Plague Journal, Chatter
Stepping away
from the chatter is not easy. I ask, “are we addicted to information?” It comes cascading at a rapid rate, at best understood partially, without enough context, — via iphone, TV, laptop screen… One byte after another edited for our approval, or said clearly, for “consumption.”
After sitting down to breakfast I check my email. A summary of the New York Times is perused in parallel with a bowl of cheerios. Most of the time I resist the urge to click on any link to a full article.
How do we step away? Do we have as much choice as we’d like to believe? Or is that belief just another form of delusion, a convenient fiction? A delusion as empty, vacuous as “the second coming.” The church attending among us will know what that means. “Waiting for Godot,” — the promise impossible of fulfillment. Is it possible to rotate the “media tap” to a mere trickle? A trickle would be sufficient for me.
Last night I resolved to take an early morning walk around the yard. My instincts told me there would be much to see right after sunrise. That is what I did this morning. Certainly Henry David Thoreau would have advised us to take a long walk, if we want to release ourselves from the media. This morning soon after looking about I was surprised to hear a persistent, low pitched thrumming chatter. I stood still and carefully gazed around. I was surrounded by at least six squirrels, and undoubtedly more were hidden, some squirrels I could not see. The sound was emanating from the cohort of squirrels. As long as I stood completely still, without any movement, the chatter continued unabated. Several squirrels were close, looking straight at me. I wondered if to squirrel “reason,” I appeared as a “giant” strangely attired squirrel? I’ll never know.
Is it squirrel mating season? Or when enough squirrels gather, do they naturally freely converse?
Life is good!
I took these photos of some flowers as I walked about. Most are of peonies.