I have long thought of myself as an environmentalist, as
well as one who strives for sustainability, both in my own life and in the
communities in which I live. Many of these communities relate themselves to
environmental awareness, spiritual openness, whole life learning, and social
justice and in so doing suffer from the linguistic failing of word overuse and
regular re-association of words. None of these fall so heavily into the traps
of linguistic redefining than the environmentalists.
We love words.
We love to come up with ways to say, “Love your mother, this
planet” without saying a single one of those words! We say, “Protect the
animals.” We say, “Save the Earth!” We say, “Be resilient!” We say, “Coexist.”
And every few years we choose a new set of words to harness for our cause. We
fear that we cannot walk a talk that, to be walked fully, would take up every minute
of every hour of every day, all year round. We watch each other buying new gas
powered cars. We judge each other’s recycling habits. We show pride at our lack
of travel. We step outside of the modern human world, but not so far as to be the
crazed mountain man, nor the hippy witch woman (yes, I often fall into this latter
category, but I think you get my meaning.) We love local food and local
artists, but we know we cannot financially support them. This is a talk we can
not fully walk.
So too do we think ourselves superior to all those who make
a different set of choices. We feel out cause is superior, we feel our choices
are superior, when we make mistakes we hide them and find ways to explain them
away, like a yuppie woman taking a day away from her low-carb, gluten-free,
raw-foods diet. But we forget how much we can learn!
We can learn from those who came before us, both in our
cause and many others. I want to especially point to our social justice
friends. The people who lovingly grip the word “feminist” until everyone they
know believes in it, and the spiritualists who convince you of the goodness of
their faith until you too believe that faith can be good. These should be our heroes
and role models. We should not let go of a word just because it feels warn out
or because it is not broad enough, think of the transformations in the
definition of feminism over the past few decades! We should not treat our “talk”
as a diet, something we are trying for a time, but as a faith, unchallengeable in
its own way.
I am an environmentalist, I believe in the ability for
humanity to sustain itself on this planet. And I fly, because I am also a woman
living in this modern global world. I do not own a car and I reuse or recycle
almost everything, but that does not make me a good person, (though I might
believe it makes me a better person then someone who does not do these things.)
But my point is, we need to learn. We need to retain our
identity and clarify out terminology rather than simply giving ourselves new
words. We need to stop shifting and sustain our movement, or we will not be a
movement. We will be the noisy rabble who can never have their voices heard.
Stick with a word Environmentalists! Any word at all.
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