Conversations with Todd

The Deer Factor ~or~ Bambi vs The Collapse of Civilization

Don’t be afraid to be afraid…
nnnnnnnnn
Yoko Ono, Beautiful Boys

I have heard many astounding things in the four years since I began to make What a Way to Go. The most astounding is this, which I have heard more than once, from real, living, seemingly intelligent and thoughtful people: “I refuse to be scared.”

Imagine… refusing to feel one’s feelings. As if such a thing is ever really possible. As if such a thing is even a good idea. As if such a disconnection from one’s own body and one’s essential humanity, as if this core-directed attempt at control and domination, isn’t just more of the same. It’s a bit like “I refuse to feel pain” or “I refuse to feel hunger.” I mean, right on… pain and hanger can be a real downer, dude, so like, yeah, cool, groovy, far out, but like…. um… shouldn’t you take your emaciated hand out of that fire? It’s starting to smoke.

Many great thinkers have wondered, Kurt Vonnegut amongst them, whether the hypertrophied human cerebral cortex will ultimately prove to have been a bad idea, and whether it will be soon selected against in the grand Walkabout that is evolution. My guess is that, if that should be the case, if we do go the way of the Yangtze River Dolphin or the Miss Waldron’s Red Colobus Monkey (two species which have recently gone belly-up in the shallow and quickly-warming end of the gene pool), it will be because this great, gray, wrinkled jelly-mold of an organ confers upon us the dubious ability to convince ourselves that we do not feel what we feel, and that we do not think what we think. To my mind, that’s about as good a working definition of insanity as we’re ever going to get.

“I refuse to feel scared.” Could we ask for a more marvelous statement of willful denial than that?

It’s understandable, of course. We live in a culture, and a system of governance and economy and production, that uses fear to control us. Just as it uses violence. Just as it uses power. And so, in the realms of power and violence and fear, we are left to stumble about at our most crazed and confused. Chafing under the dominating jackboot of the mortgage payment, the television commercial, the IRS form and our next employee review (what, did you think all dominating jackboots came hob-nailed?), we seek to distance ourselves from any and all participation in such basic human animal responses as fear in the face of danger, or protection and defense in the face of attack: “Those bastards use fear and power to control us, goddamnit! No way am I going to let them make me be afraid!” In an attempt to “not become the enemy”, we wrap ourselves in cloaks of noble courage and righteous pacifism and hope that these thin fabrics will protect us.

And why not? They HAVE protected us. If we’re rich, that is, or at least middle class. If we’re white. If we’re male. If we’re educated. If we’re first world. If we’re well-employed. Here in the Insulated States of America, much of our violence and power and fear, at least of the hob-nailed sort, has been outsourced, offshored and externalized so as not to upset us while we eat (bad for the digestion, you know). We on the top have been spared the most brutal and overt consequences of our actions for so long now that we have forgotten that there are any. We close our eyes and click our heals and zip up our No Fear hoodies and we’re good to go, confident that all that wishin’ and hopin’ will work today just like it worked yesterday.

Which is, of course, why Peak Oil whacks us so devastatingly upside the head. Because when we begin to look closely at the situation, it becomes very clear, very quickly, that wishin’ and hopin’ are about to go the way of the Yangtze River Dolphin and the Miss Waldron’s Red Colobus Monkey in terms of effective life strategies.

It burns, doesn’t it? It galls and vexes and maddens. I mean, isn’t this what we spent ten thousand years trying to control? Haven’t we worked long hours for low pay killing off everything we could that might chase us or bite us or poison us or eat us or claw us or irritate us or scare us or make us feel all creepy and oogly inside? Didn’t we arrange things so that we could know where our next meal is coming from, and where our warm bed will be at the end of the day? Aren’t we, by virtue of our millennia of effort, and by virtue of our exalted position at the very tip-top of the Great Chain of Being, actually and in no uncertain terms ENTITLED to not feel fear?

Well, sorry, no, we’re not. We can’t have that. First, because that Great Chain is a load of horseshit (my apologies to horseshit, which, composted, can be really great for your garden), and second because our delusional attempts to control something as huge and complex and chaotic and self-directing and autonomous and sacred as THE WHOLE WORLD have succeeded only in pissing her off, and, as that great mallrat-t-shirt says, “When Momma ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy”. Knock knock. Who’s there? Climate change. Oh fuck.

Some people, cognizant of how silly it sounds to actually deny their own feelings, will tweak things a bit, saying, instead of “I refuse to be scared”, something like “I refuse to live in fear,” meaning, I think, pretty much the same thing (though now avowed as an actual policy), but sounding much better. That this is said with high nobility of purpose and the best of intentions does not surprise me, for we are nothing if not well-intentioned. That it’s said with a straight face astounds me. Like… um… wouldn’t the only reason to actually “live in fear” be if there were something in our lives that was ongoingly frightening and threatening? And… I’m embarrassed to have to write this… if there’s something ongoingly frightening and threatening in our lives, don’t we actually want to know about it, and maybe, the gods forbid, respond? Isn’t that what fear is for?

Maybe that’s not totally fair. Maybe it is. At some point, we have to do the work of teasing apart a healthy and useful feeling of fear from an unhealthy and useless feeling of worry, of fear mired in molasses and J-B Weld, which can be both debilitating and paralyzing. Perhaps it’s the difference between a creative response and a reaction. Fear has an in-the-moment quality to it, as a response to an immediate stimulus, and the possibility of openness and creativity exists therein. Worry has a long-term gnawing quality to it, as if fear has taken up a dwelling-place in our hearts, with plans to stay and eat all our potato chips, and there’s nothing we can do to get rid of it.

We point to that ol’ deer-in-the-headlights as an example of the paralyzing effect of fear. Well, let’s think about deer for a second. I’ve met up with many of these “venisons of the deep” in my day, walking through the woods. When they hear me coming, they respond by running away. I’ve yet to have one stand there and let me walk up and pet it. Given the traditional choices afforded us animals, and knowing that fighting is probably riskier and may take more energy, and seeing an obvious escape route, the deer flees. Of course. Easy as pie. Deer ain’t dumb.

But when I approach a deer encased in two tons of metal and glass and fine Corinthian leather, sometimes the deer takes the third option, the option that remains when fighting won’t work and there isn’t time to flee, or a place to flee to: it freezes. Not a bad strategy as a last resort, given the physiology of vision and the instincts of predators, but fairly useless against a Ford F-350 Super Duty diesel, or even a Toyota Prius. What works in the evolved world of lions and tigers and deers fails in the invented world of traffic and tramways and trucks. An oncoming pickup falls so far outside the traditional purview of a white-tailed deer that her first and most effective fear responses break down. Fight and flight appear to be out of the question and, unfortunately in this case, freeze doesn’t stand much of a chance. Traffic and tramways and trucks. Oh my.

This, I think, is what some people are pointing to when they say they “refuse to live in fear.” They look at oil and climate and environmental meltdown and mass extinction and overshoot and economic and political insanity and they sense that, if things are really this dire, there’s no real way to effectively fight it (as in solving it… as in keeping this system going… as in SOL, dude… ), no clear place to which they might flee for safety (where could we go where they don’t hate us?…hmmm….), and they rightly surmise that freezing, in the face of something this huge, will probably not work either. What to do, what to do? There IS an ongoingly frightening and threatening presence in our lives. The coming storms lie so far outside of our purview that our traditional fear responses break down. We already know what usually happens to the deer. And being frozen in fear, apart from not working, really, really sucks. What to do?

I know! Let’s refuse the situation. Let’s just say no to our own reality! In fact, let’s re-write reality. Let’s do like Captain Kirk did with the Kobayashi Maru training exercise and reprogram the simulator. After all, he didn’t believe in the no-win situation, so why should we? I mean, c’mon, people! We’re Americans, aren’t we? Damn straight! Lock and load! Let’s roll!

Ahem… where were we?

When we douse out the fear, when we tamp down the embers of worry, we unwittingly, and unfortunately, choose ingrained reaction over creative response. We fail to let the fear and worry do their work, the work of alerting us, not only to the fact that we are in danger, but also that this danger is huge and new and so dire that our normal responses will not serve us.

Our culture in general (and those in power and control in particular) has used and abused fear and power and violence in order to manage our behavior and our beliefs, to sell us shit we don’t need, and to siphon off the material wealth of an entire planet. In reaction to that, rather than in creative response, we end up forced through tighter checkpoints and down narrower chutes, further and further into the pen. Reacting rather than responding IS a life lived in fear. Reaction is always constrained. It is always less free. The irony, for those who say, “I refuse to live in fear”, is that they already do, and that they probably always have. Refusing fear is a fear reaction to fear itself. (You came close, FDR, but no cigarette holder.)

There’s a way in which the fundamental heart and spirit of What a Way to Go can be encapsulated in one short piece of voice over: “If what we want is to stop the destruction of the life of this planet, then what we have been doing has not been working. We will have to do something else.” Something else, as in something really else, as in “now for something completely different” else. Not the same old tricks in a new shade of muddy green.

So what might that be, fellow deers? We’ve tried the Happy Chapter (TM), but that hasn’t seemed to “work” (I’m defining “work” as “somehow avoiding our headlong plunge into global mass extinction”). We’ve done the studies and written the books and convened the conferences and made the movies and, standing there in the glare of headlights, we’ve looked up at that big ol’ scary truck a’comin’, yes we have, yes we have. But then, because it’s so darned scary, and because everybody knows you can’t leave people afraid and upset, and because everybody knows that you’ve got to give people hope, man, you’ve just got to!, we’ve tacked on conclusions and chapters and benedictions and epilogues and dénouements that say, “Hey, things aren’t so bad. All we have to do is this-and-this-and-this and everything will be fine.” And the effect on us has been to put us back to sleep. I mean, if somebody has figured out the this-and-this-and-this, then surely they’re on it, right? So, I can get back to my shows, right? Cool. The truck? Oh, that. Yeah, don’t worry. There’s some guys in Colorado who have found the brake pedal.

(If only we had stopped to wonder why it is this culture never actually DOES this-and-this-and-this. Here lies Humanity: They could have saved themselves, but they really sucked at follow-up!)

We keep inching up to the edge of terror and hopelessness and despair, only to pull back and find solace in the arms of denial and false hope and slightly-less-unsustainable “green living.” Doing so hasn’t actually “worked.” So… now what? What comes next?

Remember, the truck is still coming…

I am reminded of an old children’s game we used to play in the one-room schoolhouse I attended in rural Michigan. One of us would lead and the rest would follow and we’d sit together and smack our hands on our knees and mimic the various motions and sounds as we went along. It was a hoot. Here, I’ll lead:

Coming to some fear. Coming to some fear.
Can’t go over it. Can’t go over it.
Can’t run away from it. Can’t run away from it.
Can’t go around it. Can’t go around it.
Gotta go through it. Gotta go through it.
Alright. Alright.
OK. OK.
Let’s go. Let’s go.

Smack your hands on your knees, folks. Shout out and shake these bones. We’ve got some feeling to go through! (WARNING: DO NOT TRY THIS ALONE!)

Here’s the thing: I think we all KNOW that we have to do this. We know it’s the fact that Brother Al’s movie was so damned scary that put Climate Change near the top of our national Honey-Do list (whether what the national Honeys are doing will actually “work” is another essay). We know that it’s the feeling that has made the difference. And we know that it’s the feeling that makes us come alive, which is why we spend $9 (plus $7.50 for popcorn and a drink) to go to a movie that will wrench our hearts and drain our tears and rouse our righteous indignation and scare the bejesus out of us.

What we don’t know is how to do this whole “feel the terror” thing without it totally undoing us, without it leaving us debilitated and paralyzed. I mean, shit, pretty much every last thing the analysts and scientists I’ve been reading for the past four years have been saying is now coming true, with this exception: IT’S UNFOLDING WAY FASTER THAN EXPECTED. Foreign investors are fleeing, petrodollars are petrified and petrodenial is running dry, bubbles are bursting and dollars are dropping and the price for a barrel of light sweet is getting downright crude. The delusional belief system (aka “the economy”, aka “the market”) is staring on in dis-belief. Oh, and climate change? Well, let’s just say that you might want to buy those new waders you’ve been looking at in the Cabelas catalog. Today.

You know things are moving quickly when you get to be a prophet and an historian all in one lifetime…

Atomized and ruggedly individualized, riven from our tribal roots, deprived of our healing arts, numbed, dumbed and bummed by an insane culture, alone and without community, how for fuck’s sake are we supposed to go through our terror? And why should we? If we can’t fight, and we can’t flee, what are we to do? If our terror is keeping us frozen, how do we know that feeling it and moving through it and unfreezing it (rather than denying it) will actually give us the power to jump before the truck turns us into road-pizza?

Well, here we are at the heart of it, folks, where the rubber meets the doe, so to speak. There IS no jumping out of the way. The truck is too big. And too close. And moving too quickly for us to even have time to get a good crouch in. So… perhaps it’s time to remember that sometimes… sometimes… when deer and truck meet… the truck gets totaled. And sometimes… sometimes… the deer survives.

We’re going to have to question some deeper assumptions here. Who says we can’t take the blow? And who says deer can’t protect themselves from attack? Who says we can’t find effective responses that will give us a better chance of surviving the impact? And who says we can’t align with the forces already in motion to help the death machine die with more dignity, and less destruction, than it otherwise will? Who says?

Ah, we poor Average Americans (TM). We’ve been bought off just like the Canarsies were before us (supposedly). But instead of the legendary “$24 worth of beads and trinkets”, we got iPhones and plasma TVs and hot and cold running water and The Sopranos and Denny’s Grand Slam Breakfast. We’re so much smarter than those silly Indians, aren’t we? Look what we got! And all it cost us was… well… our very souls, not to mention the health of an entire planet, which is, technically speaking, bigger than Manhattan.

We seem to have so much to lose (as long as we can continue to externalize those darn costs) that talk of taking the blow, of acting to protect ourselves and the life of this planet, scares the rest of the bejesus (that residual bejesus which has not been frightened away by horror movies) right out of us. Take the blow? I can’t take the blow; I just got these new blue jeans! Fight back? Why, they’ll put me in jail! I can’t get a signal in there! Preparing for collapse looks, to those at the top, like hard physical labor and learning to cook possum and really greasy hair and no more trips to Caribou’s. Fighting back looks like embarrassing headlines and a date with Bubba in the showers. With possum stew and jail food on the menu, the Extinction Basket with pommes frites and a Coke (TM) begins to look like an attractive option.

Pampered and purchased, it’s pretty much agreed all around that the last thing Americans are going to do is rise up and take their lives back into their own hands. On the whole, that’s probably true, at least until we’ve already lost our toys. But while masses do not seem to change minds on any sort of a time scale that will help us at this point, individual minds can and do change. People can step out of denial and get into real and effective response. You can. Yeah, I mean you. That’s why I’m sitting on my ass right now writing. Because there are people out there who are ready to look where I’m pointing. Maybe you’re one of those people.

We can take the blow. (We don’t really have much choice.) Perhaps we can even survive it. We can begin by finding our place and our people. We can start an edible forest garden and clean out some old barrels for water catchments and walk down the road and meet all of our neighbors and get together for a potluck and a meeting and talk about what’s coming. We can find a facilitator and do the feeling work we need to do, moving through the grief and the hopelessness, the fear, the anger, moving through them and beyond them, moving together, arm in arm, hand to hand, heart to heart, discovering that we are strong enough to bear such things, that we are still whole enough to not be undone by them, finding that together, we can stand and face the headlights, we can stand and hold each other as the truck hits, and finding, maybe, just maybe, that some of us are still alive after it has passed. Some of us need to do this work, because most will not. Refusing to feel their fear now, they will be forced to feel it upon impact, when the trauma is greatest, the losses so hard to bear. They will need our help.

And we can act to protect ourselves (the larger “ourselves”, which includes everybody else). We have no real idea what small groups of us can do to that truck if we stand up to it when it hits, but we can acknowledge the possibility that the truck will end up overturned in the ditch, damaged beyond repair, never to “let’s roll” again, while we manage to limp away and lick our wounds. It could happen. And since it’s possible that finding some way to deflect the truck into a ditch will “work” (and remember I’m defining “work” as “somehow avoiding our headlong plunge into global mass extinction”), then it’s worth the responding, the trying, the being, the doing. Things are going to get a bit crazy. The rules are all going to change. Stay awake. Stay aware. Stay poised. All will become clear.

The people I see engaged in effective response have all faced into, sat with, chewed on, and stared down their fear. This does not mean they are no longer afraid. It means that they have confronted their fears and found themselves more than a match for them. It means they have found their power to respond even when afraid, which is the definition of courage. They are still standing in the headlights, for there is no real place to hide, but they are not frozen. They are readying themselves for the blow, however and whenever it comes, responding, moment by moment, intuitively, rationally, non-rationally, and with heightened awareness. And they are getting prepared to play their parts in tossing that damned truck into the ditch.

It seems fair, in a way, that someone takes the blow. Not necessarily at the individual level, of course. There are many, many victims in this story. We were all born into this situation. I will not argue that any one of us in particular has a debt to pay. That’s for each of our own hearts to know.

But at the collective level, at the level of our nation, and our culture, there is a fairness here that feels deep and clear. This particular troop of clever monkeys has acted abominably. As dysfunctional (if not self-acknowledged) members of the Community of Life, as supposedly informed and qualified delegates to the great Council of All Beings, we have amends to make. Perhaps feeling the fear we’ve engendered, the pain we’ve caused, the grief we’ve created, the anger we’ve provoked, the guilt we’ve earned and the clear and soaring joy we can step into at any moment, perhaps feeling deeply is one way to begin making those amends. Feeling. Then moving into defensive and protective responses that might actually “work”. It’s sort of a cosmic you-break-it-you-buy-it situation we find ourselves in. We created this, we “civilized” ones. We broke the Laws of Life. The results belong to us. So how much do we have in our wallets? Who are we going to be?

I know my path: I’m going to finish growing up. I’m going to do whatever it takes to rejoin the community of living souls as a fully initiated adult human being. Refusing to feel one’s fear is just a dressed-up form of adolescent indestructibility, just another facet of Civilization’s millennia-long PCP frenzy. Fuck that. It’s time to grow up. I’m ready.

I’ll feel my fair share of fear and grief and anger and shame and joy, and savor the sweet delight of being alive in this amazing time. I’ll find those few people who see the truck coming, and sit with them in circle and share my heart, and my tears, and we’ll stand together and watch the truck as it nears. I’ll read the headlines, at the very least, in Carolyn Baker’s Daily News Stories, and let the fear and anger wash over me and through me, and I’ll use that fear to keep me aligned, and in response mode, with reality.

I’ll use the fear, rather than refuse it. I’ll use it to keep me awake and alive and in action. I’ll use it as an antidote to the culture that seeks always to lull me back to sleep. I’ll use it to help bring an end to that culture.

Damn, that feels good.

Bring on the truck.

14 Responses to “The Deer Factor ~or~ Bambi vs The Collapse of Civilization”

  1. Michael Tobis Says:

    I really appreciated your movie and am recommending it on my blog. I agree with your statement of the problem:

    “somehow avoiding our headlong plunge into global mass extinction”

    I sympathize with the impulse to reinvent everything, but reinventing everything is one of the things that we know doesn’t work, but if I understand you right, I think your idea of the way to respond is deeply and frighteningly wrong.

    What we need is a soft landing. You don’t get a soft landing by disassembling the airplane in midflight. What we need to do that is different is to find a path to sustainability that is fast enough that we have a chance of saving as much as we can but not so fast as to cause huge disruptions.

    Here’s another way to look at it: if the world population crashes abruptly, the damage we will do will be far worse than if it comes down gradually. The way to avoid the mass extinction is to keep things on an even keel and gradually steer the damned thing to a safe harbor.

    Deciding things emotionally rather than rationally is likely to crash the damned thing even faster. We have exceeded the long-term carrying capacity. That’s a quantitative problem.

    Doing the least damage from there requires rigorous thinking, with numbers, and taking advantage of everything good the system provides us, like movies and the internet. And hydroelectric dams and coal sequestration and maybe even nuclear power.

    The culture is confused and self-destructive, but our goal is to make the smallest change that works, because that’s the one that’s most likely to succeed. Call it muddy green and sneer if you want, but the right goal is to avoid the crash altogether, not to hasten it and make it deeper.

  2. Robin Scott Says:

    ‘Feel the fear and do it anyway’ - Susan Jeffers

  3. Phil Heikkinen Says:

    Tim,
    That’s a good metaphor, and a good read with which to start my week here at the library. Do you have another metaphor that applies to those of us with one foot in the working world while also preparing for life post-petro-collapse (to use the term that Jan Lundberg favors)?
    Perhaps riding two separate skateboards!? I never mastered riding one!
    In terms of jobs, I’m lucky in that I can easily justify applying our library’s resources in support of our relocalization efforts here. If public libraries don’t play a leading role in that, then what institutions can or will?
    I’m having regular discussions with a dozen or two people, often in the library, but also elsewhere on the island, about our next steps.
    You’re absolutely right about the fear response. So many of us skip that and want to go right to a solution.
    I’ve been living in that space where I have to keep reminding myself to take a breath, go for a run, be present, listen-because otherwise each moment can feel like an ongoing crash-that truck forever bearing down.
    OK. Another breath, another conversation, professionally and/or personally.
    Thanks!
    Phil
    Orcas Island Public Library

  4. Norm Ballinger Says:

    Good work. Trying to imagine a life that’s possible - in abeyance to what civilization has required, the big meaty fist of American capitalism in particular - is taking a while to bring into focus. Plenty of folks are shackled by their fear and seemingly choose to remain so because, well, it’s their fear. Guilt lends a mighty hand as when someone who knows they’re damned goes willingly to punishment. Some say it’s staying with devil they know. I say it’s the culturally induced trauma that makes it so. Our shame no longer blushes because shame is so normal.

    So I’m wondering, what does this truck you’re talking about look like? The last line of your letter, “Bring it on” sounds good maybe to a 13 yr old or someone who doesn’t know what you’re talking about. I think we can agree that it has the shape of a juggernaut and that a lot of what we love will be snuffed out. It may take some kind of strange attractor, maybe even a new form of gravity to get people, even our loved ones, to stand in front of an oncoming truck.

    In any case, thanks for doing the necessary work of telling people what they don’t want to hear. I can’t help but think of a number of poets, going back at least to Wm Blake, who detected the patterns of the time we’re now in, but could not keep us from jumping on the shit slide.

    regards
    Norm

  5. auntiegrav Says:

    “Knock knock. Who’s there? Climate change. Oh fuck.”
    Great line.
    Also this one:
    “So how much do we have in our wallets? Who are we going to be?”
    Except it’s backward in priority. First, before ALL else, and I mean ALL else, we must ask ourselves as individuals, as groups, and as a species: “What are we going to be doing for the universe?” Every other life form has a place to improve the ecosystem. We have separated ourselves from the real universe with religions, ‘civil’izations, and competitive behaviors. Growing up means we have to find our place in the chain and do what we can to improve it, rather than consume everything we can fit into our cakeholes or our furnaces and factories.
    Growing up means moderation in all things. Even moderation.
    Your deer example is good, but you should get the “Bambi” movie and watch the part with the grouse as the hunters are coming:
    “Gotta fly gotta fly gotta fly”
    “No! Wait! Wait! Wait!”
    “Gotta fly gotta fly gotta FLY!!!!” (taking off)
    BLAM!!!

    That’s what our System of Systems is trying to do: Trying to fly our way out of danger using resources we don’t have. Trying to buy our way out of debt. Trying to spend our way out of bankruptcy.
    All these things are undertaken without asking, “What are People For?”
    Survival isn’t an answer. Consumerism is simply Blind Faith. To truly Grow Up, we have to Grow Down. Descent is the only viable option. We have to decide who and how far.

  6. Jim Shipsky Says:

    Thank you, Tim, for saying what so few are willing to say. I’m seeing getting ready for the truck impact as a bootstraps operation. Here I am just coming awake to my complex post traumatic stress disorder resulting from growing up in the USA. I’m undiagnosed, except by myself, and no one wants to hear about it, because everyone I try to tell about it is in the same boat and gets scared when I start talking about it, and very tense and uncomfortable and the tension level skyrockets and I know I have to let it go. Derrick has convinced me I’m insane, living in an insane culture. I feel like I’m in the loony bin with no therapists. Those of us in here who have at least partially awakened need to invent our own therapy. I got from Chellis that it helps to keep telling my story and feeling the feelings. Over and over. It helps to form a tribe. It helps to get out of my insane head in a communal drumming circle. It helps to do communal Sacred Circle Dancing. It helps to do, in community, The Work That Reconnects. It helps to see how close to zero emissions I can move my life. But I want more! I am facilitating the creation of Zero Emissions Communities, where people can live a sustainable lifestyle, comprised of communal emotional/spiritual/loving support, and 100% renewable energy. Zero carbon emissions. Permaculture gardens. No cars. Unplugged from the medias. Recovery from addictions, whether money, possessions, busyness, television, substances, etc. Americans desperately need some examples of how to live as humans once lived and can live again. I don’t think we can go backwards. But for the 70% of Americans who live in non-sustainable suburbs, we can go forward to alternate sustainable lifestyles. It’s not rocket science. It needs to stgart, as you so well wrote, with feeling my feelijhngs of fear and despair and joy and exhilaration. Heartfully, Jim

  7. Linda Foster Says:

    Re: Jim Shipsky’s response. I’m in. Where do I sign up for the Zero Emissions Communities?

    All of this is very frightening, but I am a person who has always wanted to know what I am dealing with as far as a dread disease, global warming to the point of mass extinction, and the rest of the dreads.

    I have joined a Simplicity Circle, but I also want to join something similar that deals with all the issues that face our world and its rather shaky future. I think this all has to start on the community level if we ever hope to reach the powers that be. The communities have to become the powers that be. That is probably the direcrtion this will have to go because I don’t see any national politcal or government level individuals or agencies or parties who are addressing this. Too scary I suppose to even acknowledge it and have the sound bite play on the six o’clock news. Could be a deal breaker with the voting public next November.

    Jim also mentioned post traumatic stress disorder as a wide scale cultural disorder. I think he has a point with that. That could explain a great deal of the behavior we see everyday.

    The calculated denial of many people about what is happening is wide spread and is not going to be easy to change. They are comfortable in their denial and their rejection of bad news. We have been manipulated by fear to keep us in this horrible war in Iraq. We have been manipulated by anti-fear to keep us from taking global warming seriously. I for one am getting tired of being manipulated for someone else’s short term gain and greed.

  8. Virginia Simson Says:

    My whole blog is about DENIAL, the death of delusion, trauma and what people are DOing about. Less babble, more DO. I honestly think people avoid reading it because it does what I mean it to do - make them FEEL something.

    There is a point when we must get over the cognitive dissonance (what we are TOLD is happening verus what we THINK is happening versus what is REALLY happening being all at variance) confront the inevitable overwhelm and get on with it.

    I have post traumatic stress disorder, compounded. I can’t think of a single person who doesn’t have it to one degree or another - the Cuban Missile crisis rocked people to their bones as suddenly the reality of nuclear annihilation was addressed to THEM, there in the belly of the beast, America, and it’s been fight or flight ever since - or alternatively, profound dissociation. But it’s time to start getting with a daily program of recovery admittting to yourself you can never fully recover but you can be honest about it and start telling your REAL story to others.

    I wrote a series of columns on dealing with PTSD this year. They had a political AND a social context in them and it pissed people off. Not surprising, but not very healthy. Lots of people think that this affliction is for the middle class alone - well, it is not. It affects everyone. Like every other dysfunction it’s no repecter of class, sex, race but again we CAN do something about it but not be being SELF centred; that only makes it worse.

    Once people “transition” into REALizing that we really are interdependent, and treats each other as an intrinsic part of LIFE, then maybe we can end the wars, make economic sense .. and it’s really putting one foot in front of the other each and every day that’s going to get one there, with our arms outstretched towards others; not with our hands holding everything in towards our solar plexus. We can SCREAM, shout, do all sorts of normal human behaviour if we but take the time and QUIT taking the friggin meds.

    Great essay .. I’m glad someone forwarded it to me, as I could not agree more.

    Do drop by my blog and see what I found to do with myself. It’s my attempt to give something back to life and recover myself. It’s like one huge long poster to real psychic health for a person and for the planet. The links should tell you something about what’s on there.

    Thanks for letting me spout off.

    www.ladybroadoak.blogspot.com

  9. Larry Irwin Says:

    This blog is a great tongue-in-cheek overview of many common methods of trying to come to terms with issues of great import where one feels small and impotent…
    I have simple method: I do what I can, within the means that I have, to contribute what I can, where I think it will have the greatest positive impact.
    Beyond that, I am sure our planet will take care of itself… It won’t neccsarily be nice, but it will be effective. — My point is that all the worry that everyone has is all based upon “when” everything will crumble. — And they are right in the sense that the less we try to solve, the faster it will crumble. — But, it will crumble at some point no matter what we do…
    In the grand scheme of things we are totally insignificant. Earth is insignificant. Our solar system is but a spec of dust…
    Life will come and go on Earth, but it will eventually go… completely…
    So it comes down to “when”… We can spend our lives in fear, in worry, in all sorts of states of mind…

    1) Emotions like “fear” and “anger” are useful when we have to fight. I don’t see why anyone would want to suppress such useful things. But to experience “fear” based upon all the media presentations of impending doom is to be totally gullible if not somewhat mental… If you live in fear, it means you worry about everything. It’s hard to live very long if you are truly experiencing fear. Fear is meant to help you make it through scary, short-lived experiences. “Worry” isn’t useful… except to prod one into action. So, I try to _immediately_ convert any worry into actions within my means and to mentally invalidate any worrys outside my means. Worry must be dealt with and discarded, quickly.
    2) Believe nothing without evidence. Be prepared to change beliefs when presented with new evidence. 3) Question sources of all evidence. All sources have agendas that skew the data.
    4) Realize that all the things that have ever happened on Earth are actually insignificant. We do want “now” to be the best it can be, but don’t ruin your life over it… Make the best of it.

    Larry Irwin
    lrirwin@alum.wustl.edu

  10. Fred Says:

    Well said Larry. I believe this might be the next step in the conversation, and in the process of growing up and initiation. Personally, I think the truck is too close to move out of the way, or to survive impact. Facing this soberly is my challenge. It’s true, to the Universe (that infinity out there-and in here) this planet, and all the life on it is completely insignificant. Many will argue that point. I usually find those arguments indulging in self-importance. I believe self-importance is an enemy. And fear can be an enemy, or at least a worthy adversary. Useful too, as you said. For me the question is, how do I choose to feel, to live, to act, right now, given the certainty that death is right around the corner. In a way this is the perspective that we’ve been running away from by building the industrial infrastructure. Perhaps the deer, when faced with the inevitability of impact and death might choose to honor the truck. What a way to go.

  11. Monika Says:

    Where there is fear there is power
    Passion is the healer.
    Desire cracks open the gate
    If you’re ready it’ll take you through.

    But nothing lasts forever
    Time is the destroyer.
    The wheel turns again and again
    Watch out! It’ll take you through.

    But nothing dies forever
    Nature is the renewer.
    The wheel turns again and again
    If you’re ready it’ll take you through.

  12. Dan Says:

    Naomi Wolf, author of “The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot”, was on Democracy Now yesterday. She has looked closely at the current political situation in the US, and sounds genuinely (and appropriately, IMHO) scared:

    “I mean, this one scares me to death. You know, Mussolini developed — again, a parliamentary democracy, Italy was, in the teens and into 1920. He developed the Blackshirts, which were these paramilitary thugs that beat up newspaper editors, terrorized the population, and they intimidated people counting the vote in Milan. And then Hitler …developed the Brownshirts, the SA, who intimidated people counting the vote in Austria. …. And you saw this scene of identically dressed Republican staffers in Florida in 2000 intimidating people counting the vote.

    …things like that are ….more and more chilling as — I think right now people are kind of ramping up their awareness of these echoes, and what you also see predictably, because the blueprint is predictive, is that the White House is ramping up its implementation of some of the scariest aspects of its crackdown.

    …what’s so scary about Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib and these black sites around the world — apart from the moral issue …it’s our own American souls that are at stake. But just for purely personal reasons, we should be afraid when the state starts to torture people that it sees as at the margins or that citizens see at the margins: brown people on an island in Guantanamo with Muslim names, whatever. That’s what they did in Germany in ’31, ’32: anarchists, communists, Gypsies, Jews, whatever, homosexuals, whatever. You know, people didn’t care, because they were seen as at the margins. People knew about the torture cellars in Germany.

    But then, what always happens, always — you can’t name a society in which this doesn’t happen, Amy — is that there’s a blurring of the line. And once the state legalizes torture of people at the margins, inevitably it will begin to direct state abuse at people at the heart of civil society, and it’s always the same cast of characters: journalists, editors, opposition leaders, outspoken clergy and labor leaders. And when that starts to happen, society can close down in a heartbeat, because people start to sensor themselves.

    I just want to note about the blurring of the line why we’re in such a moment of danger right now. The President has said that he can say, “Amy Goodman, you’re an enemy combatant. Naomi Wolf, you’re an enemy combatant. … He can take us, and if he says it’s true, that makes it true, because it’s a status offense, and he can put us in a ten-by-twelve-foot cell in a Navy brig in solitary confinement for three years, making it difficult for us to see our families, to contact an attorney, to get charges filed.

    They can’t torture us yet, though I was chilled to learn that an adviser to the White House was reported in a British newspaper yesterday as not ruling out waterboarding against US citizens. However, psychologists know that prolonged isolation makes sane people insane. That’s what happened to Jose Padilla. So, you know, when I say everyone’s got their moment at which they start to silence themselves, the day I read in the New York Times that someone I identify with has been named an enemy combatant and is sitting in a Navy brig in isolation, that’s when I’m going to stop talking in a context like this, because that’s when I will become too afraid.

  13. jimmy Says:

    Not sure what a “Simplicity Circle” is but we have formed a discussion group in our community based arround the books - Voluntary Simplicity and Promise Ahead by Duane Elgin

    http://www.soulfulliving.com/voluntarysimplicity.htm

    http://www.awakeningearth.org/

  14. Joseph Gola Says:

    Interesting Tim, because it was I who brought up the issue of our *large brains* at the Seattle screening and briefly talked to Sally.
    What I mentioned was the fact that your doc pushed me deeply back into a consideration of things I went through when I read Chellis Glendinning in 2002.
    It seemed counterintuitive to me at the time (2002) that we were screwed the moment we began the process of civilization, and that it was destined for a Dark Age Crash before we had even begun to really spiritually evolve as a race.
    I - and I am sure many others - thought that all the great mystics, esoteric spiritual traditions and visionaries and all the great works of art were previews of a re-spiritualized humanity, a redemption from The Fall, a global spiritual Renaissance.
    So when I mentioned our *big brains* I was refering to the incredible spectrum of spiritual realities that big brain is capable of, and that we were in the process of what has been called the *shamanization of humanity* which was destined to end, not in a catastrophic collapse but a New Age.
    In other words, I was coming from the pov of transpersonal psychology and esoteric spirituality.
    From this pov - and the Western esoteric Tradition in its occasional manifestations in the Rosacrucians and some Freemasons - the Great Chain of Being is not the vulgar rationalist chain that simply puts the conventionally civilized human at the top, but regards the conventional civilized human as an undeveloped, larval form, and envisions a spiritual evolution of the human way, way beyond this larval form.
    So what we have here is a situation where we humans now have - for the first time in our known history (the possibility exists that the origins of our known civilizational streams began from the fragments of a previous civilizational cycle) total and global access to all the great esoteric spiritual Traditions - from aboriginal and shamanism to Mahayana Buddhism, and, just at this oh-so-hopeful point where we have the opportunity to spiritually eveolve on a mass scale, on a truly global scale……WHAM - we get hit by the truck and Crash into a Dark Age……..
    This situation is - to say the least - a shocking surprise for a lot of us. To be continued. Warm regards, Joseph

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