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The Art of the Mental Scrub: Wisdom from a 1970s Yoga Classic

  The Art of the Mental Scrub: Wisdom from a 1970s Yoga Classic ​There is a specific kind of magic found in the "analog" wisdom of the 1970s. Long before we had apps to track our heart rate variability or high-resolution streaming classes, there was a generation of pioneers like Richard Hittleman. His work, particularly in classics like Yoga for Personal Living , offered something that feels remarkably urgent today: a practical, no-nonsense manual for mental reprogramming . ​One of the most profound techniques shared in that era wasn’t about touching your toes—it was about touching your past. ​ Confronting the "Negative Recording" ​Hittleman’s approach was grounded in a concept that feels like a precursor to modern cognitive behavioral therapy. He viewed the mind as a storage device, playing "recordings" of past experiences, failures, and anxieties on a loop. These recordings form our "past identity"—a version of ourselves built on old data t...

The Underground Forest: How Indigenous Wisdom is Re-greening the Sahel

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The Underground Forest: How Indigenous Wisdom is Re-greening the Sahel ​For decades, the global approach to desertification in Africa was defined by a singular, expensive image: rows of plastic-bagged saplings being planted into parched earth. Often, those trees died within months, unable to survive the harsh climate or the grazing of local livestock. But across the Sahel, from the shores of Senegal to the plains of Mauritania, a quieter revolution is taking hold—one that doesn't involve planting a single tree. ​ The Myth of the Empty Desert ​To the untrained eye, much of the Sahelian landscape looks like a barren wasteland. However, beneath the surface lies what ecologists call the "Underground Forest." These are massive, ancient root systems of indigenous trees that have been cut down or stunted by decades of "modern" agricultural clearing. ​These roots are not dead; they are dormant. When farmers apply Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR)—a technique ro...

African Regenerative Agriculture

  African Regenerative Agriculture The history of African regenerative agriculture is a masterclass in working with natural succession rather than against it. What the West often calls "innovation" is frequently a re-branding of indigenous systems that were designed to produce food while simultaneously functioning as a carbon sink and water sponge. ​Beyond FMNR, here are some of the most powerful indigenous regenerative systems across the continent: ​1. Water Harvesting: The Zaï Pits (Burkina Faso & Mali) ​While modern irrigation relies on expensive pumps and pipes, the Zaï method uses gravity and biology. ​ The Practice: Farmers dig small pits during the dry season. They fill these pits with organic matter (compost, manure, or straw). ​ The "Bio-Engineers": This organic matter attracts termites . As the termites tunnel through the hard-packed earth to reach the food, they create a network of deep underground channels. When the rains finally come, ...

Ecological restoration stories in Africa

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Ecological restoration stories in Africa Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR), has become one of the most successful ecological restoration stories in Africa.   ​The core of this "underground forest" concept is that even when a landscape looks like a barren desert, the living root systems of cut-down trees often remain alive beneath the soil. By identifying these "living stumps"—known as Kisiki Hai in Swahili—farmers can regrow an entire forest without ever purchasing or planting a seedling.   ​ Key Aspects of the Movement ​The "Discovery" in Niger: While these techniques draw on ancient indigenous wisdom, they were brought to global attention by agronomist Tony Rinaudo. In the 1980s, he realized that millions of "bushes" in Niger were actually shoots from mature root systems. By protecting and pruning them instead of pulling them out, he helped regenerate over 5 million hectares of land.   ​The Method : Instead of planting new trees (which...

Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration

African Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration Knowledge  I heard a narrative that Africans had forgotten their  Indigenous knowledge and methods of natural regeneration.  The truth is  that this knowledge was "suppressed" rather than simply "forgotten".  Many historians and ecologists argue that what we now call Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) was once a standard part of indigenous agroforestry that was systematically dismantled during the colonial era. ​ The Mechanism of Suppression ​During the colonial period (and continuing into the early years of independence), forestry laws in many African nations were rewritten to follow European models of "conservation through exclusion." ​ State Ownership of Trees: Colonial decrees (such as the 1935 French Colonial Decree in West Africa) often declared that all trees belonged to the state. Even if a tree grew on a farmer’s land, they were forbidden from pruning or cutting it without a government pe...

The Great Dying: The 90% Collapse of the Native Hawaiian Population

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  The Great Dying: The 90% Collapse of the Native Hawaiian Population ​For over a century, the history of Hawai‘i was often presented as a peaceful transition into the modern world. However, hidden beneath the surface of this narrative is one of the most catastrophic demographic collapses in human history. Within just 125 years of Western contact, the Native Hawaiian ( Kānaka Maoli ) population plummeted by an estimated 90% , falling from nearly 800,000 to fewer than 40,000 by the late 19th century. ​This was not a singular event, but a "perfect storm" of biological, social, and psychological factors that dismantled a thriving civilization. ​1. Biological Warfare: The "Virgin Soil" Epidemics ​The most immediate and visible cause of death was the introduction of foreign pathogens. Isolated in the Pacific for centuries, Hawaiians had no "immunological memory" of the diseases common in Europe and the Americas. ​ Waves of Infection: Starting with the ar...

What People Mean by “Inactive DNA”

  What People Mean by “Inactive DNA” That idea gets repeated a lot;  what science actually says from the popular (and often misunderstood) interpretation. What People Mean by “Inactive DNA” When books like Slave Species of the Gods talk about “inactive” or “suppressed” DNA, they’re usually referring to the idea that: Humans only use a small percentage of their DNA The rest is “turned off” or “dormant” And possibly could be “activated” for higher abilities This sounds mystical—but the reality is more nuanced. 🔬 2. What Science Actually Says 🧠 You Are Using 100% of Your DNA Every cell in your body contains your full DNA, and it is biologically active in different ways. The confusion comes from this: Only about 1–2% of DNA codes for proteins (the building blocks of the body) The other ~98% does not code for proteins For a long time, scientists called this: “Junk DNA” But that term is outdated. 🌿 3. So What Does the Other 98% Do? Much of it plays regulatory and structural roles...