There are no boundaries in nature. Where one habitat butts up against another, rather than demarcation, unity takes place. Where the lapping waves brush against sand or the low expanse of prairie rises abruptly to the linear heights of woodland, ecological values are amplified rather than diminished. The margins, or “ecotones,” as they are known scientifically, are places where ecological magic happens.
In nature, everything is connected to everything else. A Kirtland’s warbler flies out of a temperate forest and travels thousands of miles to spend the winter on a tropical island. A molecule of water from a deep ocean trench traverses the expanse of the globe, evaporates into the air, rains down onto land, flows into a river, is absorbed by the roots of a sycamore tree, eaten by an insect, and so on. A mahogany tree in the Amazon forest exhales oxygen that is breathed in thousands of miles away in New York City by a Wall Street banker. Increased radiation levels from a nuclear bomb test in Nevada are detected in Mumbai. Humans unearth and combust fossilized carbon, raising atmospheric carbon dioxide to levels unseen in hundreds of thousands of years.
There are no boundaries in nature. Even the visual distinctions that separate the individual from the rest of the world are merely an optical and egotistical delusion. The envelope of skin gives the illusion, but not the reality of containment. Everything that comprises a body is in a constant state of flux with the outside environment. Food, water and air are consumed. The energy contained within the bonds of carbohydrates are metabolized with oxygen and then expelled as carbon dioxide. The nutrients from the animal, vegetable or mineral ingested are incorporated into tissue and bone. Byproducts are released in breath, urine excrement. What we were last week, we are not today, and next week, we will yet again be something else.
Just as matter and energy pass in and out throughout individuals and ecosystems as casually as water flows downstream, it is again picked up, used and reused in an endless, repeating cycle. There is no beginning and no end, no straight lines, in nature.
There are no boundaries in nature, but for some reason, one species Homo sapiens, is intent on creating them. In a brilliant paper “Rubbish and Racism,” Timothy Weiskel (one of my professors this summer) outlines the human cultural phenomenon of boundaries. Weiskel describes the human paradox, “While nature draws no boundaries between elements in an ecosystem, a human society which occupies a particular niche within the total system has no meaning without them.” In other words, we define ourselves in terms of boundaries. We are Americans, Christians, Muslims, atheists, Afghans, male or female, contained within lines drawn on a map and within our own minds.
The problem with boundaries is that they define separation, marking all that fall outside the accepted lines as “others.” Western Civilization exists upon the earth rather than within it. We put up fences, walls and cities, keeping nature and savages out and protecting that within from the pesky intrusion of the world. We stockpile arms, draw lines in the sand, demonize and despoil to protect the boundaries of our imaginations. Any breach threatens to undermine our very identity.
But we can’t escape our real connection to the outside. We require nature for our very survival, so we expand beyond our boundaries and consume. We consume and consume and consume, until there’s nothing left. When we are done, we toss the garbage over the wall, imagining our phony boundary will protect us from the evils of our own spoils. And then we move on to the next location. But, there are no boundaries in nature.
We have dumped our crap into the oceans, and they are dying. Where are we going to get more fish and oxygen? We have belched our exhaust into the skies that now threaten to smother us with heat and smog. Where are we going to get more air and a decent climate to live in? We have closed up our minds with dogma and mythology so tightly that we are blinded by our own folly. Where are we going to get solutions to solve the problems we have created from within our sequestered minds? We need to dwell in the ecotones.
There are no boundaries in nature.
killingMother, this immediately made me think about the human proclivity for colonization and the notion of colonizing other planets when this one is not good enough anymore because humans crapped all over their bed---another human proclivity. One could easily be tempted to call them all "sinners" and not expect a peep of disagreement from anyone---atheist, christian, jew, or muslim. Or buddhist, for that matter.
ReplyDeleteANYway, all this made me think immediately of the subject of TRASH IN SPACE, thereby bringing me to this image of what they call "space debris": http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/ESA_spacedebris.jpg
and this article in WIRED magazine: http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/05/ff_space_junk/ which oddly enough is quite hilarious when you think about it. Hilarious even beyond the tragedy.
How many science fiction stories have there been with the theme of "superior" beings bringing human population to a halt because it wasn't spiritually enough advanced for all its technology? (The remake of The Day The Earth Stood Still isn't half bad, by the way.)
I said all that, killingMother, to say, thank you again for everything you do and say. This is another great post that got me to thinking.
If you look at the image, it makes Earth kind of Borg-like, don't you think? Chilling.
ReplyDeleteI reject that with all of my being, though fat lot of GOOD it'll do me.
Oh! I guess I just voted.
Although I am not a libertarian, as the author of this post seems to be, this is one of my very favorite bedtime stories. I mean, can you imagine?
ReplyDeletehttp://powerofnarrative.blogspot.com/2008/02/tale-that-might-be-told.html
Do you guys care if I post a 4th consecutive comment? Sorry, if you do.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xB4dbdNSXY
On the other hand, there's something to be said for the biblical stories of the separating of the sheep and the goats, the wheat and the tares, the...well we get the idea.
ReplyDeleteNot everyone is fit for Heaven/Peace.
That sounds familiar.
And last, but not least, some hilarity.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theonion.com/articles/god-diagnosed-with-bipolar-disorder,348/
Well, perhaps we can call this extravagance MY SEND OFF?
It's a new day.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37dw2r45Xzg
Well, I guess I won't offer to write a blog post, but I sure can comment the hell out of one of yours, can't I?
ReplyDeleteWhat's up with that?
tsisageya, Thank you very much for all your links. As you may have noticed, I have been a bit distracted lately with my studies. If you know of any climate change skeptics, please plead my case to them. I need interviewees! I promise to be respectful.
ReplyDeleteI know, killingMother. I wouldn't call it distracted but will go with you there for the time being. If I seem like a stray kitten out in the rain, I guess it's for good reason. I truly hope you don't mind all my thoughts and links.
ReplyDeleteClimate change skeptics wouldn't be hard for me to find, if I chose to do so, since I live in Montgomery, Alabama. It's just that, in my life, I have no use for such people so don't hang out with them to discuss it, much less point them your way. Sorry. You're doing a good work and I can't even help. Plus, I'm sort of hermit-like.
I don't understand why you feel the need to reassure me that you would be respectful. I've never known you any other way. I hope you haven't gotten the wrong impression of me along somehow.
I appreciate you very much, as always.
Your friend,
Cindy