Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Plastic Tourism


Imagining a different kind of ocean was difficult.  Did I remember the fine details of our trips to the sea as a small girl on the coast of Texas, somewhere in the recesses of my mind?  Were they any different than this trip to the Bali Sea as a woman now?



Would the driver of our boat have offered a plastic wrapped, hot pink, cream filled pastry as fish food just 25 years ago?

Then another memory hits me. Just three years prior, the southern coast of the United States was darkened, oiled liberally by the hands of BP, just down wind from that place of my child hood memory.

The ragged ‘dolphin boat’ was captained by a tiny Indonesian man with a thin mustache.  He was the father of two kids and an aging dolphin boat.  He split his time between fishing and taking tourists like us, out to sea.

In the barely rising sun, the ocean and sky collaborated to fill the environment with a feathery blue hue that matched Dawa’a hoodie.  It all appeared tranquil in the haze of dawn.  The soft damp skin of Dawa’s hand felt cool as I passed my belongings to her and hoisted myself in to the boat.

Eddie was a good captain, like a slightly overgrown child, a far East Peter Pan.  He was the rebel in the bunch.  He spoke a mean English, giving him an air of confidence.  As we gained on the other dolphin boats cruising across the water, on the hunt, with cameras in hand, he held the engine’s lever with assuredness.  We were one of the few boats that didn’t look like a pack of orange puffed sardines, fat from life jackets.  We were just three without all the gear.  But that was about the only thing that set us apart. 

The light of the still present star, Sun, grew and grew.  As it lifted the last peelings of darkness, truth revealed a bit unexpectedly, the ugliness of human ignorance:

A child’s slipper, worn from the currents;
A water bottle, "Aqua, product of Nestle";
Clear plastic sweets wrapper;
Large plastic bag;
An emptied individual cereal bag with a monkey on the front and pink script;
A styrophoam chunk, hosting space for a large caste away land spider;
A knot of fishing net pieces attached to drift wood…

Litter is truthful. 

The landfill, in the shadows, is our big secret bursting with reality and litter is the clue to our great hidden mounds.  The landfills store our trash as cadavers are stored in morgues.  Trash scattered about the idealized landscapes that we hunger to be a part of, is for boding, as one might find dead bodies hanging around to rot where they had first left the living.  

Forgotten remnants of our over consumption wafted across the ocean’s deep blue face.  The ocean seemed willing to bare witness to our carelessness, like a plea to those paying attention.

The boat of Chinese stood, armed with telephoto lenses.  The Indonesians chatted with their boat drivers and fumbled with their new fangled notebook knock offs to set up for the right snap.  Dawa handed me the Iphone for a back up, easy-to-post picture option and she anxiously established her photographer stance.  Everyone was hungry in the early morning light to catch sight of a creature so unreal in our minds.  We stood together in our want.

The engines hummed.  There must have been 50-60 boats coming from all angles off the coast.  The villages lined up on the shore were now in the distance.  Fingers pointed and boats took off towards the suspect area of real live dolphins.

And as if by magic, they came.

The gentle, sublime looking creatures, wove in and out of the deep blue-gray liquid.  The closer the boats came, the quicker the dolphins disappeared.  The more we wanted, the more they slipped away, allusive under their great dark blanket.  They continued to taunt us.  What was it we wanted?  The Chinese, the Australians, the Indonesians, the Indians, the humans, all in want.  

For myself it must have been a craving for a sense of purity; a chance to be touched by their connection to the old world, the way things use to be.

 I closed my eyes as the salt sprayed against my earthy cheeks.  I prayed first, behind my big prayer, for the power to communicate with the dolphins.  I asked for them to hear me first.  I implored them.  My salty liquid fell lightly and mixed with the sea’s salt.

The engines hummed and lulled, hummed and lulled.

“Please dolphins, we don’t want to hurt you, we just want to understand.  We want to know about you, feel you.  We just want a touch of your simplicity.”  I prayed like a child.  

I kept on praying for their forgiveness, for any fear that they might feel.  I imagined that I was able to calm them like any true mother.  I wanted and wished for them to know that they were safe.  That we, all of these humans packed in to these boats roaring after them, trying desperately to catch a glimpse, just wanted to understand why we loved them so much or loved a seemingly intangible quality that filled them. 


Eddie was a good captain.  He let us stay out after most all of the boats had hummed back to shore.  He turned off the engine so we could sit and wait for them in silence.  He gave us the sacred space to commune with the dolphins. 

“There they are,” spied Dawa in a hurried whisper.

They headed straight towards our boat, sewing themselves like thread through cloth, with ease and grace.  In the silence we could hear their blowholes release, we heard them breath, like us they breathe.  We heard them dip.  We witnessed their delicately placed features, planned so well by nature to soften even the hardest of hearts.

“Look Nicki,” said Dawa.  She had turned in to a child, so fresh with delight.  I turned in to a soft piece of emotion.  They touched us and then slipped back underneath their blanket.

Had they heard my prayers?  Or do they just know?  

Eddie pulled hard and the engine came to a murmur.  “Okay, time for snorkeling.” 
I didn’t want to leave them. The stain of their sweet eyes and smooth flesh was permanent.  I wanted to lose all my fear of the ocean in that moment, slip in to the water and be carried away on their backs.  

We picked up speed and headed back towards the shore.  The truth was, I did fear something.  Was it the darkness below the boat or the green slime on the boats side?  Where did the fear come from?

The litter had not seized.  Pink plastics and blue plastics, a rainbow of biscuit bags, a dead cat bloated with its collar and bell still on, stiff and floating.  It was ominous.  I was scared to get in to the water and look below.  What would I find?  Was I afraid of the ocean's natural inhabitants or scared to see all that we human beings have disposed of in our compulsion for convenience?

We moored in a clear area, where the coral become more evident.  I fumbled with the fins and grabbed for a snorkel and mask.  Mildew filled the edges of one of them.  I was up to my ears in ewww, on edge after the bloated cat.  I grabbed for another one and tugged it over my head, rearranging strands of my hair.  We scooted to the side of the boat and after we both resisted, we plunged.

Adjusting my face gear, I held my core.  But all I felt was the emotion of taint, like everything I touched, everything I loved and admired had been smothered and I was a part of this disease of our time.

We went under. 

The first thing I noticed was a bright azure starfish, absolutely gripping;
a school of fish;
a bag;
some coral;
another bag…

I was afraid of getting too close to the plastic, the remnants of our abuse.

I noticed faint jellyfish right before me.  I remember being enamored by jellyfish as a child and doing a project on them, working so hard to find pictures and facts and then ultimately creating a scroll in a box, painted the color of the sea to display my findings. 

I moved a safe distance but knew without knowing, I had nothing to fear.

And then I saw the translucent bags, two of them a drift before us, with particles of sand in them.  I feared again.  I feared the deathless sinister waifs that masqueraded as jellyfish.  I dreaded nearing these manmade castaways, mutated from earth's matter in to earth’s foe.

Why did I fear the matter?

It is not the stick that beats us, or even the person that beats us that causes the pain, but the anger behind the beating that is the culprit to our pain (an old Buddhist lesson).

It is not the bag littering the sea, but the desire that produced the contents that were once held in that bag.

The bag, in that sense, as much a victim as nature, created to serve our unquenchable thirst.

I squint again, to see back in to another time, running along the gray sand of youth.  How far had we gone back then?  What will a trip to the ocean look like as I enter old age?  Will we have clogged the surface and the depths of the blue so much so that we no longer recognize her as our oceans?

Dawa pulls out her camera to scroll back through the images.  She gets to a shot, the back of a dolphin.  “What is that?”  She zooms in.  “Is that a plastic bag caught on its fin?”

My senses feel lost in fear for the Great Mother’s future.

In the face of adversity, are we inspired to truly change the course of our swim?  

Can we find satisfaction in a world without plastic, without oil, without petroleum?  Look in to the eyes of our near relatives, the dolphins, the birds, your kitty cat and ask yourself, are they satisfied? 


Friday, July 13, 2012

Precious Human Rebirth


I have this flash as we are standing in the subdued lights, in the epilogue of day. 
 
She has just walked in to our hotel room.  She begins talking to me about her day. 

She has been in taxi cabs and traffic, haggling 

With shop keepers and dragging her loot from place to place. 

She stands somewhere between the bustling outer world and the inner peace of home.

I have been in silence. 

I have been in my head. 

I have been in a dream with my fingertips gently clicking away.  

I stand somewhere now between the cosmos and the wakeful world that she just drug in. 

In that no man’s land, her form feels foreign, not so much her form but the form of a human animal.

As I watch her talk and hone in on her gestures, she becomes even more of an anomaly.

My senses reform again in front of this creature.

My mind birthed again in the dusk of day, I follow the lines of her body, 

Lit.

The words tumbling from her lips are mere sounds flapping their wings in my ears.

Her gestures cock my head and I am frozen in the magnificence of life.

I am frozen in the exquisite truth of being.

Frozen in the presence of reflection, a reflection of the mystery,

 Me.

A luminous form adapted from formlessness,

Sculpted in to a lover

This time.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Terror and the Khmer Rouge


There is terror in the world and the only thing that separates us from it is now and later.  There is terror that ruins souls and banishes all sensitivity and peace.  There is terror that rapes the body, explodes the mind and trashes the soul.  We have heard about it, read a book or an article about someone else’s horror or seen a movie on it; we have even had nightmares revealing the essence of terror.  Ten days in Cambodia, one book later, two films, and a few personal accounts and I had put the pink edge of my toe in to the bloody massacre, the holocaust at the hands of the Khmer Rouge between the years of 1975-1979.

Standing in the macabre tourist attraction/pilgrimage sight, I felt for the hairs on my body to rise; I listened for the screams of ghosts and the marching feet covered in rubber slippers of the perpetrators overhead.  I envisioned the abused, sunken flesh back on to the jumbled skeletons in the shrine affront me and closed my eyes to approach the blindness of their misery.  I sniffed at the cool moisture of the cave and drove myself to infuse the smell of death, rotting flesh, ruddy blood and disease. Yet nothing could take me even close to the terror of the mass of human beings left to rot in that cave. I am here  after all, in this flesh, on this day with my life, my loved ones, my comfort and safety, my liberation.  I am here as a touring vibrant young woman, arm in arm with my partner, privileged with love and human rights, all my necessities and many luxuries.  Terror is the last of my worries even as I stare directly at the remnants of one of the most atrocious acts of human kind against human kind, in our history.

I lounge on the bed with a full belly, reading the account of a survivor under the Khmer Rouge as he details the little known facts of what starvation does to the body and mind of a person.  How it drives the body to create pockets in the skin and bloat the stomach and leave a person wasted with exhaustion, how it drives a mind to beat their child for stealing the last of a family’s rations for his own aching tummy or how it calls a woman to eat the flesh of her sister after she has died of starvation herself.  This is true terror!

Oddly however, as I learned more and more about the Khmer Rouge and their platform, without my typical self righteous tone, in an almost whisper, I turned to Dawa and said I kind of understand the original principles and ideals of the Khmer Rouge.  ‘Kind of’ is a huge understatement.  Could I have ended up in that regime of stained hands?  After all it was Cambodians killing Cambodians and family members killing their own family.  Too often we glorify ourselves as the ‘do-gooders’, the benevolent hearts.  Is that what the child soldiers of the Khmer Rouge thought too, that they were exterminating for the betterment of all.  There had to be something that numbed them to the atrocities that they performed.  

No matter your ideals, a fanatic is a fanatic. 
 
Be it a communist pig or a capitalist pig.

To the Khmer Rouge, all signs of the former society were brushed off like infecting pests and deemed imperialist trash.  Currency was not taken by the officials to be used for their own means, but thrown in the dust as another sign of imperialism.  How many times have I cursed a world based on money?  Countless.  They believed in the ‘Ancients’, as they called them and an agrarian society where self sustainability was key.  I am a great admirer of the simple people living out in the bush, in the countryside living off the land, living remotely and cut off from the capitalist cities of today.  I romanticize the lines on their face and the cracked rough skin of their hard working hands, the palm fronds of their roofs and their naked babies brown with the dirt of our earth.  I have spent the past tow years growing less and less dependent on the grocery store and growing a larger and more equipped garden.  Hardly ever will you catch me buying something that is not local.

“Be the change you wish to be in the world.”
~ Ghandi 

I have humbly attempted to live by this notion to the best of my ability in this life.  And my principles on sustainability and simplicity of life, I do agree in.  So at what point can promising positive ideals for the betterment of our planet and brothers and sisters twist in to neurosis, hatred and intolerance.  
There of course were things I could not relate to like the Khmer Rouge’s discounting of religion.  I happen to be a Buddhist, the presiding religion of Cambodia.  I can’t imagine a world where I was not allowed to show love, devotion and respect for the great meditators and Boddhisattvas and even worse, be restricted from practicing meditation and compassion.  Also, they were anti education, culture and art.  That is something I definitely could not understand.  Education is freedom embodied.  Art and culture are the sweet bites of humanity’s ability to reflect the human experience in such extraordinary beauty.

However, truth be truth, myself and many of my like minded friends could easily agree upon many of the regime’s original vision of utopia.  Equally so, myself and these compadres also could say we are against the opposition.

Not saying that we would necessarily come to the point of committing crimes against humanity and unleashing sheer terror on the opposition, but perhaps we are still too close to crossing the line of the middle way.
There is one thing we as the human populace share in common, our goal for happiness.  When you strip away all the dogmas, the paradigms and face that naked soul, each one of us strives for happiness, contentment, satisfaction.  Now some person’s version of happiness could look like the exact opposite of happiness, however we all are here for different purposes and we are all equipped with varying tools.

This secret ingredient for a more placid and serene mind is vital in maintaining equanimity in a complex jungle of various opinions on how to live life and conduct oneself in society.  Without a continually focused awareness, deep understanding and compassion for society’s equal strive for happiness, we move closer and closer to a world of extremism.   This can come in many versions of ignorance that we all know too well. 
As we stand at our pulpit, we must start with humility, a silence; listening for all of the voices, all of the needs, no matter how opposing it may feel from our own.  Then we must remind ourselves to be flexible, patient and understanding.  If someone else’s vision, we are sure is wrong, by the basic laws of nature and karma, then we must expand ourselves with compassion and sympathy for the darkness that a part of their heart and intentions reside in.  And know that they too may have an inner wisdom on where the darkness resides in our path.  Humility!  Humility!  Humility!  We must stay open.  Empty ourselves often for the ability to see and feel with a breadth of wisdom.  Then speak our mind.  Speak from our heart.  Focus on the light of our vision; focus on the positivity of what is our idea of utopia and not on what we find is the negativity of another’s idea of utopia.  In this way, there is space for all 7 billion of us, our mother of green, our father of blue and all of our cousin species.  We have to be the change we want to see in the world and watch others fall beside us in these missions or fulfill their own destinies, creating a lively patchwork of various colors and flavors.

My father once rightly brought me down off of my soap box when I needed it most.  I am quite capable of being a self righteous bitch.  But every day I try a little harder to remind myself of my own strong belief in diversity.  The world would be a bland place if stripped of all of the varying voices, attitudes and ways of being.  Besides, that is an impossible goal.  As we have seen many times in our cyclical history.  Intolerance eventually fails itself.

In the end, by their own hands the Khmer Rouge met their demise.  Growing more and more hateful, inflexible, fanatic and ignorant finally led them to such a rooted paranoia.  They started off killing away the ‘new people’, then they turned against the very model of their original values, ‘the Ancients’ until they ultimately began killing their own ranks.  Hatred and intolerance eventually self destructs and all terrorism eventually ends in bringing terror to itself.  For, we are the other and the other is us.

We should never seize to feel the passion for our values and beliefs, for our hope in the collective.  Let us keep standing up for our dreams.  We need vision!  We need heart and soul in what sometimes can feel like a hopeless world.  Just be wise to smile at the person standing up next to you, across from you, all around you in their own visions.  Let us all meet heart to heart in the united search for sustainable happiness.