The Birth of a New World

How can I speak of hope when so many have died? The tragedy is that those who have passed are all the beloved of someone who lives to mourn them. Many innocent lives cut short.

The sun continues to rise. As Francesca Melandri wrote, in A Letter from Italy, “We are witnessing the birth of a new world”. Just what sort of world it is will depend so much on the lessons learned from this and the choices we make – and I mean we the citizens – coming out of it.

Gaia is swinging the pendulum back to the centre. Our beautiful blue planet is a self-regulating organism. This is more than just James Lovelock’s hippy hypothesis. Science has shown it to be true. Our entire evolution depends on her keeping the atmosphere just right for Life. The right amount of oxygen in the air we breathe, the water we drink – life-giving. Filtering the sunlight that plants and algae convert into the food that all animals are dependent on – life-giving. Life has flourished in her mastery of ecochemistry, her juggling of the winds and rains, her influence from the deepest ocean to the frozen tundra.

Gaia has been the perfect world for humans, the most generous, most kind, nurturing and forgiving mother.

I was struck by Robin Wall Kimmerer’s reflection in ‘Braiding Sweetgrass’ of how the creation stories of different cultures led to our treatment of the planet. Her people believed that the last thing to be created was a pregnant woman who fell to Earth, vulnerable and helpless. The animals brought food and each of the plants solemnly promised to provide a gift to mankind in our hour of need – and how true the plants have been to their word! Every child of her tribe is taught to be grateful and respectful of nature. In Genesis, in the Western world, a human was also created last. Not a vulnerable human, but a ‘perfect’ man put in charge of creation, set up as master of all, with a woman made as his companion. Their first act was not one of gratitude, it was one of greed, and their punishment was to be thrown out of their perfect garden – divorced from nature. Their children Cain and Abel created war.

How different these tales are. And how different the relationships that followed between humans and Gaia. Ancestral people honoured her and were grateful for her gifts. ‘Civilised’ people have laid waste, ignoring the fine balance that makes Earth the only habitable planet in the universe. We have ungratefully trashed our home. Like a kind mother dealing with an angry, addicted, self-destructive teenager, we have been tolerated and gentled warned. But for the sake of our siblings, all other life on Earth, she has reined us in.

COVID-19 has stopped us in our tracks. Using the teenager analogy, we have been grounded, gated and confined to our rooms to reflect on our actions and think things through.

The biochemists are busy looking for a vaccine. But Gaia is the master chemist. Plants alone have been doing biochemistry for 700 million years, fungi for 1,300 million years. Bacteria and viruses were there long before them. Viruses evolved from complex molecules of protein and nucleic acid before any cells appeared on earth. In the virus-first hypothesis, viruses contributed to the rise of cellular life.

We have a choice. Do we continue to try and outwit her? Dominate her chemically, change biology, change the climate, the life giving systems and cycles, providing technological solutions to ameliorate the damage we cause?

Or do we stop and think?

Will we emerge from our rooms still determined to have our own way, fuelled by greed, materialism, capitalism, anger and suffering a disconnect from nature? A ‘hole in the soul’ disconnect that leaves us shitting on our own doorsteps, behaviour only ever seen in other mammals if they are caged.

Or will we emerge with a new understanding and appreciation for what we do have?

Giving thanks is not easy when so many have died. ‘Being grateful’ seems facetious if you’re locked up in a tiny flat with worried children, no money, no job, tense and fuelled by fear and anxiety. At 32 I was alone in a strange country with no family, no friends, no income, three small children and a stack of job rejection letters. Sadly this punishment will fall the most heavily on those least able to bear it. But no matter what happens to us in life, when everything is taken away from us, we all still have the choice of determining our attitude.

Gaia is rebalancing as we have failed to heed her warnings. We have some big lessons to learn. As a new world is born, how will each of us choose to respond?

I am so grateful for this Earth and the gift of Life. Even at this time the plants hold true to their promise to provide gifts in our hour of need. Black cumin seed, chamomile and of all things, orange peel, have all been shown to prevent SARS-coronavirus from replicating (Ulasli et al. 2014). We weren’t destined or designed to live divorced from Nature crammed into concrete boxes; our children caged and putting in more hours than the EU Working Directive to learn how to live in an artificial world; fed on rubbish and sickened by our own waste.

As a mother and a once recalcitrant teenager who made some pretty stupid decisions I recognise the words. “You’re not allowed out of your room until you’ve thought about your behaviour.”

My hope for humanity is that we all take this time to reflect – deeply.

3 Comments

  1. I think to see corona as punishment is a bit unfair. The virus certainly has been so successful because of people living close together in cities, and in it we can see the checks and balances on humanity – death is natural and there are limits to how much we can grow and take over and fight it. However, sometimes the virus has profited from things which we consider the positives of society. Italy for instance has been so badly affected partly because its people live into old age and are not isolated at home but rather spend time with young people (often unwitting carriers of the disease). For the benefit of people’s standard of living we should be less socially isolated and spend more time in community and yet that is the exact thing we cannot do right now.

    I don’t doubt this will have some benefits upon nature. I hope the people of china’s cities will be able to walk outside after their lockdown and realise the air now feels pure and unpolluted, and demand that it stays that way. I also wonder whether air pollution has had effects upon death rates, seeing as how this virus is causing deaths in people with asthma, a disease often exacerbated by air pollution in the first place. If that link holds true, perhaps that will put greater force behind the argument to reduce air pollution.

    • Thank you. I also don’t really see it as a punishment, I was comparing it more to a grounding, a period of self-reflection. The Earth has to self-regulate and correct the imbalance. Your point about the elderly in Italy living with families as a cause of mortality is interesting. But there is shocking news of mass mortality in old people’s homes in the USA and France, not even being recorded statistically. My own mother is 81 and lives independently. She is well-stocked and neighbours kindly leave milk, eggs and butter on her doorstep when she needs it.

  2. With all possible respect to those who have and will lose loved ones to a poorly managed virus, it is also important to recognize the fact that very few of us will leave this world before we die. Some of will live beyond our first one hundred years. Roughly 1.4 percent of the United States population dies each year. That is something on the order of 4 million people that are expected to die in any given year. Use good hygiene, wear a mask to help protect your community, enjoy sunlight and fresh air, avoid indoor dining.

    Contemplate mortality, and strive to accept that we all have a very finite and randomly variable time to live, make the time spent living doing things worth living for.

What do you think?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.