I keep hoping that my sister is right, along with others of like mind who believe that we are on the cusp of a planetary shift. The upheavals of the past year--from the massive earthquake in China to the aborted revolution in Burma, from the events in the Middle East to the unending crises on the troubled African continent and the world-wide financial meltdown--might well be seen as signs that we are out of balance, as a species, with our natural environment. Would it not be wonderful if 2008 proved in historical retrospect to be the tipping point, the moment at which we finally hit bottom in our drunken need to exploit our planet and wreak havoc on our fellow human beings? Looking back on the year, I'm tempted to paraphrase Charles Dickens, who refused to be blinded to the dark side of that Victorian era of splendid "growth" for the British Empire: it was the best of years, it was the worst of years...
It's a misty morning in Laguna Beach. I sit and look out over our beautiful back patio and the neighbor's eucalyptus trees and am grateful for the great good fortune I have to be here at this place and time. I am driven to "think globally" because I care very much about the greater issues that affect us all. I can't help but wonder why it is that I have been granted the privileges I enjoy and by which I frequently feel humbled. "Karma" seems to me an awfully convenient and self-congratulatory explanation for the mystery of the lives we are each, individually, given to lead. We have witnessed, this past year, the inordinate suffering of many millions of beings all around the globe. I feel the obligation to do those things that are within my power to help relieve that suffering in the year to come.
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