Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Avon
River, at Upavon, Wiltshire, UK (photo by Dave Pollard)
West Woods, Lockeridge (photo by Dave Snowden)
Avebury
Manor (Photo by Dave Pollard)
Lockeridge: Thatched Roof House (photo by Dave Snowden)
Part
of Avebury Stone Circle (photo by Dave Pollard)
"History is now, and
England". -- TS Eliot
I'm
sitting on a bench beside the Avon river in a village called,
appropriately, Upavon, in Wiltshire, England. Yesterday I visited with
Dave Snowden in nearly Lockeridge and Avebury, and we hiked for miles
around one of the oldest settlements on the island, and through one of
its oldest old-growth forests. Some of Dave's
pictures, and some of
mine,
are above. Mostly we talked about complexity, and the economy.
Dave is more optimistic than I am about the future of civilization.
Today is my day for thought, reflection, unwinding, before I head off
tomorrow for London and a conference on sustainability. Although it is
unimaginably cold, it is a wonderful place for such activity. This is a
place that changes slowly, and accepts that Gaia, not humanity,
determines how things unfold. Two days ago there were flash floods all
over the country, and the people adapted, as they always have. It's not
the most naturally hospitable place, England -- the cold seeps through
your bones and the dampness is so pervasive that nothing ever seems to
dry, even in the high winds blowing through the hills. The greens that
you see here are a deep, rich green that you normally see only in
rainforest, which is what this country was before it was discovered and
razed, a mere few thousand years ago. Moss grows everywhere, because it
can, and because any creature that would eat it would almost surely
prefer some place warmer to graze.
The bird life is much more subdued than what I remember as a child --
the industrial era, pollution, deforestation and overpopulation have
taken their toll -- but if you pay attention you discover that many
creatures other than humans have learned to adapt to this cold, wet,
still-beautiful (outside the cities) land. The wild creatures here seem
much less wary than those in North America, as small flocks of birds,
ducks, sheep, and rabbits (and the occasional schoolchild heading home
from class) all look at me, this strange bundled-up foreigner tapping
away on a keyboard by the river's side, with curiosity and bemusement.
The
sheer ruggedness of the place shows on the weather-worn faces of the
people I see, but not on those of the wild creatures, much better
adapted due to hundreds of millions of years' more practice.
There is a respect here for wildness, for nature's way of doing things.
Britain has a substantial vegetarian population, and a disdain for
factory farming and genetically manufactured species of any kind. The
sheep come right up to you, if you'll let them, and so do the birds
(perhaps because they're used to being fed and admired by the
citizens). In this land made of fences and stone walls and ramparts and
barricades,
there is more tolerance of "foreigners" and eccentrics, and a more
genuine diversity, than I have seen in most places in North America. In
short, this is a resilient place, and I sense it will weather the
coming storms and the collapse, later this century, of our
civilization, much better than newer, more affluent countries.
This is a nation (a set of nations, in fact) that, at least outside the
cities, has always had a sense of the importance of community and
self-sufficiency, and that will continue to serve it well.
I am returning to my work on my novel The
Only Life We Know, and to
other creative work -- composing music
and now, creating videos -- because I think I have largely said what I
needed to say about how the world really works. Looking at the "credo"
I wrote two years ago on this blog, I'm surprised at how little my
views have changed since then (after changing utterly in the five years
before that). Most of what I worried and feared would happen as a
result of the fragility of our world, our excesses, and our loss of
critical knowledge and capacity, is starting to happen in more and more
obvious and alarming ways. I had hoped was wrong, and take no solace in
knowing that, so far, I've been mostly right.
Beyond helping people (myself included) understand how the world really
works, the purpose of this blog -- and my purpose -- is to imagine a
better way to live and make a living. My book Finding the Sweet Spot
imagines --
based on my knowledge of real Natural Enterprises -- a better way to
make a living, and spells out extensively how anyone, with the
right amount of work and self-knowledge, can create
such an enterprise.
But imagining a better way to live is
a more difficult undertaking. I had hoped to discover or create a
Natural (Intentional) Community that would be a model of how to live
better, and while I haven't given up on this search, I am starting to
see that such models are being held back by our society's terrible
imaginative poverty. While we change slowly, and only when we must, we
are capable of doing just about anything we can imagine when that time
comes. The problem is we have largely lost the capacity to really
imagine, thanks I suspect to our hopeless education
system, the dumbing down effect of the information and education media,
and, more than anything, a simple lack of practice
at imagining that
stems from being too busy doing the urgent but unimportant things that
consume most of our days and lives.
So I think I need to spend more of my time imagining, and sharing those
imaginings with my readers, and with all those I love. And I need to
spend
more time organizing real-time events, in virtual and physical space,
that allow us to imagine
collaboratively. Both at
work and in my personal pursuits,
these practices in collaborative imagining and collaborative innovation
are now my priority, my Job
One.
To provoke these events and practices, I intend to start writing more
imaginative and creative stories about what could be. They will be
stories about ways of living that will strike most people as impossibly
different
from how we live now, and how we have lived for the last few thousand
years. But
my study of prehistory and natural evolution suggests we are more than
capable of such transformative change, if we have the knowledge, the
imagination, the experimental examples, help to make the change
simpler, and, most of all, the awareness that
continuing to do what we do now is impossible.
My leaps of imagination always start with paying attention to nature,
listening to Gaia's voice, because what she has done, if you really
look, when you really
look,
is staggeringly imaginative, far beyond anything we could concoct in
our heads.
And that is what I am doing now: Just looking, watching the wild spaces
I find everywhere, to discover, to learn, what is possible. If we can't
imagine, we can do anything
-- we can tolerate atrocities, create and consume the ghastly product
of factory farms, enslave nations and children, encourage
soul-destroying abusive behaviours, allow genocide and endless war,
create an economy build on scarcity and poverty and suffering, and even
end the world by altering its climate.
But if we can
imagine... we
can change
anything. We can
change ourselves, and then our communities, and then our whole society,
into one that works, one that is responsible and sustainable and
joyful. And if we imagine together,
just think what we can accomplish. Not means to perpetrate the existing
unsustainable ways, but astonishing new ways to live, in balance with
all-life-on-Earth. In peace. In ways that allow each of us to do what
we love, what we are brilliant at, what is needed.
What we were meant to do, and to be. Imagine that.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs