Dalton Roberts
--My Sunday Journal

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7-20-03

LOVE YOUR LOVELY BLUE PEARL

Putting a man on the moon was worth it just to get that first glorious picture of Earth as the astronauts returned. They gazed in awe upon seeing Earth from space.-- a beautiful blue pearl set in a bracelet of a million diamond stars.

If only we could carry that awe around in our hearts all the time. We would not have to be reminded to recycle, to plan buildings in ways that save the maximum number of trees, to not litter our land, to not poison our streams. We would walk upon the grass with a rhythm of reverence and sing songs of adoration to Mother Earth.

We rationalize much of our ravaging of the land in the name of jobs. But there are no jobs on a dead planet. You will see no farms and factories on the bleak surface of the moon. If you went to live there, you would have to take all your life-sustaining supplies from our incredible home planet.

It stabs a cold blade through my heart to think the U.S. did not attend the world conference on planetary warming. Our leadership is blind to the realities that threaten our very existence.

We have shown an arrogant air of superiority toward American Indians when we should have been sitting at their feet to assimilate their love and devotion to the land. I thank God my mother was part Cherokee. She would take me with her to stand and listen to the wind in the whispering pines. Deep sighs would spontaneously rise from her heart.

Once I spent an entire Sunday studying an anthill. When Monday morning rolled around and she woke me for school, I said, "Aw, I wanted to watch the ants some more." She said, "I believe that's as important as anything they could possibly teach you in school today. Stay home and watch the ants."

Americans are slurping up the world's resources like a child polishing off a milkshake through a straw. We have not yet made the ridiculously elementary discovery that the world is chiefly populated by other people. Simplifying our lifestyles would be an act of solidarity with all the people of all other nations, an act of withdrawal from the high-pressure neurosis of a consumption-crazy society,.an act of provocation to stir curiosity leading to dialogue about the future of our planet and it would be a powerful redirection of personal purchasing power to grand social visions.

Most beautiful of all, it would be a celebration of the riches we can find in community, creativity and spirituality.


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