(6)


Gradually over the years, those who enjoy walking through the woods running alongside the cemetery have created a number of footpaths there.  Sometimes, particularly in winter when I know that no one else is likely to be around, I'll go for a walk along one of these.  My favorite begins with a sharp plunge down through the trees for a distance of about three or four yards, then veers off to the left and trails along the side of the gully a quarter mile or so, eventually descending to the creek at the bottom.  From there you can either follow a path up the gully's far side and go yet deeper into the woods, or you can take another path that leads up towards the cemetery again.  This latter makes for a nice little walk.

One day this past winter when I was following this path through the woods I spotted a bit of trash stuck in the undergrowth and decided to pick it up.  Turning it over in my hands, I discovered that it was a small tray made out of plastic, part of a container that had once held barbecued chicken wings according to the label on it.  Lying close to that were a couple of plastic pots, these likely having been tossed into the ravine after someone had planted some flowers on a grave.  I decided to pick these up as well.  Since that day whenever I have gone into the woods I've continued to pick up whatever garbage I find, even going so far as to carry a small plastic bag with me to put the garbage in.  Some of the debris, like the artificial flowers and wreathes I find scattered about in such abundance, I can understand being there, the woods being situated so close to the cemetery.  But when I come across items like the container for barbecued chicken wings, or the empty bottle of cough syrup I once found, or a jar that had once held pickled pigs feet in it, I sometimes have to stop and wonder how such things ever came to be in these woods.  It's a mystery to me.

I've collected any number of bags of this garbage, and yet it seems to me that the more I pick up, the more I find.  Recently I came upon six large trash bags that someone had thrown down the side of the ravine; upon opening, these turned out to contain nothing but sticks and dead leaves.  Why, I wondered, hadn't the person simply opened the bags and dumped the stuff out?  Another day I discovered a bag that was filled with the skinned remains of a deer.  Needless to say, this was an unpleasant find.  Still, I was cheered by the thought that gradually the woods were coming to look something less like a dumping ground and more like a real woods again.  However, when some of the snow melted after a warm spell earlier this month, I saw how little I had really accomplished.  Everywhere I looked there were more plastic pots, artificial flowers, strange jars, and other miscellaneous debris.  It seems there must still be bagfuls and bagfuls left to collect, and I confess to feeling somewhat depressed about it.  The struggle to make a difference even here, in a small woods at the edge of a small town, seems overwhelming in the face of such rampant carelessness.

Perhaps I make too much of this.  I would like to be a more forward-looking person, to believe that the problem of pollution in the world today is only one of the many unavoidable hurdles we must overleap as we make our way towards a better and richer life.  Yet I remain unconvinced.  It seems to me that as the flood tide of humanity rises ever higher, leaving its debris strewn upon every shore, we show ourselves to have no more regard for the havoc we wreak upon the environment than would any other phenomena of nature.  And yet, paradoxically, the extent of our unconcern seems to me a sign that the human species, taken as a whole, is losing its sense of connection to its roots, to the earth, to that which gave it corporeal existence.  As the latest experiment put forth by nature, I fear that we are proving ourselves to be something of a failure.  And yet, if this is true, where does the fault lie but with nature itself?  For it was nature, after all, that produced us.

The pursuit of these thoughts has begun to take on the semblance of fatalism to me.  If we as a species lose our sense of connection to the earth which made us, what, I wonder, will happen to our spirit – by which I mean, our ability, our will, to triumph over adversity?  Perhaps it is only through the closeness of death that we will find the answer.  Perhaps, being the kind of creatures we are, we must bring ourselves into a physical proximity with our own extinction – its mere conceptualization not being enough – before we will be able to develop the clarity of vision we need to survive.  I don't know.  It all depends I suppose on who, or what, ends up holding the last trump card.  Perhaps nature will simply do with us as it will.  Perhaps it has been doing so all along.

In any event, as winter ends and spring begins, this is the state of mind in which I find myself:  tossed back and forth between hope and hopelessness, caught up in a battle taking place both within and outside me – all the while still continuing my self-appointed task of picking up the trash I find in the woods, and feeling an ambivalent sense of servitude about it towards both nature and the human race.






INTERRUPTED CONVERSATION


you must build from the things that you find
in this world.  They tell me:
Swallow your reflection held
in a cup of black coffee.
Come, they tell me,
and leave the solace of your lonely room;
let your solitude unbirth you.
Decide if you're a child of the moon or the sun,
and whether you grew from your shadow
or it grew from you:
these things are not
necessarily inevitable.
Here is a window; there, a door:
the sheering, vertiginous space in between
is perfect for the blindness of hands.
Now jump, jump
safely to the street below –
fall down slowly a flight of stairs
surely light as air to your bending knees;
and sing, or shout, use your shoulders like clubs;
be a thief or a spy, the lover wronged:
street signs posted on every corner
will tell you where you're going
and where you've been.
Give yourself freely to institutions;
pull the burrs from your wild hair
and use them in exchange for education
or a job.
It really is
as simple as this.
We know that you are made of stars;
that's no secret anymore.
They tell me:
Drink deeply from your reflection held
in a cup of black coffee.
Your mortality is a blessing
in disguise.








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