We need the tonic of wildness…At the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things, we require that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be indefinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us because unfathomable. We can never have enough of nature. ― Henry David Thoreau, Walden
A glance at any given day’s headlines is enough to tell you that the environment is in crisis. Global warming gets most of the attention: we throw > 30 billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere each year. Anyone who thinks you can throw 30 billion tons of anything anywhere and not have an effect is sadly mistaken. The effect of global warming on glaciers and ecosystems is well known. Furthermore, the oceans absorb about 22 million tons of CO2 each day. This causes a change in their acidity and since marine ecosystems have adapted to a particular acidity over the millennia, any change that occurs over the space of a few decades can be catastrophic to their existence.
This is only one of the numerous environmental issues that need to be addressed. Also important are the dead zones in bays and gulfs, desertification due to the destruction of forests, the deforestation of the Amazon, the pollution of Guanabara Bay, overfishing, and accumulation of plastics in the oceans.
These issues raise ethical questions about how we should interact with the environment. It is not sustainable for us to pollute the environment as we continue to consume a huge proportion of the Earth’s resources. There is a need for a change in our basic values. It is only by educating ourselves that we can hope to change our behavior in a way that recognizes our role in the survival of the Earth and, not coincidentally, ourselves. The issues are not new. Earth Day began in 1970, which is as distant to us today as World War I was to the generation of young people that took part in the first Earth Day. Yet what is different now is that the time for talk has passed. We either work to change how we interact with the environment or there will be nothing left with which to interact. The changes we will have made will be irreversible and we will have no hope of adapting. We mustn’t be so comfortable with how things are that we find no incentive to change: the looming consequences are dire.
Now is the time to learn a new set of environmental values and then act. In the coming months, we will present the SIX STEPS TO ENLIGHTENED ENVIRONMENTALISM. Stay tuned…
We just live on this, in these six sacred mountains all the time, all of our life. When you are in the pregnant, you are inside of your mother. You got your mother’s breath, and it’s the same with the Big Mountain, in that way. It is my breath. See, I was born around the Big Mountain, and so that is my mother too. So all of my life, I just will always be thinking of this place. My spirit is going to be here forever. Katherine Smith – Navaho activist
Complexity is not an excuse for inaction.
Lucid Intervals: moments of clarity in thought & action
Lucid Interval #1
(revised March 30, 2021)