Author James Redfield recently shared the following on Facebook.
We’re living through a time when global events aren’t arriving one at a time, but in waves. New crises erupt before the last have been reckoned with; the volume rises, headlines collide, and the nervous system tightens.
It’s a lot. Not because we’re fragile, but because human beings were never designed to absorb global instability in real time, all day, every day. When information moves faster than integration, clarity suffers. And when clarity suffers, fear fills the gaps. That’s why inner stability matters more than ever. Awareness doesn’t require panic, and discernment shouldn’t lead to exhaustion.
Remember to step back from the noise when you need to. Protect your attention. Care for your body. Sleep well. Eat well. Walk in nature.
The more centered we are, the more clearly we see. And clarity is what sustains meaningful change.
Ground yourself. Breathe. Let calm be your strength.
I’m taking these words to heart. I’m not retreating from staying informed about what’s going on in the world, I’m not forgetting, in other words, the “duel citizenship of being alive,” but I am stepping back from the noise of the chaos in the world. I’m protecting my attention, caring for my body, and determined to do what it takes to sleep well, eat well, and spend more time in nature.
I’m also going to be more mindful and consistent in sharing content at The Wild Reed that reflects these efforts to be grounded, clear, and calm – the qualities that I want to embody, that I want to be. It will be content of wisdom, truth and beauty.
It’s not that I haven’t already been sharing such content (see, for example, here, here, and here), it’s that I want to be more mindful and consistent in doing so during these profoundly troubling times we’re living through.
And so I start this mindful sharing today by acknowledging that a favorite film of mine is The Red Turtle by Dutch animator Michaël Dudok de Wit, an amazing film he co-wrote with French screenwriter Pascale Ferran.
Notes Wikipedia about this beautiful 2016 film, one that I first saw at the Riverview Theater in Minneapolis in 2017:
The Red Turtle is an international co-production between Japanese animation studio Studio Ghibli and several French companies, including Wild Bunch and Belvision Studios. The film, which has no dialogue, tells the story of a man who becomes shipwrecked on an uninhabited island where his attempts at escape are repeatedly thwarted by a giant red hawksbill sea turtle.
Following is an insightful video commentary on The Red Turtle by the YouTube channel What Do I Know?. As I hope you’ll discover, both this commentary and the film it’s celebrating reflect the beauty and wisdom of James Redfield's words that opened this post – words that speak of knowing exactly what it is we want to be and doing what it takes to be this grounded and calm presence in the world.
Related Off-site Links:
Film Review: The Red Turtle – A Singular Talent – Gerald Peary (The Arts Fuse, February 24, 2017).
The Red Turtle 5-Star Review – Rapturous Minimalism from Studio Ghibli – Mark Kermode (The Guardian, May 28, 2017).
See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
• The Now
• A Prayer of Anchoring
• Cultivating Stillness
• Inner Peace
• Karen Salmansohn on the “Duel Citizenship of Being Alive” • Love Will Not Lose
• Until the Light Returns
• What the Wind Says
• Trusting the Flow
• A Season of Listening
• To Be Still
• Today I Will Be Still
• Eckhart Tolle on Silence and Stillness
• The Beauty and Challenge of Being Present In the Moment
• No Other Time, No Other Place
• A Sacred Pause
• Aligning With the Living Light
• Mystical Participation
• Secret Language of the Heart
• Come, Spirit
• A Delightful Summer’s Afternoon and a Moving Tale

































