For half the Irish year I ride my bicycle along the canal in
the morning to the village where I pick up the bus to my job in the city, and
ride back again in the evenings. The morning ride gives me a chance to see the
landscape when the sun is still drying the leaves of dew and shooing away the
clouds of mist from the bog, when the fish are beginning to stir in the clear
waters below and the herons are shaking off sleep on their perches.
Similar patterns stretch across the land, the water and the
sky. The dendritic patters of the tree branches of the trees that line the road
resemble the tributaries of the streams that flow below them, with tiny streams
feeding larger ones and then joining others, feeding the fields of wildflowers.
They resemble the veins of my hands, more visible now than they used to be as I
grow older. They resemble the mycelium I see in our compost, which I tried to
disturb as little as possible today when I spread it across our new garden bed.
As Albert Bates put it in the permaculture course, we see
the same patterns across all scales – the shape raindrops take on leaves of
grass are governed by the same laws that draw matter into stars and stars into
galaxies. The tessellating pattern of water as it twists and curls around rocks
in the stream, resemble the mist curling and twisting as it floats away, purged
by the light of the dawn, or the patterns of clouds as they ripple over the
Irish landscape.
The morning ride shows me the patterns of the farmers who
live near me, before they are outside at work. I see that Liam mended the fence
where the calf broke through, that last night’s wind blew some trees over the phone
lines, and that Liam won’t be reachable by phone this week. I see that Mick’s
family have laid flowers on the cross they placed along the canal, on the spot
where his car went off the road last year, drowning him. His girls are only
teenagers, and I suspect most people still leave his old space empty in church,
his seat empty at the pub.
The ride home, likewise, gives me a chance to see my
neighbours as they are busy on their plots of land. I usually see my neighbour
Seamus, in his eighties and still planting his own field, and Martin, proudly
showing his young cows and antique cars. I see other neighbours who never took
to the car culture, and still ride bicycles or even horse-carts into the
village and back.
You see, once I step on the bus to the city, the world
changes. I spend three hours on a bus and nine more in an office, staring at
screens, sitting in seats and dealing with the carrots and sticks of human hierarchies.
I live, as most of us do out of necessity, in what Dmitri Orlov calls the
Technosphere, the world of user names and passwords, computer screens and electronic
noises, online profiles and digital icons.
I try to ignore the flash and flicker of advertising on the
walls of cafes, office lobbies, buses, trains, cars, bicycle racks, bus stop
shelters and toilets. I wear earbuds to muffle the piped-in soundtrack of
advertisements, talk radio, and pop songs broadcasted into buses, restaurants,
and offices. Out of necessity, I deal with the conceptual hierarchy that humans
have created -- software programs, paycheque numbers and manager titles -- and
pretend they represent reality.
I understand the need to visit the Technosphere, and it has
its uses -- look at you, reading this on a blog. In living my life and raising
a daughter, though, I always try to keep one foot in that artificial world and
one foot in the real one, the one that has been here for uncounted lifetimes
before us and will continue long after the Technosphere has passed into legend.
2 comments:
While there are a lot of fractal patterns in our world, thank goodness there are also emergent behaviors, so we will still get surprises as things evolve and complexify.
Steve, thank goodness.
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