The evidence of our genes, migrations, language creation, brain evolution, past climate change and the debris we left behind, now allows for informed speculation on the social organisation and behaviour of our pre-agricultural ancestors.

Saturday 24 December 2011

Prep (updated 2019)


 'In the early stages of learning to navigate naturally, time spent investigating puddles is rarely wasted. The key is always to think about the surroundings, to understand the sun's effect, getting to know its different arce in summer and winter, thinking about the shape of the surrounding ground, the wind and rain, and then trying to understand what can be deduced.' Tristan Gooley ( View on Amazon )


 'We stopped evolving and adapting when food was scarce and life was full of arduous physical activity. Hence, our bodies instruct us to eat everything we can lay our hands on and exert ourselves as little as possible. ..most diet and exercise advice is pointless. To move more and eat less is a direct contradiction of our genetically engineered impulses. Our forager ancestors would seek high-energy (meaning high-calorie, high-fat) foods that could be obtained at the lowest energy cost. They would eat or not depending on what they could find or kill, meaning mealtime was a fairly unpredictable thing. They would move when hungry (or when being pursued) and relax once fed - like wild animals today. Their movements would be sporadic, meaning short periods of intense activity (hunting, hauling, climbing, running) separated by long stretches of languid rest and play. There would be unpredictable intervals of low food intake... ..As far as our genes are concerned, this is still the way of the world.' Arthur De Vany ( View on Amazon )


 'I am sure many of you are familiar with the phrase "fight-or-flight response," which is common terminology used to describe the way in which we respond to threatening or dangerous situations. Unfortunately, this phrase is only two-thirds true and half-assed backward! In reality, the way animals, including humans, react to danger occurs in the following order: freeze, flight, fight. If the reaction really were fight or flight, most of us would be bruised, battered, and exhausted much of the time.' Joe Navarro ( View on Amazon )


 'When we go into a forest that has not been interfered with by man, our thinking mind will see only disorder and chaos all around us. I won't even be able to differentiate between life (good) and death (bad) anymore since everywhere new life grows out of rotting and decaying matter. Only if we are still enough inside and the noise of thinking subsides can we become aware that there is a hidden harmony here, a sacredness, a higher order in which everything has a perfect place and could not be other than what it is and the way it is.' Eckhart Tolle ( View on Amazon )

Full reading list 2019 (photo by Nick Hewling)

Selected reading list 2019 (photo by Nick Hewling)


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