I weep as I write.
Surfers surfing, walkers walking and people enjoying the good life. |
It is a beautiful day; surfers are surfing, swimmers are
swimming, people are walking everywhere, the local coffee shops and cafes are
packed with those simply celebrating the good weather and the equally good life.
This is the good life, at least that which the modern marketers
tell us is the good life, and it is the rich life, something that is the epitome
of our growth and consumerist-based economy.
It has been achieved because of our rapacious approach to
all that allows humans to prosper. Sadly, and confusingly, it is a lifestyle I
love, but it is one that is entirely unsustainably.
It is urgent, well beyond urgent, that we re-think what it
is we do; re-imagine our way of life; seek a new way to access joy;
re-structure and re-shape our communities to allow them to become emboldened with
happiness the resilience and within that understand that contentment is to be
found through working with, helping and encouraging your fellows, family and
friends, rather than pursuing a life foundered on the exploitation of finite
resources and making “presentism” the root of all activities.
Saving the planet is irrelevant as it is fine for no matter
what we do, it will go on, the real issue is about saving ourselves, or at
least preserving the conditions that are conducive to human survival.
Nature always looks to achieve equilibrium, but in dumping
inordinate amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, we have disrupted its
bid for equilibrium and it will achieve that no matter what – storms, droughts,
and major weather events we cannot yet understand.
The lifestyle we lead and the one I weep for is open to us
because of our wealth; a richness that has allowed us to service our wants
rather than simply our needs.
Working fewer hours each day (work in the modern and
traditional understanding of work) is an anathema to any economist trained in
the growth/consumerist/profit paradigm, but it is the most obvious first step
in any move to abate the impacts of climate change.
Should we have fewer grounds for exchange (money) we will
have no option but to turn to our fellows for support and within that build
stronger and more resilient communities.
By Robert McLean
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