuccessfully to assiSt an exit through meditation and will, Smith was so sure that she had heard Popiya's wishes correccly that she, with Popiya, "went to a very spiritually aware and underStanding veterinarian.... Popiya quietly accepted the injection as I held her in my arms, and she was gone in a few seconds."2\ What all of this very metaphysical book adds up to for Smith is her willingness to claim the tide that she says others have given her-"Animal Mystic." "Seeing the mystery of life, the spirit eternal, in our animal friends and all of life, is what my work is all about," she assesses. For the argument here, however, her words about the mystical matrix of what she does and is, when juxtaposed with the fixed theological content of her book, point again to the fragile situation of nature religion, evoking and, from a methodological perspective, adding to the comparison-oriented model of Ernst Troeltsch. In his classic study The Social Teaching of the Christian Churches (1911), TtoeltSch distinguished-in a distinction scholars have come to consider fundamental-between churches and sects. But there was still a third form that TroeltSch identified, and that was mysticism. Characterized by "radical religious individualism" and a "pure fellowship of cl10Ught," nondependem on institutions, and combinative of Christianity with other elementS, the mystical proclivity was bequeathed to modern times.'6 By the nineteenth century, it was linked to cultural and literary Romanticism, to nature, to illumined momentS outside the social world. Yet this Romantic nature mysticism of the nineteenth century would also reveal that it had its orthodoxies and that its orthodoxies were nudging it not toward systematic expression in an institutional context, as in the case of recognized religious traditions, but tOward a different kind of borderland of the spirit. In the United States, one form cl1at mysticism had assumed was the metaphysical tradition. And in the late lwenrictl, ccntl.lI)" ,Jlld on into lhe Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics rwenty-first, much of me metaphysical tradition coalesced for the time in the movement called the New Age, a movemenr mat could be recognized by the marked vocabulary and tenor of its "spirirual" discourse. Animal communicarors, by and large, are New Agers, and so their moments of elevated consciousness and mystical communion with animals, as denizens of narure, lead mem ironically away from narure and inro the realm of spirir. Those in contemporary America who seek, like the shamans of other times and places, ro talk ro the animals are encoding inro meir messages nuanced affirmations that bespeak a dOCtrinal ormodoxy significandy removed from a nature that, even with a Romantic gloss, is still manifesdy material. In an idenrifiable social and cultural momenr that favors "spirirualiry" over "religion," their metaphysical creed prefers harmonious connection over theoretical precision and distinctiveness. Yet animal communicarors end by affirming what they deny, for the terms of their discourse communiry dictate a new precision about what may be said. If the shanlans of tradition imitated the speech of animals, able, as in the paradisiacal age, ro speak and underStand it, the animals mat me new interspecies communicarors contact have learned a human dialecr. The animals, in short, speak New Age. Thus, watching animal communicarors can help in the task of deciphering me American trajecrory of a Romantic nature religion inro metaphysical discourse. Watching them can also help in me task of idenrifying the role of social and culruraJ context in transmuting religion-in-general in our time. Surely animal communicarors engage in idenrifiable forms of symbolic practice. Surely, roo, as the Troeltschian discussion suggests, mysticism for me most part needs ro be considered as a species of religion. Even more, undersrood in light of an earlier American metaphysical world with a distinctly religious ambience, it is difficult ro dismiss me religious beliefs and behaviors that New Age metaphysics carries with ir. But perhaps what all of this most suggests is the need ro understand the religious in processual terms more man essenrialist ones. From this perspective, it is hard ro draw a hard and faSt definitional line ro mark me point at which religion ends and some Other Form of culrural practice begins. But it is also possible ro nOtice gradations of presence and absence-ro see the differences berween, say, a spirirualist seance in 1861 and a telephone conversation berween a client and an interspecies communicator in 200 1. It is also possible ro notice the relative "presence" or "absence" of nature in any movement that might have a claim to be counted as nature religion. Indeed, if Horace Bushnell could be imported on a rwenry-firstcentury time machine into the discourse communiry of presenrday animal communicators, he might be perplexed at the metaphysical fundamenralism he encountered, wim its lingering evocations of Enlightenmenr claims ro uum. Language among animal communicarors is literal and concrete, almough their subject has slipped away from its foundation in narure ro the realm of spirit and conjecture. The Romanric Bushnell had written, in the middle of the nineteenrh cenrury, that "we can never come into a setded consent in me trum, unril we better understand the narure, capacities and incapacities of language, as a vehicle of truth." He had argued that words were "only hinrs, or images, held up before me mind of anomer." "Words of thought or spirit" were "not only inexact in meir signiftcance, ... but mey always affirm[ed] someming which is false, or contrary ro me uum inrended." There were "no shapes in me uums" that words represenred." Likewise, Ralph Waldo Emerson would have felt eStranged in the company of the animal communicators. Even if, for him, words poinred to nature, which in rum pointed ro spirit, Emerson's attempts to unmask language and show its attachmenrs ro the material world never led ro linguistic flXiry, a condition he Strongly opposed, but rather to a docuine of correspondence that favored, not suppressed, metaphor and analogy.20 More man that, Emerson could never count himself a complete Idealist: he always undersrood nature as a tangible, and even inroxicating, presence. Worried in his book Nature that he had gone too far in the direction of Idealism, he hastened to protest, "I have no hostiliry to narure, bur a child's love to it. 1 expand and live in me warm day like corn and melons."29 It required a stronger doctrine of language ro leave the physical for the metaphysical world. Literally and paradoxically, it required 66 67 68 Reconsidering Nature Religion Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics a more mechanical and less organic view of words and rheir capaciries ro pierce, as ir were, rhe meraphysical veil. And so, ir is rhe osreoparhic physician Andrew Taylor Srill, former magneric docrorl mesmerisr and perhaps spirirualisr, who bener poims rhe way imo rhe world of rurn-of-our-cenrury ralking animals. Already, as he conremplared me body's living secrers wirh a view ro wresr rhem imo healing discipline, he used rhe rheroric of rhe American Enlighrenmem ro move roward spirir and meraphysics. Ar rhe same rime, he moved away from religion and roward science, roward a form of discourse mar privileged human undemanding, managemem, and comra! of hererofore mysrerious worlds. Togerher Emerson, Bushnell, and Srill suggesr me cuirural rurns and r\Vim rhar gor us from rhere (me lare eighreemh and rhen ninereemh cemury) ro here (rhe early rwenry-firsr cemury). Over rhe objecrions no doubr of Srill, rhe firsr rwo poim ro rhe slipperiness of speech and conversarion (wirh humans, wirh animals) and, even more, ro rhe evanescence of rhe marerial world rhar language seeks ro grasp. By analogy, rhey also suggesr rhe slipperiness of rhe very concepr of religion. Taken rogerher once again, rhe rhree him of rhe quier, sliding dearh of a Romamic religion of narure and irs passage, in a journey of becoming, imo an inside-our Enlighrenmem world in which rhe animals have confidenrly learned ro speak New Age. 3. Andrew Taylor Srill, Autobiography ofAndrew T. Stilt with a History ofthe Discovery and Development ofthe Science ofOsteopathy (1897: reprint, Notes I, Horae<' Bushnell. "Prdiminary Di·;,~rLnion on rhe Nature of Language as R.'.:lared 1'0 Thl)ughr and Spirir." God in Chi'i.rt (1849), in David L. Smith, ed., Homee Bw/mel{: Selectee! Writings on Language, Religion, andAmerican Clt/ture (Chico, Calif: Scholars Press, 1984),33,37. 2. Ralph y;',ddo Emerson, Nature (1836), in The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emersol'. vol. I, Natltll:, ,,·lddresses, and Lectures, cd. Alfred R. Ferguson er al. (Cambridge: Harvard Universiry Press, Belknap Press, 1971), 17. Emerson's views of language here closely followed rhose of Swedenboq~i~,11 Sampson Reed. 69 New York: Arno Press & The New York Times, 1972), 100. 4. S~e Norman Gevirz., The D.o.s: OsteopClthic Medicine in America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Universiry Press, 1982), 13-14. 5. Mircea Eliade, Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, trans. Willard R. Trask (Princeron: Princeron Universiry Press, 1964),99,93-94. 6. Writren insrrucrions for animal communicarion may be found, for example, in Penelope Smirh, Animal Talk: interspecies Telepathic Communication, 3d ed. (Point Reyes Starion, Calif.: Pegasus Publications, 1989); Penelope Smirh, Animals . . , Our Return to Wholeness (Poinr Reyes Station, Calif.: Pegasus Publications, 1993), 25-55; Carol Gurney, The Language ofAnimals: Seven Steps to Communicating with Animals (New York: Banram-Dell Publishing, Dell Trade, 200 I); Lydia Hiby wirh Bonnie S. Weintraub, Conversations with Animals: Cherished Messages and Memories as Told by An Animal Communicator (Trourdale, Oreg.: NewSage Ptess, 1998), 157-83; Maureen Hall, Telepathy with Animals: A Workbook (Norrh Hollywood, Calif: Maureen Hall, 1997); Diane Srein, Natural Healingfor Dogs and Cats (Freedom, Calif.: Crossing Press, 1993),34-41; and for cars, rhe parrially releparhic Anirra Frazier with Norma Eckroare, The New Natural Cat: A Complete Guide for Finicky Owners. rev. ed. (New York: Penguin, New American Library, Plume, 1990), 24-27, 262-65; and Celesre Yarnall, Cat Care, Naturally: Celeste Yamalts Complete Guide to Holistic Health Carefor Cats (Bosron: Charles E. Tuttle, 1995),9-16. Carol Gurney, Samanrha Khury, and Penelope Smirh, all animal communicarors from CaJifornia, have offered sound rapes wirh anecdotes and instruction. Numbers of communicarors offer workshops insrructing in techniques for contacr. 7. For nature religion, see Carherine L. Albanese, Nature Religion In America: From the Algonkian indians to the New Age (Chicago: Universiry of Chicago Press, 1990), esp. 7-8. 8. J. Allen Boone, Kinship with All Life (New York: Harper, 1954), Boone's other books include Letters to Strongheart (New York: Prenrice-Hall, 1939), a series of reflecrive and meraphysicallerrers, writren from various places to which Boone rraveled and addressed to rhe spirir of Strongheart, who had died before rhe rime of wriring;]. Allen Boone, The Language of Silence, ed. Paul and Blanche Leonard (New York: Harper & Row, 1970), with essay-reflections on Jusr Joe, a rarne monkey, and similar themes; and J. Allen Boone, You Are the Adventllre.' (New York: Prenrice-Hall, 1943). 9. Boone, Kinship, 78-80 (emphasis in original). 70 Reconsidering Nature Religion 10. Of the twelve animal communicators to whom I have spoken regarding their work, eight use the on-the-line method of communication. 11. As an example, Carol Gurney, a well-known communicator in Agoura Hills, California, incorporates a discussion ofsound business practices into her sequence of classes. 12. See, for example, the already-cired Penelope Smith, Animal Talk; Penelope Smith, Animals . .. Our Return to Wholeness; and Lydia Hiby with Bonnie S. Weimraub, Conversatiom with Animals. See, also, Arthur Myers, Communicating with Animals: The Spiritual Connection Between People and Animals (Chicago: Comemporary Publishing, 1997); Michael Tobias and Kate Solisti-MatteJon, eds., Kinship with the Animals (Hillsboro, Oreg.: Beyond Words Publishing, 1998); and, by the most well-known author, Susan Chernak McElroy, Animals as Guides for the SouL- Ston'es ofLife-Changing Encounters (New York: Ballamine Wellspring, 1998). For audiOtapes, see note 6 above. 13. Myers, Communicating with Animals, 231-36; Species Link: The formull of Interspecies Telepathic Communication, Issue 34 (April-June 1999): 18-19. 14. Susan Chernak McElroy, Animals as Teachers and Healers: True Stories and Reflections (New York: Ballamine Books, 1997). 15. See, for example, Species Link, Issue 26 (April-June 1997): 21; Species Link, Issue 30 (April-June 1998): 17; Species Link, Issue 34 (April-June 1999): 20; and Species Link, Issue 38 (April-June 2000): 20. 16. Dawn Brunke, "A Journey of Becoming," Species Link, Issue 37 Oanuary-March 2000): 4-5. 1.7. Penelope Smith, "God Is a Whale," Species Link, Issue 30 (April-June 1998): 1. 18. Penelope Smith, "God Is a Whale (Part II)," Species Link, Issue 31 Ouly-September 1998): t. 19. Sharon Callahan, "Barbara's Story," in McElroy, Animals as Guides for the Soul, 87-90. 20. Ibid., 91-92. 21. Of the twelve animal communicators to whom I have spoken (seven in California, twO in the Southwest, two in Virginia, and one in Pennsylvania), all but three signaled agreemem with New Age metaphysics. Conversations with the remaining three were not extensive enough to form a judgment. 22. Smith, Animals . .. Our Return to Wholeness, v. I am aware of at least one communicator who is some-.vhat circumspect regarding whether or not animals know of their past lives as other species (although, even so, her Nature Religion and the Turn to Metaphysics 71 views imply that they do). In her Conversations with Animals, Lydia Hiby writes: "Never has an animal told me that in another lifetime she was some other species. However, I have met animals I considet 'old souls.' I feel ~hat such an animal has a greater understanding about life and is somehow wiser beyond her chronological years" (186). 23. Smith, Animals . .. Our Return to Wholmess, 285,287-89. 24. Ibid., 135, 1.34, 157. 25. Ibid., 257-58 26. Ernst Troeltsch, The Social Teaching ofthe Christian Churches, trans. Olive Wyon (l 91. I.; reprint, Chicago: Universiry of Chicago Press, 1976), 1:376-78. 27. Bushnell, "Preliminary Dissertation on the Nature of Language," in Smith, Horace Bushnell, 39, 41, 42. 28. For Emerson's views of language in the comext of the idea of correspondence, see Catherine L. Albanese, Corresponding Motion: Tramcendental Religion and the New America (Philadelphia: Temple Universiry Press, J 977). 29. Emerson, Nature, 35.