DailyGood: News That Inspires - Jun 13, 2026
|
|
|
|
"No organism on Earth has ever survived alone, not one, not across the more than three billion years that life has been finding ways to persist on this planet." — Ashley Glowiak |
|
|
How Our Lineages Mirror the Mycelial NetworkAshley Glowiak invites us to understand ourselves as part of living networks rather than individuals -- "nodes" carrying forward what ancestors survived, loved, and left unmetabolized. She compares, "When a node in a fungal network is struggling, depleted, isolated, unable to access what it needs from its immediate environment, the network routes toward it. Resources move from abundance toward deficiency with a precision no individual organism is directing, because the intelligence of the whole understands what no single node can see from its own position..." A family is a similar network of nodes. When a family member is severed through shame or silence, they don't simply disappear; they become distortion points where healthy signals scatter. Through four movements -- sealing boundaries to become "selectively permeable," acknowledging excluded members to restore their place, metabolizing stored activation through the body, and pruning patterns that have outlived their protective function -- a single family can change the signal it transmits through the entire lineage. "The saprotrophic fungi are the network's composters," she writes, and in the same way, what families release and metabolize becomes "the fertility of everything growing next." No healing, she suggests, ever happens alone.
|
Be The ChangeToday, bring to mind a family member you've distanced yourself from -- whether through silence, judgment, or simple withdrawal -- and speak their name out loud with one true thing you can acknowledge about their struggle or their place in the family. You don't need to contact them or resolve anything; you're simply practicing what the article calls "network restoration," allowing a severed node to be seen again, which changes the signal moving through the entire system. Notice what shifts in your own body when you stop holding someone out and start holding them in the larger story your family has been trying to complete. |
|
|
|
Comments
Post a Comment