One night in a dream, near Rum
Island Spring where I make offerings to the naga, I am given the gift of a vision.
I am lifted high up into blackest
space where I am allowed to hover with no visible support. When I look down, I
can see the whole upper part of the Florida peninsula from Orlando to the
Georgia line. Like the Technicolor animation in an old Disney movie,
exquisitely hand-drawn in the finest detail, I can see beneath the topsoil and
into the holey limestone of the Floridan aquifer, that huge storage tank for
one of the world’s largest supplies of freshwater.
I watch in awe as groundwater
bubbles through porous bedrock, rising here in springs and rivers as rain
falls, falling there as water is pumped out for people and farms—a dynamic,
percolating system with limestone rendered in grey, beige, and brown, water in
every color of blue from ultramarine to turquoise to aquamarine.
As I watch, I don’t just observe
but understand how rainfall
and withdrawals at one place on the peninsula can change groundwater levels
even hundreds of miles away as that water alternately seeps, flows and rushes
through limestone conduits that range in size from pinholes to underground
rivers.
This net of bubbling springs
connected by strands of flowing water reminds me of another vision I had years
ago, a vision of Indra's Net.
Watts so perfectly describes what
I was shown so many years ago that I wonder if this image of Indra’s Net is
something that is hard-wired, somehow, into human consciousness.
I think of my vision of Florida's
springs as Indra's wet net, where each spring is a reflection of the causes and
conditions that have formed it and all the other springs—and I believe that we
humans are reflected in that wet net, too, because of the harm we cause or the
help we offer to this beautiful, complicated, life-giving water system.
Many years ago now, I wrote that
the way we treat each other is reflected in the way we treat the environment
that is our home, and vice versa. The vision of Indra's wet net is yet
another example of that idea.
I woke from my dream of the living
aquifer with the vision firmly and vividly implanted in my mind. I would love
to find someone who could animate what I saw, so others could see it too.
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