How
Earth Day is Just Like New Years’ Eve
BY
Even for me the
connection is a little tenuous if I think about it too much. But, in that they
are over-hyped abstractions, focusing attention, if only for a brief moment, on
the natural cycles of time and nature, New Years’ Eve is just like Earth Day. It
is a moment we vow to do better, but real change continues to hauntingly elude
the full promise of progress, resilience and – dare I say it –
sustainability.
As trite as it
may sound, by making every day a celebration of the Earth and our
connection to it, the better the odds that our descendants won’t
wake up early next century cursing us for taking it all, leaving an
over-heated, polluted, life-stripping mess. Hell, forget about them.
Save yourselves.
As we rush
toward the limits of planetary boundaries, the consequences of failing to
see the danger ahead and really doing something about it comes into sharper
focus. Beyond the day-to-day of typical human perception, we see something
menacing out there, beyond the circle of fire that our energy economy creates
as a fortress wall against the dark universe beyond.
We’ve come too
far to turn back. We must press on, undertaking the twin challenge of creating
a new energy economy and the mindset to envision how to live and – hopefully –
prosper within it. All while raising our kids, paying the mortgage and putting
food on the table. No longer can we separate the day-to-day necessities of life
from the restoration and conservation of the source of all life. Earth.
I am not
anti-Earth Day. “Go!” I say to all the great work that is done all over
the globe. I’ve had many opportunities over the years to speak and work with
many passionate, visionary and really smart men and women. People with the
audacity to think that through hard work and collaborate, they can change the
world. Getting to this point involves substantial victories in a long journey
of how humans behave in their environment.
But despite the
effort there remains a very long row to hoe. There can be no standing in place.
It’s time to move. The good intentions of one day too often end as gnawing
disappointment.
And that’s how
Earth Day is just like New Years’ Eve.
“What
I stand for is what I stand on.”
- Wendell Barry