Up, up and away!When I was 12, I had the opportunity to visit the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , where my father was building a scientific submarine. The aerospace company he was working for also built the lunar module for the Apollo space programme and I met the astronauts who had been to the moon. I was struck by how much of what they did was actually controlled by computers and experts on the ground. Although they were highly trained, they acted to some extent like human robots. I later learned that some of them eventually suffered from depression and alcoholism alcoholism, disease characterized by impaired control over the consumption of alcoholic beverages. Alcoholism is a serious problem worldwide; in the United States the wide availability of alcoholic beverages makes alcohol the most accessible drug, and alcoholism is and this made me ask questions. Would all adventure henceforth From this time forward. The term henceforth, when used in a legal document, statute, or other legal instrument, indicates that something will commence from the present time to the future, to the exclusion of the past. be managed by computers, with nothing left to human initiative and the human spirit? Then I began noticing the hang-gliders hovering hov·er intr.v. hov·ered, hov·er·ing, hov·ers 1. To remain floating, suspended, or fluttering in the air: gulls hovering over the waves. 2. over our Swiss mountains. It was all so very simple. There was no engine, no speedometer speedometer, instrument that indicates speed. A cable from an automotive speedometer is attached to the rear of the transmission of an automobile; the cable turns at a rate proportional to the speed of the car. or altitude meter. Everything depended on the instincts and reactions of the pilot and the vibrating vibrating, v using quivering hand motions made across the client's body for therapeutic purposes. of the cables--and he or she could fly like an eagle! When I first experienced the thrill of hang-gliding, I discovered something that I had not learned at school. It was the stimulus and heightened awareness of coping with the present moment. School wanted to prepare me for the future by teaching me about the past. Hang-gliding and other adventure sports--parachuting, surfing, skateboarding skateboarding Form of recreation, popular among youths, in which a person rides standing balanced on a small board mounted on wheels. The skateboard first appeared in the early 1960s on paved areas along California beaches as a makeshift diversion for surfers when the ocean etc--set you back on yourself. In split seconds you are forced to adapt and to do what you have to do. This is an ideal preparation for life. Scientific studies show that only ten per cent of what happens to us is what we can see and prepare for. The other 90 per cent is chance and the unexpected. So to know how to train your inner resources to react and respond to their fullest in the present moment is vital. I have used these experiences in my psychiatry--helping people to be fully connected with and to themselves. I have used acrobatic hang-glider flights to explore the short vital moments when we have to encounter the unexpected. Of course you do not have to go hang-gliding to connect properly to yourself and to find heightened consciousness, but that is the way I myself discovered its importance. Then I made another discovery. I was invited to co-pilot a balloon in a race across the Atlantic. At first it seemed the opposite of hang-gliding--no wind in your face, no turbulence, but rather seeking out the wind currents and accepting to go at their speed. We won the race. It basically meant accepting to be pushed by the wind. Next came the challenge of attempts to balloon around the world. Our first flight in Breitling Orbiter Breitling Orbiter was the name of three different Rozière Balloons made by Cameron Balloons to circumnavigate the globe. The first two balloons never made it, while the third made a successful attempt in 1999. took five years to prepare and ended early and abruptly in the Mediterranean after we discovered a leak in the kerosene kerosene or kerosine, colorless, thin mineral oil whose density is between 0.75 and 0.85 grams per cubic centimeter. A mixture of hydrocarbons, it is commonly obtained in the fractional distillation of petroleum as the portion boiling off tank. We accepted this as a challenge, made improvements and lifted off for a second time from Chateau d'Oex in January 1998 for what turned out to be (and still is) the longest manned balloon flight ever made. We eventually came down in Burma, having been refused permission to fly over China. Why can't we live our lives as an adventure? We long to abolish the unknown and live only with certainties, but our certainties can soon turn to prejudice and intolerance. The unknown is always only just around the corner and there is no escaping what it may contain--bereavement, illness, unemployment. There is no choice for us but to go with these wind currents. What we can do is to ride them and use them with our inner capacities fully sharpened sharp·en tr. & intr.v. sharp·ened, sharp·en·ing, sharp·ens To make or become sharp or sharper. sharp and developed. As we go into the new century we need to be ready to go with the winds of trust, conscience and intuition. If we are open to the unexpected and are alert and adaptable, life will become a wonderful journey. |
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