Nicole Manley
 
 

Workshop of the Flood Risk Management Conference

This workshop intorduced rivers from the viewpoint of a river to shift thinking away from human centred needs and to take a stance of living with, rather than living from.

 An example of such a way of thinking is recent legislation that was passed by the New Zealand parliament that declares that the Whanganui River and all its physical and metaphysical elements—is an indivisible, living whole, and henceforth possesses “all the rights, powers, duties, and liabilities” of a legal person.

 Human rights were given to the river, because this was the closest existing form of law that could describe how the Maori people living in the Whanganui catchment understood their river. The people of the Whanganui have a saying, “the great River flows from the mountains to the sea. I am the River, the River is me.” They say that the river is their “awa tupua”- their river of sacred power and a “tupuna”, an ancestor.

 The aim of this workshop is not to follow the footsteps of the New Zealand Government by suggesting giving rights to rivers in Scotland, but what we aim to do today is take a different, more embodied, perhaps, view of the rivers in Scotland, or the rivers that are your rivers. The purpose for the next 70 minutes is to shift our thinking away from our human centred needs and try to ‘become’ the river, so to speak!  By shifting our way of thinking, and attempting to move out of the box, we are aiming as a group to co-create a sense of a a different relationship to a river. I’ll be suggesting in the course of the workshop that we create two important concepts that might signal such a different relationship, and maybe lead us to make subtle shifts in the way we want to live with rivers. The premise for the workshop is that art based creative practice can help us to begin this journey, and we will be using creative processes such as poetry, drawing and free word association.

The Creative Practice Process 

First, we are going to start with a film of a river’s journey. The film is approximately 10 minutes long. I will stop the film three times, each time you will write a group poem and then we are going to shift to drawing and creating our two new concepts of living with rivers.

 On each table you have folded pieces of paper with a number 1, another 2 and another with 3. These are the papers you will write your group poetry on. We will start with the number 1. After playing three minutes of the film, one person will write a first line of the poem in top line. From the line they have written they will choose a keyword and write this on the right-hand side of the paper in line 2. You will then fold the piece of paper so no one sees what you have written, the next person then has to start their line or use the keyword somewhere in their line of poetry. What you write as poetry is to relate to what you see and hear in the film, which might also evoke emotions, memories, thoughts, and ideas.

Once you have written your poetry, we will share the poetry from each table and discuss some of the meanings of these poems and how this relates to your work in Flood Risk Management. After discussing the poetry and flood risk managment, you will be asked to draw, write words or put marks on paper whatever comes to mind when you think of the film, the poetry outcomes and the discussion we have had about how this relates to your work in Flood Risk Management. Finally you will be asked to place your creative piece on the river sketch that is on the floor in the middle of the room.

A film of a River’s Journey

STOP 1

Source to sea, raindrops fall,
The rain is peaceful and relaxing,
Water flows from calm to bubbling over stones,
Skipping and bubbling over dark stones and mossy depths,
Mossy rocks made smooth by time and flows

Volcano of life,
Life disturbed by flow,
Flow sculpt land and rocks gently,
Land resistance, I will get through

Wild and gentle beginnings in peace,
Wild at heart and wild by nature,
Nature’s journey moving, creating noisy peace,
Fizzing noise from bubble vortices

Clean blue lifeless water,
Swirling bubbles, clear and blue dancing quickly,
Coloured weeds and dancing with me,
Reflections of sunlight are so colourful

Mossy rocks and bubbles,
Dynamic life within the rocks,
Bright dynamic beginnings,
Beginning towards the hostile unknown

I am unstoppable, I keep on freely flowing,
Hurried movement cascading and tumbling,
Bubbling over the delicate flora and fauna,
As above, so below, bubbling, full of air, each side a mirror –

Fast currents of bubbles,
It goes quickly and bubbles like a waterfall,
Washing clean the rocks, quickly by,
Rushing and washing all around

STOP 2

Underwater canyons out by destructive water,
Rushing and gurgling, escaping through carved channels from millennia,
Water becomes more wild with more power faster and faster,
The power of the river starts to grow,
Turbulent water and sediment, mixing, shaping the river bed

Debris spirals on the surface,
Spiral arises from the deep waters,
Deep water reveals contracting flows,
Flows go down,
Down space and to time to transform

Continuous movement, sometimes quiet, sometimes restless,
Restless water, fast flow, water’s reflection on smooth rocks,
Waterfalls are fantastic places for reflection,
Fantastic, powerful, chaotic giver of life

Rocks and landscapes formed over centuries,
Smooth surfaces are formed, as on my journey I go,
Journey with no escape from deep water,
Trying to escape, gasping for air whilst being sucked deep below

Hurling towards the unstoppable,
Downwards its hurling, relentless and powerful,
A powerful and unstoppable force,
Escape the force, shelter in the eddy

A conflict of movement rapid and slow,
Rapid yet slow, passage of time, passage of water,
Slow at first, getting into speed and,
A quick tempo ducking and diving through the caverns

Bubbling life in a maelstrom,
It’s when I’m bubbling that I’m breathing,
Energy, spheres and breathing geysers,
Carrying energy with me

STOP 3

At last, long thin tiny fish with stripes, hurrah,
Fish swimming between the rocks,
Dappled sunlight on stones and flashes of fish,
Families of fish living safely in slow flowing water,
Is water life? Does water give life? Unquestionably so! Water is Climate and climate is water

Life looks beyond the surface,
Beyond myself there is space to be,
Be connected to the cosmos XX and see light and spirits,
Light from cosmos shines on life in moss,
Light shines through to illuminate fish and flora

Light twinkles through to life in the deep,
Life’s secretes suspended in the deep,
Deep with many layers, but a home I still offer,
Home to fish and strange plants; mystical world

A smooth, murky journey losing sight of where it’s going
Freedom and life runs smooth,
The river shows freedom and peacefulness,
Insulated from the sounds of rain, there is peacefulness in my land

It transforms the landscape – striking or not,
Flashing stripes on a shifting landscape,
Sediment shifting, fish swimming, plants growing – life,
Life teeming with the restless silence of the deep

A dynamic atlas projected on the ceiling,
Dynamic is also the change of the landscape,
Smoothing and carving the landscape surrounding,
Lazily carving its path.

Calm, flowing, life force,
The water full of life comes and goes flowing,
My life carries on as normal,
Nothing is normal, all has wonder