Here is a song written on the same holiday by the whole group of volunteers on the John Muir Trust Cae Mabon Trip July 2006
Gobblers!
We are consumers, we follow every trend
Driving to the shopping mall to spend and spend and spend
We are consumers, we boost economies
Filling all our leisure hours with endless shopping sprees!
We are the gobblers! We never have enough…
We’re addicted to shopping for stuff, stuff, stuff!
WHOAH….Bin it, toss it, chuck it in the bucket!
Find my flexi-friend so I’ve got lots of cash.
Wear it, tear it – oops! I’ll need a new one!
Just a few more outfits…hoard them in the stash.
Throw away your VCR, get some DVD’s
Buy yourself an iPod, toss the MP3’s.
Rwanda, Uganda, mountain gorilla homes
Are plundered every single day to run our mobile phones.
Children work for endless hours to give us plasma screens
But don’t spill your Nestle coffee on your Gucci jeans!
WHOAH….Bin it, toss it, chuck it in the bucket!
Find my flexi-friend so I’ve got lots of cash.
Wear it, tear it – oops! I’ll need a new one!
Just a few more outfits…hoard them in the stash.
Now the desert’s spreading, the seas are on the rise
Yet governments refuse to act, they dupe us with their lies
They know that we don’t want to live without our precious cars
Or give up foreign holidays, or plans to go to Mars
Cos we are the gobblers, who never have enough
We’re addicted to shopping so that we can strut our stuff!
WHOAH….Bin it, toss it, chuck it in the bucket!
Find my flexi-friend so I’ve got lots of cash.
Wear it, tear it – oops! I’ll need a new one!
Just a few more outfits…hoard them in the stash.
So let’s just sail away on an endless garbage sea
A tidal wave of adverts – seductive fallacies
We’ll go to River Island, jump on Waterstones
Our Oasis from the Monsoon and MacDonald’s Monotone!
Cos we are the Gobblers, we never have enough
Fried by our mobile phones, our brains are full of fluff!
WHOAH….Bin it, toss it, chuck it in the bucket!
Find my flexi-friend so I’ve got lots of cash.
Wear it, tear it – oops! I’ll need a new one!
Just a few more outfits…hoard them in the stash.
If we keep dumping rubbish and don’t stop wasting soon
Our planet will descend into apocalyptic doom
If we keep being gobblers and never have enough
Pretty soon we’ll find that things get really tough
And on the day that Earth implodes – goodbye, the Human Race!
There’ll just be a faint ring tone, drifting out in space….
(Nokia tone) Duddle-er-der, Duddle-er-der, Duddle-er-der, Duhh!
(Small voice) It’s God on the phone….
(Booming voice) WHAT HAVE YOU DONE WITH MY EARTH?!!! I LEAVE YOU ALONE FOR 5 MINUTES…..(then muttering)… I just go off for a piss….(fades away)
Tuesday, 8 January 2008
Climate
Here is a poem I wrote on an eco-holiday a couple of years ago, I wrote it looking over an ancient woodland in a valley in Snowdonia, hopefully it illustrates what could happen if we do not act.
Climate
I stand alone in lonely lands,
Clasping a crag with crooked hands,
Perched on a rock for all to see,
With flies abuzzing by my knee.
From this rock the world I can see,
Though the world cannot see me,
Past by me flow oaks,
From sky to sea,
Past my rock, from which I see.
Up on this rock , in this land,
It strikes me the beauty I that I see,
From Scraggy mountain top to azure sea.
From this rock upon which I dwell,
I cast my eyes to the oaks that surround me,
Their wise, firm trunks bursting from the earth,
Their hand like branches reaching to the sky.
And if these wise old trees,
Stretching from sky to sea,
Could speak to me,
They may sing a requiem not a eulogy.
For in times to come,
Man, with his crooked hands,
May have turned this Eden into a hell.
Climate
I stand alone in lonely lands,
Clasping a crag with crooked hands,
Perched on a rock for all to see,
With flies abuzzing by my knee.
From this rock the world I can see,
Though the world cannot see me,
Past by me flow oaks,
From sky to sea,
Past my rock, from which I see.
Up on this rock , in this land,
It strikes me the beauty I that I see,
From Scraggy mountain top to azure sea.
From this rock upon which I dwell,
I cast my eyes to the oaks that surround me,
Their wise, firm trunks bursting from the earth,
Their hand like branches reaching to the sky.
And if these wise old trees,
Stretching from sky to sea,
Could speak to me,
They may sing a requiem not a eulogy.
For in times to come,
Man, with his crooked hands,
May have turned this Eden into a hell.
Knowledge speaks but wisdom listens
What makes a human human cannot be defined in set of black and white characteristics. The concept, definition and parameters of what constitutes a species is hard to define. Nature is messy and we seek to categorise it to make sense of it.
There are a number species in addition to ourselves that are probably self-aware e.g. elephants, great apes and dolphins.
Another step down the sentiency ladder animals such as crows, wolves, monkeys, parrots, whales etc. have the same traits to a lesser extent, they may not be fully conscious and aware of others in the same way but aren't far off.
We have emerged from the messy chemistry lab of life and are the only animal on this planet that at least have the potential to be fully in control of our lives, understand the laws of the universe and use them to our advantage.
Humans are observers, like all animals we are a bag of chemicals, our personalities are a mix of environment and genetics. We observe to learn and hold together our societies and at the same time are very suggestible. Though the saying, "A certain level of hypocrisy is necessary to civilised life" (Anne Whitehead) rings true it is because it is so easy for us in our complex modern societies to become disjointed from the natural world and our human rationality in turn not necessarily coinciding with reality, i.e. chopping down tropical rainforests for short term profit.
We are now entering what has been labelled the ‘anthropocene’, where for the first time one species dominates the face of the earth and has the ability to fundamentally change life on earth. Our problem is that we’re remarkably knowledgeable these days but not very wise with the use of that knowledge. We seem to spend the bulk of our time using it to gain power over one another.
We have the ability to fundamentally change this planet and to wipe ourselves out, our future is in our hands. The key thing we need to concede is humility, it would appear to me that the greatest human flaw is pride. Pride prevents us from acknowledging our mistakes, from reconciliation and in turn increases our propensity to war and war is the enemy of nature and of man.
Will all we have died for, fought for and accomplished be destroyed by our flaws or will it be saved and grown so that one day we can truly touch the face of god? Will this day come, can we do this? We got rid of slavery, we brought down Rome, hell we built the roman empire, we have split atoms, understood the language of life, can harness the natural world to our own ends....
The one thing we can all agree on is caring for the environment; it is unlikely that the whole of humanity will ever be in total agreement about everything and it would make life less interesting if we did.
All it takes is a little humility personally and that step to understand the other.
"Faith is not certainty, it is the courage to live with uncertainty" - Jonathan Sachs
There are a number species in addition to ourselves that are probably self-aware e.g. elephants, great apes and dolphins.
Another step down the sentiency ladder animals such as crows, wolves, monkeys, parrots, whales etc. have the same traits to a lesser extent, they may not be fully conscious and aware of others in the same way but aren't far off.
We have emerged from the messy chemistry lab of life and are the only animal on this planet that at least have the potential to be fully in control of our lives, understand the laws of the universe and use them to our advantage.
Humans are observers, like all animals we are a bag of chemicals, our personalities are a mix of environment and genetics. We observe to learn and hold together our societies and at the same time are very suggestible. Though the saying, "A certain level of hypocrisy is necessary to civilised life" (Anne Whitehead) rings true it is because it is so easy for us in our complex modern societies to become disjointed from the natural world and our human rationality in turn not necessarily coinciding with reality, i.e. chopping down tropical rainforests for short term profit.
We are now entering what has been labelled the ‘anthropocene’, where for the first time one species dominates the face of the earth and has the ability to fundamentally change life on earth. Our problem is that we’re remarkably knowledgeable these days but not very wise with the use of that knowledge. We seem to spend the bulk of our time using it to gain power over one another.
We have the ability to fundamentally change this planet and to wipe ourselves out, our future is in our hands. The key thing we need to concede is humility, it would appear to me that the greatest human flaw is pride. Pride prevents us from acknowledging our mistakes, from reconciliation and in turn increases our propensity to war and war is the enemy of nature and of man.
Will all we have died for, fought for and accomplished be destroyed by our flaws or will it be saved and grown so that one day we can truly touch the face of god? Will this day come, can we do this? We got rid of slavery, we brought down Rome, hell we built the roman empire, we have split atoms, understood the language of life, can harness the natural world to our own ends....
The one thing we can all agree on is caring for the environment; it is unlikely that the whole of humanity will ever be in total agreement about everything and it would make life less interesting if we did.
All it takes is a little humility personally and that step to understand the other.
"Faith is not certainty, it is the courage to live with uncertainty" - Jonathan Sachs
Evolution
In typing you enter a certain melodic rhythm like the one I heard earlier when listening to the birds singing and hearing people shouting in the background. Human language has far more in common with birdsong than other primate’s communication. When hearing the people shouting and the birds singing it all merged. Even though they sounded disparate there was similarity and connection. Beauty was found in the seemingly raucous verbal chaos.
Much can be said for life in general being like that, it does to an extent make sense.
It would seem that organisms in the natural world perform a function within naturally occurring systems and as those systems change so do the inhabitants of the ecosystem. Those not best suited to carrying out their functions die out, in a word, evolution.
Humanity evolved from other forms of life following these rules, however on top of our biological evolution we have developed sophisticated cultural evolution, the pace at which we culturally evolve speeding up all the time as new innovations, firstly language, then the written word and now modern mass communications increase the speed at which our cultural evolution takes place.
Humans are generally rational beings, within their worldview, the problem is that this does not necessarily coincide with reality. Humanity’s cultural evolution in addition to our genetic evolution has created problems for us.
As we humans have our creative spark, in addition to what makes us an animal it means that we have the capacity to be more inventive than we might otherwise be, however, this creativity partly caused by our complex cultural evolution could also be our undoing.
We have the capacity to create complex societies and separate ourselves off from the natural world; we can live out our whole lives and have no link to it.
When we live in tribal or indigenous societies we tend not to have this problem, as the societies are too small scale to lose touch with the natural world. Now that we have come up with large complex societies where our natural urges to compete with one another are extenuated/exaggerated far beyond what they would be in a natural setting, combined with people’s loss of perception of sustainability mean that our risk of self destruction is far higher than it might otherwise be.
Basically without our imagination we would never have developed large complex civilizations, yet ironically it is this very imagination that could be our undoing.
It does make one wander if we’ve been rather wasting our time, we might have been happier just staying in the trees.
When people talk about the natural world as if it were as far away as Neptune, I think they are barking up the wrong tree. There is only one world, this one, we live on it and are part of a natural system, if we cut ourselves off from it we in turn live in an unsustainable way. We must not look at nature on sentimental grounds for reasoning for protecting it, it is our very life support system. If anything can be said about the human race being unique it is that we may be the only species in history to wipe itself out.
Much can be said for life in general being like that, it does to an extent make sense.
It would seem that organisms in the natural world perform a function within naturally occurring systems and as those systems change so do the inhabitants of the ecosystem. Those not best suited to carrying out their functions die out, in a word, evolution.
Humanity evolved from other forms of life following these rules, however on top of our biological evolution we have developed sophisticated cultural evolution, the pace at which we culturally evolve speeding up all the time as new innovations, firstly language, then the written word and now modern mass communications increase the speed at which our cultural evolution takes place.
Humans are generally rational beings, within their worldview, the problem is that this does not necessarily coincide with reality. Humanity’s cultural evolution in addition to our genetic evolution has created problems for us.
As we humans have our creative spark, in addition to what makes us an animal it means that we have the capacity to be more inventive than we might otherwise be, however, this creativity partly caused by our complex cultural evolution could also be our undoing.
We have the capacity to create complex societies and separate ourselves off from the natural world; we can live out our whole lives and have no link to it.
When we live in tribal or indigenous societies we tend not to have this problem, as the societies are too small scale to lose touch with the natural world. Now that we have come up with large complex societies where our natural urges to compete with one another are extenuated/exaggerated far beyond what they would be in a natural setting, combined with people’s loss of perception of sustainability mean that our risk of self destruction is far higher than it might otherwise be.
Basically without our imagination we would never have developed large complex civilizations, yet ironically it is this very imagination that could be our undoing.
It does make one wander if we’ve been rather wasting our time, we might have been happier just staying in the trees.
When people talk about the natural world as if it were as far away as Neptune, I think they are barking up the wrong tree. There is only one world, this one, we live on it and are part of a natural system, if we cut ourselves off from it we in turn live in an unsustainable way. We must not look at nature on sentimental grounds for reasoning for protecting it, it is our very life support system. If anything can be said about the human race being unique it is that we may be the only species in history to wipe itself out.
Everybody needs a boss one way or another
Life’s bizarre, every time I write along these lines, my musings, each time I look back at how my life, thoughts and opinions have developed I find them to have developed in ways that I couldn’t have guessed. I also find frustrations in the difficulty in recording/conveying ideas. There is such a difference between the spoken and the written word. The more complex the idea and often the more important and meaningful it is, the harder it is to put forward the ideas and ensure that they are more than just fleeting thoughts. What I’m describing are some of the trappings of what could be called the ‘human condition’. Most of us, most people, spend most of our lives like any animal. We do the basic things eating, sleeping, finding mates, general everyday life. In this respect we are nothing special. We are animals like any other just getting on with living. However, we do differ from all other life significantly, we have moved from adapting to the world around us to adapting the world to suit our needs.
Whether there is any one particular facet of what it means to be human that is completely unique to us, i.e. our primate relatives may display the same trait to a lesser or greater extent. The sense of the greater is, in my opinion, one of the most important and defining human traits.
In all human societies we hold the idea of the greater. This could range from looking at those with a higher status in the society as the greater e.g. an emperor, to a mythological being with ‘super-human’ powers or even just looking at oneself in the greater scheme of things.
Despite life’s limitations and frustrations we, humanity, have achieved a great deal. I believe it to be our insatiable curiosity that drives us forward, that need to comprehend the greater, what is beyond, why might we be here? Without that urge I think we would never have got off the starting block. True, we may well have come up with practical technological innovations to ensure our survival and make life easier, though what makes us special is our imagination that is provided by our sense of the greater.
Without it we would never have gone to the moon, be able to get our heads round seemingly illogical subjects such as physics or have come up with the arts. Organised religion, empires, the things that change the world fundamentally require innovation and imagination and I believe that this unique spark (for whatever reason we have it) will either make or break the human race.
Whether there is any one particular facet of what it means to be human that is completely unique to us, i.e. our primate relatives may display the same trait to a lesser or greater extent. The sense of the greater is, in my opinion, one of the most important and defining human traits.
In all human societies we hold the idea of the greater. This could range from looking at those with a higher status in the society as the greater e.g. an emperor, to a mythological being with ‘super-human’ powers or even just looking at oneself in the greater scheme of things.
Despite life’s limitations and frustrations we, humanity, have achieved a great deal. I believe it to be our insatiable curiosity that drives us forward, that need to comprehend the greater, what is beyond, why might we be here? Without that urge I think we would never have got off the starting block. True, we may well have come up with practical technological innovations to ensure our survival and make life easier, though what makes us special is our imagination that is provided by our sense of the greater.
Without it we would never have gone to the moon, be able to get our heads round seemingly illogical subjects such as physics or have come up with the arts. Organised religion, empires, the things that change the world fundamentally require innovation and imagination and I believe that this unique spark (for whatever reason we have it) will either make or break the human race.
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