Tag Archives: earth

connectivity

My physics teacher way back in high school, for all his antics, struck me with a realization when he exclaimed: “ An ocean is never the same when you drop a pebble”. He was explaining of course the principle of kinetic energy, that is, an object once in motion never stops until another object absorbs the energy. But the absorbing object gathers explosive energy that may later on translate into another form of energy, ad infinitum.

 

 

That was in 1982 then, when aside from tv, radio, game and watch, cinema, and betamax, we did not have any other optical entertainment. The Inconvenient Truth was still an idea but Al Gore did not have an idea that it would shape in a digitalized form. Then, the weather patterns were so regular that in the Philippines, rain was expected from June to February, and the leaves would fall early March presaging the summer heat of April and May. Lives and activities were then planned according to the weather patterns.

 

 

My physics teacher may have unwittingly nuanced his kinetic energy with the idea of connectivity, an inevitable interaction between man and nature, and amongst men.

 

 

For every boon there is the embryonic bane. The turbines which powered engines of trains and industries have propelled industrial revolution when civilization relied on synthetic products fashioned out of raw materials. Before the turbines, we had to hunt then cook the meat. Later, life is made convenient by processed meat, fast foods, machine-controlled temperature, etc.

 

 

Little did way realize, or shall we say, refuse to realize that for the convenience the inventions have offered us, a trade off with the environment is getting apparent. All through these years of seeming conveniences that we marvel, the atmosphere is thickened with particles, the ozone layer punctured, the seas littered with toxic wastes. In fine, for making our life easier than the hunting nomads, we sacrifice our environment, mother earth, which now threatens not only our way of life but life in general, with tsunamis, typhoons, dry spell, la nina and el nino. The notebook upon which I store my blog, and the cellphone that I use to greet my love ones, may make life here on earth meaningful, but years from now, when the batteries are drained, and the gadgets unusable, I would have to add, and this is ironic, to the threat of human extinction.

 

 

Connectivity. Everything, we do invariably affects the great cosmos. If we throw a pebble into the ocean, this is a connectivity which alters life and nature but does not really threaten earth and the earthlings. But threw a plastic in the ocean, in time, vulnerable sea creatures die, the fishermen lose their livelihood, their children, wallowing in poverty, migrate to the cities to become the scourges of urban living. And the government has to spend more for the policing of the cities, thereby draining financial resource which could have been well-spent in other productive ventures.

 

 

Logic 101 escapes me every time a head of state proclaims that the climatic changes do not threaten human existence. But the politicians, for their narrow vested interests, will always see white instead of black, wherever their interests would lead them. After all, between prostitutes and politicians, the only difference is the pursuit for power in the later, and the need to survive, in case of the former. But what is troubling is the pronouncement of some scientists, ( or pseudo-scientists?), that the environmental changes are not at all threatening. One may lack the scientific formulations, but at times, the basic form of knowledge, common sense, explains better than hypothesis and theorems. How else can you explain the respiratory diseases and allergies due to dust particles? Typhoon in the Philippines during the summer months of April and May? Inundation even for a moderate rainfall? If these scientists are the only ones to suffer the wrath of nature, one would not bother to raise an eyebrow for their “oh” very scientific conclusions. When the arguments become too complex, God beckons us to use common sense.

 

 

At another level of connectivity is in terms of human relation. In biblical sense, God is found in every man’s face, that we are all but manifestations of the divine, and hence, we are all members of the same family. But in these times, connectivity amongst men is shown with the information superhighway.

 

 

Information is a harbinger of change. During the cold war, the iron curtain was pierced with the shortwave radio broadcasting where liberal ideas were heard in communists areas. Years after, the liberal ideas became movements for change, and eventually, the overthrew of communist regimes from within. John Howard, the former Australian Prime Minister, was defeated due to two issues: environment and Iraq. Environmental issues henceforth will factor in elections of national leaders. As always, the battle starts in the mind, and the internet plays a major role in bringing a sea change in the way we treat the environment, and relate to fellow humans.

 

 

 

As I post this blog, like a pebble dropped in the ocean, its effects in the landscape of the human mind, may be precisely, only a pebble, hopefully not feeble. Yet, the energy of the pebble is unstoppable; it goes on ad infinitum.

Prev: 25 years hence, a reunion

scorching earth

My mother told me that when I was born, the wind was howling, the trees were dancing, the river was rising, and the sky celebrated my coming with thunder. That was how nature greeted me. My affinity with mother earth started since then. Even now, I prefer the pristine solitude of a roaring sea than the roar of an engine.

I was a September born when typhoon in the Philippines would normally hold sway, in a regular frequency, every year. Then, there was no need of a weather forecast to determine the coming monsoon, or the inter-tropical converging zone, or the super typhoon. Our folks would normally brace for bad weather during the months of July through February. The weather pattern was so regular that every body would qualify as weather forecaster.

But decades after, everything changed. Suddenly, we hear of typhoons in the summer months, during March to June when accordingly, the earth is closest to the sun, and when days are longer than nights. And these typhoons do not come in celebration of a birth, or of the dancing trees, but they bring mayhem and destruction, of landslides and floods. The folks would say, “There is calm after the storm.” That cliche is now untrue. There is stench of death after a typhoon”.

And yes, there was this river, where our siblings, in moments of childish adventures, would escape from our house routines to swim in the then clear waters. We also then knew exactly what part of the river was the deepest that we had to avoid. We had the map of the river bed in our minds, thanks greatly to the absence of mud brought about by erosion of the mountain and siltation of the river. That river was a playground for kids, and a source of livelihood of the small fisherfolks. The last time I visited the river though, it has meandered, and almost dried up and floodied during typhoons. It has ceased to be a playground, and to be a source of living.

Every summer then, I looked forward to going my father’s hometown. Only half-kilometer from the town proper, were swamps and forests where birds, in varied colors and species, would chirp and glide near us that we could almost catch them, and clasp them in our young and innocent hands. There was this owl that I caught and kept, and when I lost it, I felt a part of me was taken away. But now, everytine I passed my father’s hometown, I am often caught in moments of nostalgia because the birds’ haven is now a sprawling brewery.

The earth I knew then is now a mere image in the memory screen of my mind, an image which I can only retell to my young kids as they play the latest computer games, with their eyes focused on the screen, and their consciousness utterly detached from the rest of the world. The better your focus and detached from your surrounding, the better a computer player you become. Ones expertise in the game is proportionate, in a way, to one’s detachment from the world. Such a tragic reality.

But as I look at my kids, I am almost tempted to tell them, that before, we used to play hide-and-seek with other kids under the moonlight, when the moon at night was so clear and bright, without the smog right above the canopy of the earth. Should I tell them play with the neighbors whom we don’t know? And where? In the concrete roads where the vehicles run as if there is no tommorow? Or in the bird’s haven which is now a brewery? Or should I let my children play under the rain as we used to when we were kids when I know that the rains now come with sulfur?

Yesterday, the news was flashed that in some cities here in the Philippines, the temperature rose to 39 degrees celsius, searingly hot for our national standards, the hottest in our recorded history. And yet, in this searing climate, we have at times, rain drops that would force us to stop our tennis games. Strange things are going on in this strange-filled environment.

In the name of development, humans have become predators of the earth that has nourished and sustained life. We cut trees to make houses, furnitures, skycrapers. We use plastics to package our fasfoods; batteries to power our cell-phones. We use fuel to transport. Hence, in proportion to our march to development, we destroy mother earth accordingly. In our attempt to seek shelter and to pamper us with the niceties of modern living, we have unwittingly destroyed the earth, the same earth that could unleash it’s fury through floods, tsunamis and earthqaukes. Paradoxically, in our attempt to shelter and enjoy the luxuries of life, we have caused the destruction of the greatest shelter – Mother Earth.

During our lawyer’s convention, there was this speaker who talked about environmental laws. To paraphrase, there is no sense saying there is income when you cut trees. If you cut a tree, it is converted into money, ostensibly to finance development. But when you cut the trees, you are warming the earth, you cause denudation which will trigger lanslides, and flash floods. In a way, if you cut a tree, you kill a human being who become mere statistics in times of calamity. The money you have earned for cutting a tree may not be enough to rehabilitate after a natural disaster.

I like the analogy used by Al Gore in his documentary, Inconvenient Truth. According to him, we are like a frog. We are in a bottle we call earth. It is getting warmer every day, but it does so slowly, and quite tolerably. But then later on, it might be too late for us to realize that it has become too hot for us to bear that we die without our knowing. But if the frog was from outside, when you dip it into a bottle with warm water, it will jump away to safety.

There may be truth to his analogy. But I don’t have to feel the earth getting warmer for me to realize that we are off to a serious climactic disaster. As a I look at the forest, it has ceased but a mount of rocks. There is no forest without trees. The river of my childhood has ceased to be playing ground. The bird’s haven is now a mass of concrete. As I look at my youngest kid playing Play Station, I wanted to tell him pick-up your trap and catch a bird? But where now should he catch a bird, or swim in a river, or play hide-and-seek? The paradise of my childhood have long gone, and what I have is only a memory. In a word, I don’t need Al Gore to tell me the Inconvenient Truth. The truth is not in the graph of temperature changes. The truth is most real and tangible in the life I have known and the difference in the life that my kid would have to live without.