Embracing A New Normal (Not of the Trump variety)
Photo courtesy: White Wold Pack http://www.whitewolfpack.com/2016/09/standing-rock-protest-grows-with.html |
I attended a Catholic university, and during my time in
college, I embarked on several school-sponsored retreats. While semi-religious,
these days-long outings in the wilderness really more resembled self-help or
mindfulness groups than zealous theological preaching sessions. In one very
popular retreat, we broke into small subsets and discussed our fears, woes,
past issues, and current predicaments. We shared our feelings, our meals, and
our hearts. We opened up to people at whom we would have never batted an eye
back on campus. It was all very kumbaya, with ample servings of respect,
understanding, and helpfulness. Narcissism, competitiveness, back-stabbing, and
ladder-climbing were left at the cabin door.
Upon returning to school, our larger retreat cadre reassembled
at a future date. I was asked to represent my smaller group and give a talk
about what I gleaned from the outing. Though I do not recall the details, I
vividly remember my main point: I asked, why can we not live the same life we
lived on the retreat, every day? Why do we have to come back to campus and
return to the unethical, corrupt, and unjust "normal"? Suffice it to
say, I don't think many people were pleased with this notion - not the least
from whom I sensed unease, were the priests who ran the retreat.
In 2011, I participated in the massive, unprecedented, yet
eventually, unfruitful protests against the anti-union and corporate
capitalistic policies of the then newly appointed Walker
administration in Wisconsin.
For weeks, citizens occupied the state house in Madison, living cooperatively, sharing
resources and assets, providing each other with basic needs and necessities. Ultimately,
we were forced from the capital building, foolishly abdicating the fight in
favor of the contemptible political process. We retreated back to our comfortable
- or, for a large constituency, not so comfortable - lives, and far too many
people were more than pleased to return to "normal."
Occupy Wall Street and other such occupy encampments, much
like in Madison, demonstrated on a small scale how easily social-democratic and
social-anarchist communities can work to mutually benefit everyone. They
provided alternative
paradigms to the morally bankrupt, ethically corrupt, environmentally
destructive, socially deplorable, vacuous lives that we are all complicit in
living each day. But alas, acknowledgement that such cooperative societal
endeavors are possible, and may be even preferable to the majority of the
downtrodden and exploited citizenry, is not considered polite conversation or
acceptable media discourse.
Much like my college retreat, these extended protests and
others like them provided a moment to step away from the mindless treadmill we
continually trample and offered a different, and likely, better path for
humanity. Now, we witness a similar circumstance with the Standing Rock
encampment of water protectors fighting against the construction of the Dakota
Access Pipeline. Only this time, the people at the forefront of the struggle
are the very people who have suffered perhaps the most oppression of any single
faction of citizens on the North American continent, and who, in their
traditions, may present the clearest course toward combating the mutual
scourges of environmental degradation and social injustice. As one water
protector explained
to Ann Wright (in her November 8 article),"I am now living as my
ancestors lived...in nature all day, everyday, in community living, working and
praying together. I have been waiting for this gathering all my life.”
Perhaps we should all be working toward such a permanent global gathering.
Our only real chance of contending with climate change and
inequality is through a sustainable way of life - which means wholly altered
social, political, and economic systems that value biology over business,
ecology over economics. More equitable and sustainable ways of living have been
illustrated during protests in recent years, but for them to matter, they need
to be maintained after these short-term gatherings and adopted as
"normal." The cultural values that indigenous communities hold embody
a critical route toward sustainability and justice. Our greater societal
embrace of their values may be our last best hope to save our species.
Kristine Mattis holds
a PhD in Environment and Resources. Contact: k_mattis@outlook.com. Follow:
@kristinemattis
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