Edgar Allan Poe is not who I usually look to for
inspiration, unless I need to hide an enemy in a wine cellar or undermine the
structural integrity of a house. But, nonetheless, I recently read his poem “A Dream Within A Dream”
and came away lighter.
“Is all that we see
or seem
But a dream within a
dream?”
Dear Edgar: No. All that we see and seem and dream of can be
made real, is being realized.
In the last day, I have eaten meals with a cook, a landscape
designer, an academic sustainability coordinator, and a PhD candidate in
revolutionary botany. We, all, naturally fell into discussing how to save the
world. I used to have these conversations only with the people I trusted most,
the people I sensed were already on the same page. I didn’t want to expose the
beating heart of my hopes to eyes that might be unfriendly. And so such things
grow until one can become sure and brave enough to talk with newly met
strangers, friends of friends, about the challenges of the world, and more
deeply, the paths and the rewards of rising to those challenges.
The bedrock of my hope about the world is that more people
than I can ever know are laboring in a brilliant and wide scope of ways to make
a kinder planet. This is something I take on faith, on the daring hope that
active belief will make it so, that a host of private dreams are made true
through the dint of love and effort pouring from so many hearts into the wounds
of the world. To hope that I am part of something so much larger than my own
small self is what keeps me sane in the face of all that threatens this world.
It is hard to keep from drowning in despair. Everyone I talk
to, old friends and new, knows the gloom and doom of things. We know the climbing
counts of carbon pollution, we know where such pollution is entering the world,
and we know—with sickening certainty—our own entanglement with these monstrous
and devastating systems. It is easy to feel too small and lost in the face of
all of that.
Escape, in any way, feels like an impossible and lonesome
dream.
And yet, the more of us who acknowledge that dream, the
easier it becomes to push on, to think and be positive and proactive about the
daunting challenges that lie ahead.
The power is shifting. there are ever more of “us” than of
“them.” We’re living louder, we’re cheerfully helping each other along these
paths, through this thing, whatever it is. There is a lot of company to be
found, bumbling along in the lessening darkness. Perhaps my world has grown
smaller, perhaps I am insulating myself and only speaking to, talking to, those
who I can most safely suspect of agreeing with me. Perhaps. But, to take the
only page I want from Karl Rove: this is rallying the base. I’ve been told that
we only need 10% of the population to have a revolution. This, being brave
enough to talk about what shapes the deep why and how take inside our hearts,
this is how that 10% come together, how the base is rallied.
What we are doing, at present, is building a support
network. We are finding each other, baring our hope and hearts as the only
secret handshake that matters. What we do with our resistance and resilience,
in practical terms, is still open. We become a web, flexible and porous, the
shape ballooning and morphing as the winds pass through, untold threads yet to
be spun. The grounding certainty here is that we are in this together, no
matter our individual paths. The increasing admissions of support, of our
mutual and wheeling direction away from corporate systems of soul and planet
pollution, always towards the things that give us joy, I very well believe
might be the revolution itself.
Which means it is happening. No longer a dream within a dream or the wisp of a hope, it
is here and it is now. Evermore.
(Convening ravens graphic from: www.dinefwrliteraturefestival.co.uk)
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