Even if you’re not an environmentalist, you’re taken aback. We can see what we’ve traded for our conveniences. The damage we inflict daily is obvious. Some will say it’s inevitable. Some will say it’s time we measure the cost versus what we get in return.
Last week I repeated an oceanographer’s observation that Nature hates excess. Too much of anything endangers everything, so Nature has ways to trim whatever is overflowing. People didn’t have any hulking, hairy predators. We had only our own kind to fear. Is it a coincidence that more people have lost their sense of serving the greater good? More are murdered, starved, abused? More of the workers are trampled beneath the greed of the rich. But perhaps that death toll was still too small, so Nature brought in a reliable predator—a new virus.
The COVID-19 virus isn’t terribly fussy about who its victims are. It targets the aged and the weakened, of course, but it also takes out young people. It feeds on the ignorant who refuse to believe information about how viruses work, but it also feeds on the well-educated who were trying to make a difference. It gorges on crowds because they dared to think they were immune. It’s a predator we’re forced to respect…until we discover a way to control it. And then we’ll exercise our power again. We’ll indulge our whims and flip off anyone who reminds us we’re only creatures, after all. We’ll rearrange the surface of the Earth to suit our hunger…until the next predator arrives.
Maybe it’s time to celebrate all we are in this moment—without hair dye and body wraps. We will one day be shards of bone in the ground. But in this moment, we’re bathed in the goodness of others. We can see who truly sustains us and who merely seizes our assets. We can see that we don’t have to have someone to watch for entertainment. We’re here to experience and learn for ourselves. We don’t have to have huge vistas. Our yards are crammed with tiny wonders. We don’t have to yearn for mythical heroes with superpowers. We have heroes around us. I’m home. I’m safe. And I’m in love with the Earth.