The Year of
Contemplating the Big Picture and a Few Big Parties
Dear
friends,
This past
year I’ve been thinking about the big picture, the really big picture, the
unfolding of the universe, the story of evolution, the nature of consciousness,
our human place in it all, the future of our beautiful planet both in the near
term of decades and hundreds of years and longer in terms of millions and more,
big questions. I have been reading in
the science and philosophy of evolution and consciousness.
Evolution is
a process, but it is also a set of epochs with important distinct
characteristics and periods that set the stage for future action. I grew excited
about the story of the Cambrian explosion of about 500 million years ago, when
life developed limbs and really began to move.
Then around 250 million years later the great Permian extinction (the
biggest of 6 mass extinctions) seemed to threaten life itself, with over 80% of
all genera wiped out. I admit to sadness at the loss of all those life forms,
but at the same time this die-off created the conditions for the future worlds
that include our own. Some small reptile made it through and gave rise to all our
ancestors.
And at some
point somewhere consciousness, self-consciousness and symbolic representation
each emerged. While symbolic representation is the tool that has given humans
so much of our power, I think that subjective experience of consciousness is
the most important achievement.
Subjective experience is the great mystery, while we may be correlating
it to more and more specific brain functions, subjectivity by its nature always
stands outside of (or perhaps inside of ) third person objective descriptions.
While I embrace the truth of material science, reflections on consciousness
bring me back to the mystical. Subjective experiences leave us with questions
that just may be outside of the realm of the answerable.
In the short
term we face the 6th mass extinction event. Current species extinction rates may be as
much as 10,000 times the average rate. That’s bad news. Humans and our machines
are behind this disaster. Habitat loss,
invasive species (largely human introduced), over-fishing, pollution, and
global climate change all play a role.
Ethically, that’s really bad news. But humans still could do a lot to mitigate
this disaster.
This happens
against a background of human relations out of balance. One percent of the people on the planet own
nearly half the assets of the planet, and with wealth comes power. In spite of a general trend towards more democracies
on the planet, other trends stand to undermine those democracies, overturning
of election finance reform by the supreme court in the “Citizens United” case,
trade agreements like the pending TPP treaty that threaten to undermine local
laws. In Michigan, civic sovereignty is being dismantled by the governor’s appointed
managers. It has taken courageous whistle blowers to expose the extent of
surveillance, the lack of oversight and lack of transparency that large
governments (notably our own) will try to get away with.
But here is
a glimmer of hope, the truth can be uncovered, resistance is possible,
organizing makes a difference. I once asked the historian Howard Zinn, who was
going to win this race? and he pointed out that it wasn’t a race but an ongoing
struggle. One person can make a difference, but I think it takes social movements
to change things.
My own
efforts in the struggle have increasingly turned towards the strategy of
building democratic economic institutions through the cooperative movement. I
have been the president of the food coop’s board this past year, I am engaged
in an effort to organize a home care business to be run by a workers
cooperative, and I am involved with a network of coop activists trying to build
this movement. I also continue my efforts to promote the peer listening
movement known as co-counseling, and the compassionate communication movement
called non-violent communication or NVC.
One other
effort that I’m involved with that I wanted to mention is a fund-raiser. Some friends of mine and I will be hosting a
fundraising party to raise funds for a community center building for the
Dancing Rabbit eco-village. The building will be a model of sustainability,
built to the standards of the Living Building Challenge. To date only 6
buildings worldwide have been able to meet this high standard. We need examples
like this.
Speaking of
parties, this past year was marked by three important ones for my family. In
May we celebrated Zev’s Bar Mitzvah. Zev and Teo participate in a spiritual
education program that is described as “Jewish Roots and Interfaith Branches”. The ceremony involved, among other things,
Zev reading and interpreting a passage from the Torah. Zev is articulate and
bright, a natural speaker. I was proud of how well this presentation went, and
I was proud again when several people well experienced in Bar Mitzvahs told me
it was the nicest Bar Mitzvah that they had ever attended.
In June my
brother got married to a woman he had known in high school and then reconnected
with through the internet. I had the honor of being the best man. While I enjoyed the whole project of thinking
about how to best support my brother on this important day of his, I
particularly enjoyed making a toast. The wedding was in New York City. While there I also had a moment to reconnect,
in my case, with my best friend from college Eric Soloff who I hadn’t seen in
nearly 30 years.
The third
party was my mom’s 80th birthday this January. My dad organized a surprise party, and our
family traveled to Atlanta, that was the first surprise. That evening the second surprise was a party
with some 80 friends of hers! The party
included dinner, a slide show about my mom’s life, music and speeches and it
concluded with group singing. During our time there we attended a demonstration
and an awards ceremony for a peace essay contest that my mom organized. On the
morning of her 80th birthday my mom swam a mile. Way to go, Mom!!!
January this
year also marked the 20th anniversary of my relationship with Beth. We
considered another party but decided to put that off until the 25th . Instead we went out for dinner and a walk
through the snowy streets of Ann Arbor. And we reminisced about our
relationship. I can’t imagine a better life partner for me. We share in common
the things that are important to share, and we complement each other with many
of our differences. The longer I share
relationship with Beth the more I find that I love her.
Teo cares
deeply about equality and fairness, so although he won’t have a Bar Mitzvah for
more than a year, I should say something about him. I’ll mention his passion of equality. As part of a class project he did a
presentation comparing wealth inequality in Sweden and the US. He picked this
topic with no prompting from his politically left parents. Teo continues to
thrive in Math and he enjoys playing the violin.
The other
big event for us this past year was a sort of classic vacation. We took a train to Glacier National Park and
spent a week camping, hiking in the mountains, horse riding and river
rafting. Although global warming is
certainly taking its toll on the Glaciers we were able to hike to ice, the boys
had fun sliding on it. This brings me
back to the start of this letter. Although Glacier National Park is sparse of
fossils it is about 200 miles south of YoHo park in Canada. YoHo is the home of
the Burgess Shale, the fossil rich mountain side that gives us the core of our
understandings about the Cambrian explosion half a billion years ago. Looking
in the other direction there are the issues we face now, and in the big
picture, a few billion years from now we will have to address big time solar
global warming as the sun expands out to where we are. If we make it that far
I’m guessing we’ll manage. It’s always something.
With love,
Gaia