Houses Built on Sand
The other day I heard a story about a Zen master who visited Yosemite National Park, where he stood looking up at a great waterfall.
He noticed that the river came to the falls in one full stream. Then, falling, it separated into drops and rivulets. At the bottom these drops and rivulets again joined the rushing flow.
His insight was that humans are like the river. We are all part of the whole, but when we come into the world we separate out into individual drops or rivulets. We each, in our arrogance, believe that we are unique. But when we die, we join that great rushing river and become one again.
This story (from the documentary "The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill") stayed with me as I was contemplating a lecture given last week at Marlboro College by the award-winning environmental writer Elizabeth Kolbert. Her reporting for The New Yorker has been expanded into a book, "Field Notes From a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change."
Kolbert is a small, wiry, dark-haired woman with enough nervous energy to supply the wattage for several energy-saving light bulbs. She made being brilliant seem easy.
Here in Windham County, where we do so much to prevent global warming -- recycling, green building, riding bicycles, community gardens, anti-idling campaigns and the rest -- we tend to invoke the three "Ss" - self-righteousness, sanctimony and superiority. So it was nice to hear the science for a change.
There's no question about what is driving Kolbert. The last words in her book are: "It may seem impossible to imagine that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we are now in the process of doing."
Cancer metaphors may be a cliché, but it's startling in this case how apt they are. Like any parasite that invades a host organism and lives there until it destroys it -- and destroys itself in the process -- humans are destroying the very earth we live on.
It's hard to understand why. In the first book of Genesis, it says that God made man and woman in His image and gave them "dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth."
Many early civilizations took the stewardship of the earth reverently, walking lightly on the landscape and conserving it gently even unto the seventh generation.
But by the time our culture reached the point of unbridled capitalism, things had changed. The word "dominion" turned into "domination." It's all ours, so let's make as much money as we can out of it.
Strip-mining the planet became our right, as it is now China's right, and India's right, and Latin America's right. Why shouldn't they too have SUVs, televisions, and swimming pools?
We are celebrating Earth Day on April 22. In 1970, when we celebrated the first one, the damage being done to the planet was already obvious if you knew where to look.
In 1974, for example, I began a career of living in small, rural agricultural towns in Latin America. The cities were already becoming polluted, but most of the rural places were so physically lovely that they lifted your heart just by walking out of the door. Orchids grew wild in trees, colorful birds flew overhead, cattle grazed on savannas, rivers raced down mountains tipped with glaciers, everything was green, and the sky was wild and open.
Life in these towns was difficult, no question about it. People worked hard and did without many material things. Resources were scarce. One time, in the Amazon, I found a tin can on the side of the road and grabbed it as a treasure. I had at least five possible uses for it -- eventually it became a lantern.
Then, every so often, I would come back home to visit my parents and wonder why Americans needed 20 different kinds of shampoo. In these rural communities, everyone had their place and their work. Even little children ran errands and herded cattle. Everyone contributed. Even the mentally ill were cared for. In their isolation, these people's lives were far more connected than ours have become -- they were all part of the river, while we here in America had become individual rivulets or drops, deluding ourselves that we are independent from place and time and each other.
After her lecture, I asked Kolbert to define "catastrophe." She said, "There are about 6 billion of us on the planet, and 5 billion will die. If you don't mind earthquakes and hurricanes and droughts and starvation and human suffering on such an enormous scale, then maybe we shouldn't care."
"Wherefore, by their fruits ye shall know them," Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount.
Going back to the Bible, it's hard not to remember that at one point an angry God caused a flood and wiped out most of mankind.
"And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house and it fell; and great was the fall of it," Jesus said about the man who built his house upon the sand instead of the rock.
We have built our houses upon the sand. We have forgotten that we are all part of one flowing river of life. And in the end, the suffering of 5 billion people may be on our heads.
A collection of Joyce Marcel's columns, "A Thousand Words or Less," is available through joycemarcel.com. And write her at joycemarcel@yahoo.com.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllCocoaSwan: Actually it is dominion not communion. If you use the word communion it doesn't make any sense. Besides dominion is a theme found all through the bible. There were no self righteous monks that took it upon themselves to change words indiscriminatly. There was an stringent process of checks and rechecks to make sure they got it translated right. If you were a monk would you take a flippant stance towards God's words of whom you were dedicating your life and were given the awesome duty of translating?
Another poignant article by Joyce Marcel. Joyce, I'm always moved when I read your CD stories, and I liked your book very much.
Good comments by all of you.
Galen: Ah, the internet. I never heard of Joyce Marcel, Galen or a million other people sharing their thoughts, knowledge, and solutions without this gigantic means of communication. With Joyce's and other writer's articles, I tell these stories to friends, family and "strangers" with the hope of bringing a bit more understanding of things and conditions where we can make a difference. People pass information around.
I've got a HP Laserjet printer and I go through three cartridges a year printing articles (like this one) and mailing them to friends and family members without computers in order to get the word out. None of it is in vain.
Also ever notice the obsession with Total Destruction of the World lately?
Remember the nineties?
We we're so positive then, we were imagining simple Drunken Crop Duster Pilots defeating whole Space Alien Invasion Forces.
My theory is that since the Boomer generation was weaned on immersion into the TeleCulture, their impending deaths and general narcissim are feeding this Total Death Fear back to it.
I wish they would just be afraid of the Nukes like their parents -that at least had some logic to it.
Or just accept that they're friggin' Mortals, and get over it.
-matti.
So we're left with a much larger total population than before the agricultural era AND all the intervening know-how for a nice cosy techno-life, given this much of warning time?
Doesn't sound so bad if you think your a god that can "scientifically" determine how many humans will die as a result of climate change.
The gap between such an attitude and the equally common one pointed out by -randolfski- above doesn't seem to me so large really.
They both assume that the World is something we can do things TO, instead of do thing IN.
I know things look pretty nasty from any sensible Human POV, but from the Earth's we've just moved alot of the inorganic bits around, thinned out and undiversified the organic bits, and turned the heat up a smidge.
Yeah, we can fight over what's to blame, and figuring out what to do seems pretty smart, but this endless repetition of the What if? Disaster scenarios is just silly.
Who really needs to know more than "Shit's coming down, bad Shit, get ready"?
Lots and lots of people I guess.
Having FUN?
-matti.
Couple appreciation month? What a sad commentary, that list.
Five out of six of us must die. Okay, but certainly, it won't be me or anyone
i care about. And what about my animals, surely they must survive too even
if the store where i buy my dog food doesn't exist anymore. I'm a white,
privileged member of the number one nation on Earth. Certainly, the condemned
five of "us" must come from the brown, yellow, or other category of the human
race. And I understand that the big mammals must be sacrificed. The whales, polar
bears, gorillas, elephants, tigers will only exist in picture books in twenty years,
maybe less. Many from my privileged sect say, "that's the cost of doing business."
Those salmon that will never swim upstream again, "it was just their time to go."
When this happens, i think it may be my time too.
Did anyone notice that the majority of the above list is consumer/corporate fronted?
Dominion: Control or the exercise of control.
As JM said, it is not domination.
Just like "war" is not the same as "illegal invasion."
Just like "torture" is not the same as "some frat boys letting off some steam."
Meanwhile, isn't it about time we start Earth Week? Or Earth Month? Seriously, one f**king day for the entire planet? Here's a list of what month April is:
* African-American Women's Fitness Month, Natl
* Alcohol Awareness Month
* Cancer Control Month
* Car Care Month, Natl
* Card and Letter Writing Month, Natl
* Celebrate Diversity Month
* Child Abuse Prevention Month, Natl
* Couple Appreciation Month
* Customer Loyalty Month, Intl
* Daffynitions Month, Intl
* Decorating Month, Natl
* DNA, Genomics and Stem Cell Education and Awareness Month
* Donate Life Month, Natl
* Emotional Overeating Awareness Month
* Fresh Florida Tomato Month
* Grange Month
* Humor Month, Natl
* Informed Woman Month
* Injury Prevention Month
* Jazz Appreciation Month
* Kite Month, Natl
* Knuckles Down Month, Natl
* Landscape Architecture Month, Natl
* Learn Thai Month
* Month of the Young Child
* Occupational Therapy Month, Natl
* Parkinson Awareness Month, Natl
* Pecan Month, Natl
* Pet First Aid Awareness Month, Natl
* Pharmacists War on Diabetes
* Physical Wellness Month
* Poetry Month, Natl
* Prepare Your Home To Be Sold Month, Natl
* Prevent Lyme in Dogs Month
* Prevention of Animal Cruelty Month
* Rosacea Awareness Month
* School Library Media Month
* Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Month, Natl
* Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Education and Awareness Month, Natl
* Southern Belles Month
* Soyfoods Month
* Straw Hat Month
* Stress Awareness Month
* Twit Award Month, Intl
* Women's Eye Health and Safety Month
* Workplace Conflict Awareness Month
* Youth Sports Safety Month, Natl
But Earth only gets the one day. No wonder it's decided to kick us loose...
industrial man is dead planet
dead planet is dead man
industrial man is dead man
animal man, aware, is living planet is living man
industrial man, lacking awareness, must desist
Kolbert's book is worth the read.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HI_faqq5C8&feature=related
Buffalo Moon
Coco- Of course 'Earthday' will make it to the MSM.
It's now the main crowing point of the corporations on how 'green' they have become.
After all lead-based green paint is cheap. You can get a helluva deal on hundreds of gallons of the stuff. From China.
what a sad but lovely article. and even if it did make it to the msm galen, i'm sure the vast majority of people would read it, then turn to the 'gossip' page or sports, or t.v. it's going to take 'catastrophe' to awaken the sheeple from their gadget/techincal/american idol/money making stupor. i wonder if earth day will make the msm...................
As a side note, but relevant.
When I walked my daughter to school today, I noticed a group of children watching some ants. Some were picking the ants up (and learning that ants bite), and the boys were trying to stomp on them.
I went over and quietly explained how important ants are to the environment.
Then I asked what would happen if the ants all died off.
Immediately one little girl said "Then we die too?"
The kids all got it.
In that one instant you could see the realization of truth in their eyes.
They let the ants be right after that.
We need more voices like this.
But out in the mainstream, not howling in the internet wilderness...
Actually, the word is NOT dominion, but communion...once again, some self righteous monk translated the original Hebrew incorrectly....
CS