We lose the forest for the trees, forgetting, even so far as we think at all, that we are trustees for those who come after us, squandering the patrimony which we have received. – Learned Hand
Imagine landing in a place where all of your basic needs are met. A tree gives you fruit. A stream gives you water. A cow gives you milk. A field gives you grain. And so it was for humans. Call the place what you will. Maybe the Garden of Eden. But the place, let’s just call it Earth, did give. And we took. In time, we took so much that we became known as consumers – those whose function it is to consume. But we never learned the limits of taking; certainly not the art of giving back.
Few understood the environment was in equilibrium with all of its parts moving in unison. But the trouble brewing was evident on August 22, 1981 when the New York Times had an article: Study Finds Warming Trend That Could Raise Sea Levels. It was front-page news; below the fold, perhaps, but still front page.
A decade later it seemed romantic to have a new beginning in a new century and so: “The goal of the Climate Change Action Plan is to reduce the nation’s emissions of so-called greenhouse gases to 1990 levels by the year 2000.” (NYT, Oct. 20, 1993; section A, page 20)
Well, 2000 came and went and … nothing. Everything was then supposed to happen in 2020. Everyone loves 20/20 vision. In 2015, the UN set goals: Goal 13 “aims to mobilize US$100 billion annually by 2020 to address the needs of developing countries to both adapt to climate change and invest in low-carbon development.”
Uh, oh. Nothing. Hey, what about 2050? “At the heart of every long-term strategy is the setting of goals for deep GHG emission reductions by 2050.” (wri.org).
But we can only fool ourselves. The Earth isn’t fooled; it simply resets the equilibrium.
The storms began before the hurricane season officially kicked off, with the formation of Tropical Storm Albert in mid-May, two weeks before the official start of the Atlantic season on June 1. In August, midway through the six-month season, scientists upgraded their outlook to say 2020 would be “one of the most active seasons,” and said they expected up to 25 named storms by the time it was over. By November, even that upgraded expectation was exceeded: There have now been 30 named storms — 13 of them hurricanes — breaking a record set in 2005, when 28 storms grew strong enough to be named. Fifteen that year became hurricanes. (NY Times, Nov. 16, 2020)
We have been squandering gifts since the Garden of Eden. We should have learned that taking has its limits; not having learned that, we must now live through the penalties. Work for an awakening.
Lucid Intervals: moments of clarity in thought & action
Lucid Interval #5
(originally posted Nov. 18, 2020; revised March 23, 2021)