by threadbear » Sun 14 Oct 2007, 23:27:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') agree. PO doesn't scare me much. It's the rest of it that scares me, drought especially.
Heineken, I was talking to my sister in law the other day, and we hit on storms. We both love them. I loved it when I was a kid on the prairies and lightening bolts would hit the utility pole right behind our house and rattle the windows, with thunder that would deafen us. Love flooding, being snowed in etc..etc..We both agreed it made and makes us feel alive.
But last winter was something else, she said, because as she stood in her living room, listening to wind that sounded like a freight train bearing down on her house, she could hear old douglas firs landing with a thud and the awful slow whining cracking sound of old limbs and tree tops being blown right off other trees. It felt, she said, and thought for a few seconds...abnormal.
When you talk about the drought you're experiencing I get the same ominous feeling. For lack of better descriptors, climate change and what we're going through now, carries with it a feeling of ominous foreboding of epic proportion, an almost biblical moral undertone that is sure to unleash archetypal mythic forces, whether they be purely psychological, or correspondent with some external "something".
It is this weird feeling of being judged that, I think, will have people embracing the idea that carbon emissions are responsible for global climate change. There is definitely something mythic going on here.