Inspiration / CAREER INSIGHTS & STRATEGIES
YOU ARE BRILLIANT, AND THE EARTH IS HIRING
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By: Griff Foxley, www.apocketofchange.com
If you've read Paul Hawken's Blessed Unrest,
you know that there is no other writer/activist in our time with quite
the macro- and uber-optimistic-perspective on the challenge of our
times.
I just stumbled upon this brilliant commencement address he gave to the Class of 2009 at University of Portland on May 3, 2009.
If
I could distill this speech into liquid form I would get drunk on it
every day of the week. Period. So without further ado, in its entirety
(click the "Click Here to Read On" nub):
When I
was invited to give this speech, I was asked if I could give a simple
short talk that was "direct, naked, taut, honest, passionate, lean,
shivering, startling, and graceful." Boy, no pressure there.
But
let's begin with the startling part. Hey, Class of 2009: you are going
to have to figure out what it means to be a human being on earth at a
time when every living system is declining, and the rate of decline is
accelerating. Kind of a mind-boggling situation... but not one
peer-reviewed paper published in the last thirty years can refute that
statement.
Basically, the earth needs a new operating system, you are the programmers, and we need it within a few decades.
This
planet came with a set of operating instructions, but we seem to have
misplaced them. Important rules like don't poison the water, soil, or
air, and don't let the earth get overcrowded, and don't touch the
thermostat have been broken. Buckminster Fuller said that spaceship
earth was so ingeniously designed that no one has a clue that we are on
one, flying through the universe at a million miles per hour, with no
need for seatbelts, lots of room in coach, and really good food, but
all that is changing.
There is invisible writing on the back of
the diploma you will receive, and in case you didn't bring lemon juice
to decode it, I can tell you what it says: YOU ARE BRILLIANT, AND THE
EARTH IS HIRING. The earth couldn't afford to send any recruiters or
limos to your school. It sent you rain, sunsets, ripe cherries, night
blooming jasmine, and that unbelievably cute person you are dating.
Take the hint. And here's the deal: Forget that this task of
planet-saving is not possible in the time required. Don't be put off by
people who know what is not possible. Do what needs to be done, and
check to see if it was impossible only after you are done.
When
asked if I am pessimistic or optimistic about the future, my answer is
always the same: If you look at the science about what is happening on
earth and aren't pessimistic, you don't understand data.
But if
you meet the people who are working to restore this earth and the lives
of the poor, and you aren't optimistic, you haven't got a pulse.
What
I see everywhere in the world are ordinary people willing to confront
despair, power, and incalculable odds in order to restore some
semblance of grace, justice, and beauty to this world. The poet
Adrienne Rich wrote, "So much has been destroyed I have cast my lot
with those who, age after age, perversely, with no extraordinary power,
reconstitute the world." There could be no better description.
Humanity
is coalescing. It is reconstituting the world, and the action is taking
place in schoolrooms, farms, jungles, villages, campuses, companies,
refugee camps, deserts, fisheries, and slums. You join a multitude of
caring people. No one knows how many groups and organizations are
working on the most salient issues of our day: climate change, poverty,
deforestation, peace, water, hunger, conservation, human rights, and
more. This is the largest movement the world has ever seen.
Rather
than control, it seeks connection. Rather than dominance, it strives to
disperse concentrations of power. Like Mercy Corps, it works behind the
scenes and gets the job done. Large as it is, no one knows the true
size of this movement. It provides hope, support, and meaning to
billions of people in the world. Its clout resides in idea, not in
force.
It is made up of teachers, children, peasants,
businesspeople, rappers, organic farmers, nuns, artists, government
workers, fisher-folk, engineers, students, incorrigible writers,
weeping Muslims, concerned mothers, poets, doctors without borders,
grieving Christians, street musicians, the President of the United
States of America, and as the writer David James Duncan would say, the
Creator, the One who loves us all in such a huge way.
There is a
rabbinical teaching that says if the world is ending and the Messiah
arrives, first plant a tree, and then see if the story is true.
Inspiration
is not garnered from the litanies of what may befall us; it resides in
humanity's willingness to restore, redress, reform, rebuild, recover,
re-imagine, and reconsider.
"One day you finally knew what you
had to do, and began, though the voices around you kept shouting their
bad advice," is Mary Oliver's description of moving away from the
profane toward a deep sense of connectedness to the living world.
Millions
of people are working on behalf of strangers, even if the evening news
is usually about the death of strangers. This kindness of strangers has
religious, even mythic origins, and very specific eighteenth-century
roots. Abolitionists were the first people to create a national and
global movement to defend the rights of those they did not know. Until
that time, no group had filed a grievance except on behalf of itself.
The
founders of this movement were largely unknown - Granville Clark,
Thomas Clarkson, Josiah Wedgwood - and their goal was ridiculous on the
face of it: at that time three out of four people in the world were
enslaved. Enslaving each other was what human beings had done for ages.
And the abolitionist movement was greeted with incredulity.
Conservative spokesmen ridiculed the abolitionists as liberals,
progressives, do-gooders, meddlers, and activists. They were told they
would ruin the economy and drive England into poverty.
But for
the first time in history a group of people organized themselves to
help people they would never know, from whom they would never receive
direct or indirect benefit. And today tens of millions of people do
this every day. It is called the world of non-profits, civil society,
schools, social entrepreneurship, and non-governmental organizations,
of companies who place social and environmental justice at the top of
their strategic goals. The scope and scale of this effort is
unparalleled in history.
The living world is not "out there"
somewhere, but in your heart. What do we know about life? In the words
of biologist Janine Benyus, life creates the conditions that are
conducive to life. I can think of no better motto for a future economy.
We
have tens of thousands of abandoned homes without people and tens of
thousands of abandoned people without homes. We have failed bankers
advising failed regulators on how to save failed assets. Think about
this: we are the only species on this planet without full employment.
Brilliant. We have an economy that tells us that it is cheaper to
destroy earth in real time than to renew, restore, and sustain it. You
can print money to bail out a bank but you can't print life to bail out
a planet.
At present we are stealing the future, selling it in
the present, and calling it gross domestic product. We can just as
easily have an economy that is based on healing the future instead of
stealing it. We can either create assets for the future or take the
assets of the future. One is called restoration and the other
exploitation. And whenever we exploit the earth we exploit people and
cause untold suffering. Working for the earth is not a way to get rich,
it is a way to be rich.
The first living cell came into being
nearly 40 million centuries ago, and its direct descendants are in all
of our bloodstreams. Literally you are breathing molecules this very
second that were inhaled by Moses, Mother Teresa, and Bono. We are
vastly interconnected. Our fates are inseparable. We are here because
the dream of every cell is to become two cells. In each of you are one
quadrillion cells, 90 percent of which are not human cells. Your body
is a community, and without those other microorganisms you would perish
in hours. Each human cell has 400 billion molecules conducting millions
of processes between trillions of atoms. The total cellular activity in
one human body is staggering: one septillion actions at any one moment,
a one with twenty-four zeros after it. In a millisecond, our body has
undergone ten times more processes than there are stars in the universe
exactly what Charles Darwin foretold when he said science would
discover that each living creature was a "little universe formed of a
host of self-propagating organisms, inconceivably minute and as
numerous as the stars of heaven."
So I have two questions for you all: First, can you feel your body?
Stop
for a moment. Feel your body. One septillion activities going on
simultaneously, and your body does this so well you are free to ignore
it, and wonder instead when this speech will end. Second question: who
is in charge of your body? Who is managing those molecules? Hopefully
not a political party.
Life is creating the conditions that are
conducive to life inside you, just as in all of nature. What I want you
to imagine is that collectively humanity is evincing a deep innate
wisdom in coming together to heal the wounds and insults of the past.
Ralph
Waldo Emerson once asked what we would do if the stars only came out
once every thousand years. No one would sleep that night, of course.
The world would become religious overnight. We would be ecstatic,
delirious, made rapturous by the glory of God. Instead the stars come
out every night, and we watch television.
This extraordinary
time when we are globally aware of each other and the multiple dangers
that threaten civilization has never happened, not in a thousand years,
not in ten thousand years. Each of us is as complex and beautiful as
all the stars in the universe. We have done great things and we have
gone way off course in terms of honoring creation. You are graduating
to the most amazing, challenging, stupefying challenge ever bequested
to any generation. The generations before you failed. They didn't stay
up all night. They got distracted and lost sight of the fact that life
is a miracle every moment of your existence.
Nature beckons you
to be on her side. You couldn't ask for a better boss. The most
unrealistic person in the world is the cynic, not the dreamer.
Hopefulness only makes sense when it doesn't make sense to be hopeful.
This is your century. Take it and run as if your life depends on it.
To link to original article, click here.
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