(Goose print, with my compliments to Mary Oliver and her wild geese) |
With the UN Climate Talks opening in Paris on Monday, and
with Paris freshly symbolic of joyous resistance against terror, I have been
trying to articulate the link between the two. Others, of course, have already found it and written and done magnificent work in highlighting the connection.
But, never mind preaching to the choir—we are all part of the choir and singing
out in our own times and ways and voices has certain merit in this necessary
revolution on personal and global scales.
This morning, the morning after Thanksgiving, I found the
most recent New Yorker hunkered down
under the circulars and ads for Black Friday sales that came in the newspaper
and mail. In it, Steve Coll writes: “The Islamic State is an oil-funded
descendant of Al Qaeda in Iraq, a branch of the original Al Qaeda, which was
formed in 1988.”
For years, Black Friday has made me spitting mad. That our
nation goes to sleep full of gratitude and turkey and pie and love on the small and human scale that transcends politics, full from a day of
focusing on the bone-deep values of our lives and national ideology and wakes
up to shop until we drop…this makes no sense. And when what I believe to be at
stake with this pressurized American overconsumption—merely the life of our
singular and beautiful planet, the authentic vibrancy of our human
relationships—is further threatened by the discounted, disposable merchandise
produced in decidedly unclean conditions, built with the energy of
heartbreakingly filthy power plants, well…I turn into a snarly Charlie Brown
about the commercialization of the holidays.
But this year, knowing that more pointedly anthropocentric
threats than climate change are also tied to the blind overconsumption of
resources, I have a slim hope that the madness of Black Friday and absurd
Christmas consumption can be reduced. If we are, as a culture, hugely reliant
on oil, and much of that oil is purchased from governments and states that fund
terrorists, then, aren’t we, through our energy misuse and selfish purchases,
funding conservative zealots with dreams of suicidal jihad and fueling the
storms and droughts that ravage everyone?
In 2001, President George W. Bush encouraged Americans to
fight back against terrorists by continuing to live our ordinary lives. Taken
out of context, this message was watered down to “fight terrorism by shopping.”
Which is absurd. When we shop, when we consume without thought for the back
story of what we are buying, without an understanding of where our hard-earned
dollars will go—my suspicion is that not only do we contribute to the changing
climate, but we may very well be funding those who would hold a hotel hostage,
gun down a concert and any other number of acts against humanity.
Rather than that, let’s rebel against terror and slow our
destruction of this lovely world by living more ordinary lives. We can live
smaller and smarter, and in this, we will be more connected to the rest of the
world. In being wise and humble and aware that our voices and choices and
actions do matter in this world, we grow
magnificent, we become limitless. Rather than scrabbling to reach some nebulous
and hollow ideal of enough and what a good life looks like, we learn to live
how it feels right. The Socialist and artist William Morris wrote “have nothing
in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.”
I love this. They seem like good words for living by, for revolting from normal destructive pressures and connections, for embracing the holiday season with, and saving the world through.
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