Saturday, April 13, 2019

Borneo Jungle




Image result for batu lawi









This is an excerpt from a novel I didn't get around to publishing. It isn't meant to be all true. 

Chapter One
From the frenzied airport the newlyweds hike down the jungle highway in a monsoon deluge. Thick drops ping off the pavement in little explosions, and the light has been so dimmed by rain that it’s hard to see each other’s facial expressions; to know exactly what the other is thinking or the mood they’re in. When drenched to the bone, their t-shirts plastered to their skin like latex, Rebecca stops suddenly, refusing to take another step. “It’s time,” she says.
            “What, seriously,” Donald says, glaring at her through the descending torrent.
            “You know I have to do my practice.” She’s a strong believer in leaving the world a better place.
            “Yes I know Becca, but look around. It’s a freakin hurricane out.” She stands waiting until he gives in. “Okay, if you have to, Jesus, let’s set the tent up back there away from the road so no one will know we’re here.”
            “You’ll have to do it though. You know I’m vulnerable right now.” She says she has an ongoing illness, but her family thinks it might be in her head.
            “Sit tight lovely one. I’ll take care of it.”
            “Thank you Don.” She kisses him in the rain. “What would I do without you?”
            “Probably disintegrate into your couch,” he kids.
            “Ha, ha, not without you.”
            Donald hurries to erect the tent, fumbling with poles and fabric while she sits motionless in the rain chanting and meditating, rivulets of water running off her chin like a river. He calls to her when it’s finished. “Okay my young Buddiss, it’s ready.”
The forest used to stretch inviolable from sea to sea, like the boundless green ocean. Now there are just fragments down here along the coast, remnants of a once great wilderness where everything was in balance. They’re hidden enough so people driving by, sputtering and caged in vibrating steel, can’t see their tent, just a wall of trees shrouded in mist. As the rain lets up they hang their sopping shirts and pants on a vine to drip, drip the water away. They’ll never dry though. Not in the rainforest. Nothing ever does. The wetness is perpetual and penetrating and causes skin to rot. The leeches like it, but probably nothing else does.






Long Live Freedom, Long Live the Wild
If protecting the environment doesn't become the main priority for our political leaders it will continue to be ravaged. Most of the world’s problems stem from one, a degrading natural world and our disconnection to it. At every turn the president only keeps pressing ahead with his fascist agenda, which does nothing to help the environment and everything to destroy it. Only with wilderness can we be healthy and truly free; only will the poor have a chance. How do you get someone like him to think along these lines or at least fathom the idea that without nature humankind can’t survive, so he will do some good? The answer is simple. Getting him to do it is another matter entirely. You take him to the Amazon jungle and have him try to survive for three months in the wild led by a Mascho Piro or an Huaorani shaman. Otherwise you can’t. His sickness of greed and narcissism cannot be cured in an industrial world of asphalt and steal with people like him who cannot think outside the capitalism box. You have to replace him before he takes us all down. We have to respect nature again. This requires massive public pressure, shaming leaders who support anti-environment policies, and also by becoming an ardent minimalist. Long live freedom. Long live the wild.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hn8gk67s6YM