Today,
we know that major dams, the largest constructions in the world, can cause
seismic activity. We’re talking earthquakes. But the earth’s health is not even
just about this sort of thing anymore either. It’s about how we’ve become
threatened by our own existence.
Every day we hear about new extinctions.
How do you talk about this enormous loss
that all of us are facing? Those that
have little ones. Those that like to think about futures. Like to think about the summer sun or kitchen
gardens feeding families in Kenya . The movement of people and animals.
Rhythms. Maybe the drumming of the
caribou influencing our music. We don’t
really know how any of the subtle or even the strong rhythms transform or
change the flow of the blood in our veins. What we do know, we know so well
that we’re starting not to hear it. We know that mountains in Switzerland have to be covered to
protect them from melting. We know that bugs
that have natural enemies are free to destroy because the cold that would suppress
them no longer does.
We know that our opposable thumb is
unopposable.
How do you talk about this and relate this
to the loss of someone you love without making it seem like you’ve made too
much of a leap and that people aren’t important? When people rank priorities of life, we’re
always at the top of the list. Do people have to be the most important? Of
course they are to you. Those that love you; those that give you meaning, and
gravity and ground. But what about all those other beings and bodies living on
this planet that sustain all that you love? What do you know about that? How close are you to it? Is your ear to the ground?
Enki, in ancient Sumeria, the place that
gave us writing, meant wisdom. Enki literally meant your ear to the ground. Can
you hear the smooth turns a salmon makes up a winding river? While in the belly, salmon eggs learn how to
follow the river and to mind their way back to the open ocean.
Every day another extinction. Aldo Leopold said an intelligent tinkerer
saves all the pieces. We’re losing the
pieces. Rhythms are changing. Some of the sounds that make up the song are
disappearing. Some of the movement in
the river is stopped by dams and diverted waters. We should celebrate our
differences. But we have to distinguish between difference and loss. We know that the Earth has tremendous
capabilities of renewal. Some people call wetland habitats the earth’s lungs. If given a chance wetlands not only transform
toxic wastes but thrive again and become open invitations to ducks flying
overhead to rest during their migration.
Every being is a significant part of this world. Every living being,
every body of water, every parcel of land. How do we learn how to hear what
we’ve put into the background? We need
to start listening again.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00E2UU19O
No comments:
Post a Comment