It was three blocks further in my neighborhood walk when I saw this door:
I stopped to read the sign:
I really appreciated the message, in the face of the grim news from the Centers for Disease Control that, at a minimum, they expect 100,000 deaths from coronavirus. A friend in Britain texted that the death rate had risen 50% overnight. At-risk workers are going on strike for protection. And the New York Times reported on the weaknesses in our national supply chain of food.
If only that were all. Another friend asked, "When were the fires in Australia?"
We pondered that for a minute, and I wanted to say, "Last summer," but it was only two months ago. Years ago, I defined "root shock" as losing all or part of one's emotional ecosystem. I would include "climate change" as a process that, in changing the ecosystem of the world, has caused all of us root shock. Coronavirus comes on top of the stern confrontation with climate change that we had when the continent of Australia was burning and a billion animals died. This series of massive upheavals fits with what I have called "serial forced displacement," a repeated ripping apart of communities and ways of life. The psychological ramifications are powerful: we are disoriented, disconnected and stripped of the part of our identity that came from knowing our place in the world.
In such moments we are open to fears but also to new truths. I feel hit over the head with all these realities, which are stripping away my illusions and pretenses and myths, until I see the sparkling atoms that spin in and around us in webs of connection I have only just begun to imagine. I used to ask my class in Urban Space and Health, "Who is more important to city, the bus driver or the doctor?" Trick question, of course, as they are equally important, but my students would routinely fall into the trap and say, "Doctor." And as a person who lusted to go to medical school so that I would be important, I must say I have spent a good bit of my life climbing out of that hole, slowly learning to see the dance of the universe.
However far I had gotten on that journey to ecological consciousness, this moment in history has shoved me forward. The poet Mary Oliver spoke to what this series of events -- these displacements from the known universe -- is opening for me and perhaps to all of us:
“I tell you thisto break your heart,by which I mean onlythat it break open and never close againto the rest of the world.”
If my heart is open to the world, then I can see and show that I stand with us all. People have been proclaiming their solidarity in myriad ways, but I plan to follow the lead of my neighbor: I'm going to make a big sign that says, "We're all in this together," and put it on my door.
1 comment:
I often refer my colleagues and my students to read your books especially Root Shock. I think from now on I’ll strongly suggest that they read your blog. Thank You🌈
Post a Comment