Sunday, February 21, 2021

Love Letter to the Earth

Breathing in, I calm my body.

Breathing out , my body is at peace.

Breathing in, I take refuge in Mother Earth.

Breathing out, I release all my suffering to the Earth.

Thich Nhat Hahn, Love letter to the Earth 



As a species, we need to fall in love with the Earth.  We only save those things which we love.  Currently, we see the Earth as a resource to exploit, only there for us to do what we want with it.  We have hurt the Earth.  In places, we have devastated it.  And why?  Only to fulfill our own greed and need for power.  If our species is to survive, we need to shift our thinking and our beliefs.  We need to recognize that we are of the Earth, as she is of us.  We need a radical shift in our way of being with the world.  We need to choose love.

"We allow political boundaries to obscure our interconnectedness.  What we often refer to as patriotism is actually a barrier that prevents us from seeing that we are all children of the same mother.  Every country calls its nation a motherland or a fatherland.  Every country tries to show how it loves its mother.  But in doing so, each country is contributing to the destruction of our larger mother, our collective mother, the Earth. In focusing on our human made boundaries, we forget that we are co-responsible for the whole planet."

Thich Nhat Hahn, Love letter to the Earth

In tradition indigenous cultures, it is believed that no one owns the land.  Humans walk on the land with respect and generosity.  For everything that is taken from the land, something is given in return.  When plants are harvested, an indigenous person would only remove a small portion of the available plants in order to leave enough plants to regenerate for future harvests.  Indigenous peoples lived in reciprocity with the land.  Western cultures create borders and boundaries and claim the land as our possession.  This leads to violence and scarcity as we feel that what's on our land is ours and if you are not privileged enough to have food on your land, then you fight to take it from someone else's land.  As we head into climate change, the land you live on and call your own, may no longer be able to produce food which means humans beings will be shifting and migrating to areas where food production is possible.  Because people will defend that land as their own, this will lead to violence and struggle for power.  We are all one species.  We are one people.  We are the same.  What we do to one person, we do to all.  There is no us and them. 

"Humanity needs a kind of spirituality that we can all practice together.  Dogmatism and fanaticism have been the cause of great separation and war.  Misunderstanding and irreverence have been the cause of enormous injustice and destruction.  In the twenty-first century is should be possible for us to come together and offer ourselves the kind of religion that can help unite all peoples and all nations and remove all separation and discrimination.  If existing religions and philosophies, as well as science, can make an effort to go in this direction, it will be possible to establish a cosmic religion based not on myth, belief or dogma, but on evidence and in the insight of interbeing.  And that would be a giant leap for humankind. "

Thich Nhat Hahn, Love letter to the Earth

 



Friday, February 12, 2021

The Uninhabitable Earth

 I just finished reading The Uninhabitable Earth, by David Wallace-Wells, and wow, was it heavy.  Having a background in environmental science and having studied climate change, I can't say that I found anything too shocking about what was in the book, but the fact that it was all there, in one book, in 12 chapters titled The Elements of Chaos, was an eye opener and soul crusher to be sure.

In the book, Wallace-Wells lays out all of the data he's acquired through his collection of articles related to climate change.  It's a lot of data.  When most of us think of climate change, we think of unprecedented weather events, sea levels rising and maybe climate refugees.  This book exposes us to the 100s of other consequences we may not be aware of.  Below is a list of climate change consequences that I had either never thought of, or was only vaguely aware of.

Bitcoin- to be honest, I only vaguely know of bitcoin as a concept. I had no idea how it was generated or the fact that 'mining Bitcoin uses as much electricity as nations like the Netherlands'.  I still don't really understand how bitcoin is mined, but apparently the thousands of computers calculating math problems 'produces as much CO2 each year as a million transatlantic flights.'  So, we are relying on technology to save us from the destruction of the climate, while simultaneously causing destruction through excessive use of electricity the majority of which isn't green.

Food- Not only will climate change shift where we are able to grow food (our current breadbasket will become too hot and dry to grow grains- the wheat belt is shifting 160 miles each decade), it will also reduce the nutrient value of our foods.  As CO2 builds in the atmosphere, there is a decrease in the nutrient content of our food- 'drops in protein, iron, zinc, and vitamins B1,B2,B5 and B9' were found in rice, which is the protein staple in many parts of the world.  So, not only will it be more difficult to grow food, the resulting food will be less nutrient dense.

Oceans- Oceans account for 70% of the Earth's surface and absorb 1/4 of the carbon emitted by humans, and 90% of the excess heat.  As a result, the oceans are acidifying and there are now over 400 dead zones in our oceans.  Areas where there is no longer any oxygen and nothing can survive.  The oceans are a major food source for much of the human species and a very large producer of oxygen which is essential to human survival.

Air Pollution- As climate change progresses, there will be more air pollution- particles in the air as a result of desertification (think the dust bowls of the 1920s USA), and ozone smog.  With an increase in air pollution, one can expect an increase in heart disease, cancer of all kinds, respiratory disease and adverse pregnancy outcomes like premature birth.  Air pollution is also linked to worse memory, attention deficits and autism spectrum disorders.  With CO2 at 930ppm (twice what the atmospheric CO2 is now) cognitive ability declines by 21%.  At at time when we are going to need humanity to be at its best and brightest, human health will be failing.

Diseases- Boundaries that currently exist for mosquito borne diseases like yellow fever and malaria are going to shift exposing billions more people to those threats.  The number of people with disease from mosquitoes, ticks and fleas has tripled in the US in just the last 13 years.  The planet could harbour 100,000 yet-to-be-discovered viruses and we don't know the effects of climate on the bacteria in our bodies.  For example, there was a 'mega-death' event in the population of saiga- a small antelope found in Asia- as a result of warmer temperatures, increased humidity and a bacteria that had been harmless until the conditions changed.  This bacteria multiplied rapidly and travelled from the tonsil, where it had been living in harmony for many, many generations, to the liver, kidneys and spleen.  We have thousands of bacteria that live on and within our bodies.  As climate changes, will our symbiotic relations with these bacteria also change?

Imagine all of these things happening at the same time as economies are collapsing, governments are unravelling and violence on the planet is increasing.  Wallace-Wells paints a bleak picture, but it is one we all need to see.  We have already increased the planetary temperature by 1 degree and are well on our way to 2 degrees.  At this point, we can't prevent that from happening, but what we can do is avoid the absolute devastation that occurs at an increase of 3 or 4 degrees.  We know how.  We have the ways.  Now we just need the will to do it.





Thursday, February 4, 2021

Education


 I watched a webinar by Robin Wall Kimmerer, the author of Braiding Sweetgrass, and she said "An educated person is a person who knows their gifts and how to share them with the world."  This made me think about how extremely far away we are as a society from that definition of an educated person.  A definition like that would allow for everyone to follow their calling, instead of becoming thousands of dollars in debt to the education money making machine.  A definition like that would allow a trades person to feel equal to a wall street banker.  A definition of education that includes the use of and sharing of our gifts would allow each and everyone of us to experience joy and peace.



Our industrialized education system has a monopoly on determining what people should learn and how they should learn it.  It has been monetized into a system where only the privileged can enter the system.  Our ideas about work have been skewed so much that we believe only the educated deserve to find work.  Try finding a job that pays more than minimum wage without having a degree to back up your abilities and you'll find there are no jobs to be found.  Our prejudice shines when a person not educated in our country applies for a position.  If they don't have a North America education, then they have no education at all.  Go back to school and prove that you obtain a degree in our schools, then we shall see if you are worthy.

Our children are really the ones who suffer.  Yes, there are some children who excel in the classroom.  They learn best through reading and writing.  Their gifts lie in academics and they would be content in our traditional classroom, except that the majority of the students in the room do not learn through sitting quietly for hours on end being told what to learn and how to learn it.  They are the explorers and the creatives; the tactile learners; the energetics or perhaps they are the dreamers; the spiritual; the artist.  Teachers have an impossible situation these days.  They are asked to teach all of these individuals at the same time within very limited parameters.  30 students, each with different gifts- some gifts are to be nurtured while others are to be squelched.  It's important that everyone fit in and follow the expectations.  Add to that all of the anxiety, anger and fear that many students carry with them and you end up with a toxic soup.  Teachers being assaulted by children as young as 4 years old.  Bullying has reached all new levels of awful.  Classrooms are being evacuated because a violent child has taken control of the classroom.  

Our education system is broken.  Our society is broken.  It's time for change.  It's time for a new story.

Monday, February 1, 2021

Hope

 With all that is going on in the world today, it can be easy to become overwhelmed.  There are so many threats to our existence that if one sits down and tries to process them all, we inevitably end up shutting down.  How does one stay open to the information without becoming overwhelmed with grief?

I have a degree in Environmental Science, and by the completion of that degree I was left with the belief that we, as a species, were killing ourselves and that extinction as a species was inevitable.  I completely shut down.  I still did little things to help the environment- I recycled and composted; I turned off lights when I left the room; I grew food in my backyard; I bought Green and organic- but I did it all knowing that those things weren't having the slightest impact on the mass destruction that was happening to our world.  My education had shown me that the people in charge, the people with power, were more interested in increasing GDP than they were in having fresh water to drink.  They were more interested in creating profits for their shareholders than they were in preserving the forests that provided them with oxygen.  They were more interested in making billions of dollars than they were in maintaining a planet that would provide a home for their children and grandchildren.  Every decision that was being made in every 'developed' country was about the economy.  It was about keeping money flowing and growing.  We had to cut down the forest because it had a greater dollar value as lumber than it did as a tree.  We had oil reserves in the ground that had to be extracted because that would save the failing economy.  What country wouldn't extract their oil?  Environmental destruction was not considered as a cost.  The planet was there for our use, was it not?  Did we not have the right to use 'our' resources however we wanted?  To this day, even with the effects of global warming being blatantly obvious and devastating, our global leaders are still saying 'well, we can't do anything about it now because it would just cost too much; it would be devastating to the economy'.  What about the devastation global warming is causing to the people?  Apparently, that is a price they are willing to pay.

When I graduated in 1998, we were already learning about global warming.  The knowledge was there.  We knew it was happening, but in the 30 years since I graduated, what has been done?  There have been some glimmers of hope as smaller countries have adopted climate friendly policies, but for the most part, there's just been a lot of talk and very little action.

So, for most of my adult life, I have had the knowledge that we were causing massive damage to the planet, that we knew we were doing it, and that we also knew how to stop it, but that the political will just wasn't there.  I shut down.  I lived my life day to day and put on blinders so that I could cope.  I'm not an activist.  I'm an educator and where I could, I would teach my students about what was happening to the world, but I did it with little hope.  Life is already hard enough without having to cope with the fate of the entire species (and most of life on earth).  It was only when I was introduced to the work of Joanna Macy that I was able to pull myself out of the abyss and start caring again.  


Monday, January 25, 2021

I See You

 When I first started this blog, I called it Life Unwitnessed because personally, I felt that no one saw me.  I had no great love in my life, and while I had a wonderful circle of friends, I never felt understood.  Over the last 10 years, that has changed for me.  I have met the love of my life and have worked toward becoming a more authentic version of myself.  Now, my life is witnessed and what a gift that is.

However, there is still so much life out there that is not witnessed.  I'm talking in an ecological and societal sense.  So many of our world's issues arise from not seeing the other.  I believe that one of my greatest strengths is holding space for others- witnessing their lives and hearing their stories.  I will continue to write here in this blog as witness to the things I learn and the stories I hear.