Apiary of Devotion
I want to feel realities beyond my own, I want to know how those beings, who still remain with us in the futures will experience life. But I can only imagine, I can only imagine because I’m human. And there is nothing wrong with anthropomorphizing. We have a curse and a blessing to perceive this responsivity of life, everywhere we turn. Perhaps the whole evolution of life on earth conspired towards our increased interactivity and relationality with each other, as beings. Our faces, our voices, our eyes, our intentions—all reflected in more-than-human world.
We stand in the apiary of imagination, offering our devotion to the unknown. We pray to the opaque, something yet unrevealed to us. This is how we dance and temper with future potentials—through imagination. The invisible sense that can navigate us through the unraveling of the meta-crisis.
“The world we know cannot be wholly mind-independent, and it cannot be wholly mind-dependent… What is required is an attentive response to something real and other than ourselves, of which we have only inklings at first, but which comes more and more into being through our response to it — if we are truly responsive to it. We nurture it into being; or not. In this it has something of the structure of love.”
– Ian McGilchrist
Imagination generates new worlds. Not just desired futures, but all future potentials. Dystopias and protopias dance on the same dusty ground to the melody of our collective narratives, myths, and worldviews, glistening in the thick air of ecological collapse. Yes, the absence of collective multi-species imagination (we could call it animism) fuels the derangement of living systems. It enabled the disconnection from places and species that are incredibly vital to planetary biodiversity and homeostasis.
We must remember that our imagination was used to design and create profoundly extractive and parasitic relationships with each other and the Earth. The language, systems, technologies, and economy that facilitated the capture and mass extraction first emerged in our imagination.
But what if we realize that imagination much like attention, directed at regeneration and kinship, can be an act of devotion? What if we use our imagination as a bridge, connecting our personal experiences with the experiences of other living beings?
Seen this way, imagination is the first act of mending the rift in the membrane that brings us into a full, embodied relationship with the earth — the first step in the process of undoing the story of separation that permitted us to morally justify centuries of capture and extraction.
Multi-species imagination reconnects and enlists us as listeners to a world full of wisdom, a world that is always speaking to us. And once we begin to step outside our own minds and practice paying attention, our love will find ways to serve the wider web of life — to tell stories that aren’t just about us, to design products and services that are co-created alongside nature, for nature. To build worlds that develop the potential of all beings and celebrate the diversity, abundance, and beauty that multi-species futures have to offer.
Announcing two new workshops in July
If work of imagination resonates with you, we (
) have some exciting news to share: This month, we have two “Worldbuilding Regenerative Futures — multi-species imagination and design” workshops coming up, on July 22 (in-person in Berlin) and on July 29 (online).Make sure to get your ticket fast because all previous workshops were sold-out! If you cannot afford a ticket, reach out to us directly via Eventbrite. We want to make sure that everyone can access our experiences.
Click on the event image below for more information and tickets.
Co-writer and photographer
.Images from Lithuanian countryside, 2023.