Here is my confession: I still look for silver bullets. For
all that I have written about the future being better and richer and more
varied than anything that has come before, for all that I whisper these hopes
to myself in the doubting nights, and preach them to friends on sunny days, I
have dark times when I am looking for The Answer to present itself.
Of course this will never come. And, even if it did, I’d be
fundamentally unlikely to trust it to be real and comprehensive.
It has been almost a month since I saw the mountain of coal
sitting beside the ocean at the Brayton Point Power Station. I’ve been afraid
to look up the rate of use per day and calculate how the mass I saw could have
shrunk or re-grown in that time. The challenge of how to build a better world
than the one that requires us demolish real mountains and make ourselves sick in
order to live our daily energy-sucking lives…this has kept me awake some nights and made my
days a little sadder now that I have some better grasp on the physical enormity
of the problem. It’s terrifying and daunting and now I have tears in my eyes
again about this.
Because I do not know what to do, and nothing that I do know
how to do is anywhere close to what I would deem “enough.” I don’t know what
enough looks like, and I know that even when an action isn’t enough, you have
to do it anyway.
I ran away from all this darkness and doubt over the
weekend. I went to the mountains, surrounded myself with the crisper air and
the colors of sunlight on granite and schist and balsam fir and good people all the rest
that I love up there. When I lived in the mountains, when I found my mountain
people and we engaged in the common work peculiar to those beautiful hills, one
of the best things I learned was how very capable we humans can truly be. An
action needs to be done, and there being no one else there to do it, no one to
pass the buck to, you quickly learn to jump in with little knowledge and
cautious instinct. You have to trust yourself to be able, and to correct any
mistakes you make. And to feel no shame in trying and failing, in learning.
When I look to my time in the mountains, there are things
that I want to mine, to bring down the trails and into the world as so
many treasures. There are the obvious things, that a hotel sleeping 100 people
can run off of wind and solar and propane, that we simply do not need so much
stuff, that physical labor is not something to avoid, that the best times of
life happen when you least expect them, and so on. But, above all that, I would
bring down that spirit of willing-to-risk-capability.
If we’re going to escape the nefarious grasp of the
Normal—the American unfillable hunger for new and more and bigger and shinier
and faster, the race to the top that tramples our hearts and happinesses—then
we’re going to need to trust ourselves of being capable of anything and
everything beyond that tired way of being.
Specifically, I went to the mountains this last weekend
because Madison Springs Hut was celebrating it’s 125th Anniversary.
Anyone who has spent an appreciable amount of time in those walls will have
many and sweet memories. I love this. But there is a strange dark side up there
too—in general the huts, in my experience were lousy with mice. I cannot begin to quantify
how many traps I set, how many mouse carcasses I sent flying into the
krummholtz. It was disgusting, it was horrid to think of those naked pink feet
and tails scrambling over your foodstuffs, it was a stark lesson in mortality
and human entitlement to empty their gray-brown bodies from the traps. But it
was part and parcel of being there, just another piece of life that needed
doing. So, we all did it, and now we know.
When I came home to Cambridge on Sunday night, exhausted
body and soul from my time at Madison, the first thing my housemate said was
“could you set the mousetraps?”
I do not believe in Destiny, but often, the answers we’re
looking for are closer than they seem. I want to bring the willingness to try
and fail and learn and become capable out of the mountains. I had not thought
that it would be through the mice. But then, if there are no silver bullets,
then the multitude of answers and actions we need can and will and do come from
anywhere, from everywhere.
My words are braver and stronger than I am—no matter what I say or do, I’m still haunted
by all the specters of a changing climate and unhappy people questing for a sick version of Normal that is killing our planet. That’s still a big pile of coal--and it's far from the only one. Neither my blogs nor my mousetraps
are evenly matched opponents for such harsh reality. But, one has to start
somewhere.
I’m off to check the traps, you come, too?
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