by Ibon » Sun 10 Apr 2016, 08:20:21
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')
Doom does not necessarily refer to extinction. It can also refer to much suffering and death. Although people generally acknowledge mortality, it is highly likely that most would like to avoid passing away due to suffering caused by crises discussed in this forum.
Let's address suffering. Buddhism as an example explores this and states that suffering and death is an integral part of this mortal existence and it is the attempt to avoid suffering that causes the most suffering. Part of a healthy life for any individual is to accept the conundrum of this mortal sentient existence. A society with some depth and wisdom will have mentors and teachings that will cultivate this acceptance.
We live today in a society that has little depth in confronting death and suffering, that cultivates instead a culture of avoidance and denial of suffering, that allow elders to rot in "old peoples homes", that creates endless products to maximize convenience and distraction. It is little wonder that existential threats like climate change are treated with denial.
My caretakers dog recently had 8 puppies. 4 have died already as this was her first litter and she was clearly overwhelmed. My daughter, who is here with us, found one of the puppies that had wandered off and was severely dehydrated and weak and almost dead. She brought the puppy to the mother and held the puppy to the teat of the mother and it attempted to suckle but was too weak. This puppy did not survive the night. My daughters compassion was noble but just as important was the wisdom gained that the 3 or 4 puppies that will survive will be healthy along with the mother and that this is nature's way, not all 8 puppies "deserved" or were meant to survive.
Now let's apply the puppy story to 8 billion humans assuming that this will be the population when consequences start. Our global culture is going to experience and witness the asymmetrical consequences of climate change and human overshoot, will see bio-regions suffer disproportionately, will see mass migration from coastal areas, will see a die-off unfolding in many parts of the world. Our modern consumption culture, so excellent today at creating distractions and denial, at avoiding suffering, is going to be confronted with hundreds of millions and eventually billions of little puppies to weak to continue to suck on the teat of consumption culture, that will fall by the wayside, linger in starvation and eventually perish.
I do think that many who have been so conditioned to avoid suffering and death will truly prefer to hold on to the ideology of abundance until the end and will go down harshly. They will suffer disproportionately.
Those however who move through these hardships with eyes and ears and hearts open will suffer as well but they will suffer knowingly. There will be wisdom gained. These are the very experiences which will swing the pendulum away from hedonism and toward devotion and self-sacrifice.
How many of you have had dying parents and have experienced hospice workers who have come into your home and helped your dying loved ones ease their pain into death? Hospice workers are some of the most deeply compassionate humans on the planet. They exercise their compassion muscles every day. They help the dying and their families through the process.
Well, there is going to be a big "market" for these skills in the decades and centuries ahead.
We should embrace the suffering that will come. It will make us a wiser and more compassionate culture. It will transform our culture.
Ralfy, you are saying that extinction might be preferable to suffering. This is exactly a sentiment born of our immature culture that is in deep denial of the nature of existence. That has been honed to avoid suffering. This sentiment comes from a culture that is sadly unprepared for what is coming. I agree with you, many who feel this way are to weak to suck on the teat of the reality of consequences, They, like the puppy, will expire in the night. But fortunately they will make room for those more tenacious.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com