{"id":47414,"date":"2019-05-03T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-05-03T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/finding-solace-in-nature-amid-grief-and-despair\/"},"modified":"2019-05-04T10:21:56","modified_gmt":"2019-05-04T18:21:56","slug":"finding-solace-in-nature-amid-grief-and-despair","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/finding-solace-in-nature-amid-grief-and-despair\/","title":{"rendered":"Finding solace in nature amid grief and despair"},"content":{"rendered":"
There’s a poem by Wendell Berry, written over five decades ago, called “The Peace of Wild Things.” The poem has been reprinted many times and also set to music.<\/p>\n
At a recent concert when the song was performed, I was asked to make an introduction, using my experience as a local naturalist — a personal statement related to the thoughts expressed in the poem — despair and grief at the state of the world and finding solace in nature.<\/p>\n
With great trepidation, I agreed to do this, although this task was much harder than writing a scientific paper or giving a class lecture. So here goes …<\/p>\n
Like the poet in the song, I am very pessimistic about the future of the natural world. The things we proudly call civilization and progress have unleashed a monstrous wave of destruction over the planet. The human population has been and still is increasing at a phenomenal rate, creating social tensions as well as prodigious ecological damage.<\/p>\n
[A fun game to play while hiking]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n With little or no regard for the often predictable consequences, human activity is wreaking havoc everywhere — cutting forests, plowing prairie, paving ponds and marshes, overharvesting and overgrazing, blocking or diverting streams, extracting material resources and dumping what’s unwanted, polluting land and ocean and air, warming the climate, causing one of the biggest extinctions in the history of the world.<\/p>\n There is clearly reason for grief and despair. No use waiting for government or bureaucracy to act, and I think collective human behavior is unlikely to change very much.<\/p>\n It all comes down to individuals. But distressed minds do not think clearly; despair must be temporarily set aside behind a mental curtain, in order to live productively and constructively, perhaps even doing some small things to slow the pace of destruction.<\/p>\n In a search for equilibrium, I seek comfort and peace where it can still be found.<\/p>\n