19 Comments
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Lorne Daniel's avatar

Thanks for articulating our challenges so well. This is hard work which, most days, overwhelms me.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Thank you, Lorne. Everything about this is hard, yes. We need to pace ourselves, right?

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Thomas Wharton's avatar

This is helpful and encouraging. I'm a writer--that's where I feel I can best do my part. So I'm trying to tell new stories, and so often it's the old, malfunctioning stories that I come up against in my work.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

That's right, Thomas. Often I think all we are is stories and a microbiome. And we're in the midst of a story (i.e. culture) with the arc of a big wave heading toward a rocky shore. Glad to have you here. Thanks for the note.

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Jonathan Tonkin's avatar

LOVE this post, Jason! The quotes are gold too. The aliens hoovering up the ocean only for humans to advocate the three Rs in response (i can’t actually recall what it was exactly) is so on point. A real scale mismatch is going on!

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Thank you, Jonathan. That aliens-as-us hypothetical of Derrick Jensen's has always stuck with me. It reveals so much. His writing is well worth your time. He has several books but I know him mostly through his essays published in Orion. That quote comes I think from his essay in the anthology Moral Ground.

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Jonathan Tonkin's avatar

Nice -- will have to dig in! There's just far too much to read!!! Cheers

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Chloe Hope's avatar

I think you said it all with “The destruction is everywhere and it hurts.” Bearing witness is quite the task, especially when people like Dick Cheney exist (that quote made me nauseous), but you’re right, something does shift in the swing from more focused lens to a wider angle, to seeing the “one large intractable thing”. For me it becomes clearer that change is needed from all directions, top-down, bottom-up, inner, outer (dare I say material and spiritual?). “Find what you’re good at, what you love to do, and that helps shift the culture.” Yes, exactly that. Thank you, Jason.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Thanks so much, Chloe. Material and spiritual and from all directions, yes. Which I think is another way of saying we need to remember where and who we are within a more vital reality.

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Chloe Hope's avatar

Amen to that, my friend

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Eduardo Madrid's avatar

Thank you, as always, for another crystal clear essay, Jason. Take care.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Thank you, Eduardo. I'm glad you found clarity in it. It took me a while to put it all together.

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Marisol Muñoz-Kiehne's avatar

All that’s green and good,

under colonialist siege.

Transform in time, we?

...

Loss, harm, hurt, ache, angst.

Awareness brings gifts, and grief.

Domination, death.

...

Elephants in china shop!

Loud call heed. Joint action need.

“Don’t be one person.”

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Sandy's avatar

Thank you for this thought provoking essay. I think that the elephant in the the room that no one wants to talk about might be death.

Chloe Hope had a good refrain that I returning to. She said “ If I have learned anything about death it is that nothing lasts, and life goes on.” The world has collapsed many times, and civilizations have fallen over and over again. Death may the one constant in life as the Buddha observed.

It seems ironic that as I face my own mortality, I am also confronting the end of a world that I love so much.

And both personally, and as another being in an infinite cosmos, I find some comfort that life will go on, always and forever.

In the meantime I will remain observant, aware, appreciative and grateful for all the grace this sweet earth offers. May all beings be

free of suffering, may all beings know true happiness.

Peace 💕

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Michael's avatar

Much appreciated prayer Sandy. It appears you are an elderly Buddhist as am I. It is my belief that the teacher of all the Buddhas is suffering and from that lesson comes compassion and even though all life may someday come to an end Compassion will not. It is woven into the very fabric of reality and we are in its palm and the Earth is in ours.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Thank you, Sandy. Chloe is right, as always. I don't worry so much about the rise and fall of human societies, since we are mayflies in Earth history. It's the collateral damage across the living world that haunts me about this particular failed cultural experiment. It's the unnecessary suffering and loss of so much complex, enduring, beautiful life. The Buddha has something to say about suffering too, I know, but when it's all so easily avoidable, and when the reasons for the suffering are so foolish... That said, I too know that life will endure in new forms under a familiar sun.

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StellaH's avatar

Truth.

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Julia Fitzgerald's avatar

Thank you for this. It helps clarify things and guide my direction.

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Jason Anthony's avatar

Julia, thank you for telling me this. I worried that the piece didn't have quite the clarity I'd hoped for. But I'm happy to offer something that you can carry forward. Be well.

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