Thursday, February 09, 2006
Once again I am witness to a beautiful sunrise over the tops of the woods near my East Texas home. Yesterday, I saw the sunrise reflected off buildings from downtown Dallas.
I was amazed, while back in the city, at all the concrete, manicured grass, landscaped yards. Then I also visited the “burbs”. I had much the same observations but I was also struck by roof tops so close together. It gave the illusion that I could easily jump from one house to another.
The overall impression of city life is that of organization and control: people living neatly tucked away in their boxes. Due to so many people living so close together, fences are erected for privacy, giving a sense of aloneness. A patch of grass and a tree here and there is the occupant’s sole commune with nature. I once lived in that city and in those circumstances. My life was void of the messiness of nature, and therefore of the opportunity to commune with nature. The world of nature that I had any contact with was planted, fertilized, cut and pruned, then watered, fertilized, cut and pruned again over and over with the seasons. A city is the congregation of people (part of nature), but just like the nature in the city (e.g. parks), organized and manicured.
I have often in the past during my transition from city life to country life, which I am still undergoing, complained of my little E. Texas home’s lack of decent roads, of my driveways made of iron ore, of my yard composed of sand, leaves, fallen juniper berries, and weeds of all sorts, along with ants, moles, ticks, and gophers. But oh how happy I was yesterday to return to my disorganized, unmanicured, and more natural setting with a little wilderness.
But I guess the main difference that I notice in city life vs country life, for me, is my contact with people. In the city, I knew, on a very superficial level my neighbors. I had one that I entrusted to pickup my mail and newspaper while out of town so no one would know I was gone and maybe would not steal “my stuff”. When I moved to the country, in typical city style, I erected a fence around my property to keep out a very nice woman who told me upon meeting her, “I am actively seeking a friend”, hugged me, and was totally unapologetic and unembarrassed for the tears in her eyes at her admission. I was unaccustomed to such unorganized interactions with people. To simply pop over for a visit and be so open with one’s feelings, without a phone call or email, was unheard of in the city unless someone in my household , or myself, had gone off the deep end and I needed immediate help. In the city, people, like their streets, houses and yards, are organized in neat grids with stop, yield, and caution signs controlling both their intersections and their interactions.
However, in my home in the country, I have met more people on a raw, unrehearsed, personal level than ever before. It is somewhat frightening to be so open, vulnerable, and unguarded; so “one of” the people. But in this transplantation, I am learning a lot about nature, people, and myself. Much of this learning experience I find a little difficult to accept just now; like animals killing their prey, a perfectly natural thing and obviously my problem not theirs, or trees being toppled by disease, and people, including myself at times, exhibiting openly their wide range of emotions.
I now more often feel a part of nature, rather than in control of my artificial tract of it I had in the city. In exchange for my secure, anonymous, and somewhat superficial life, I have gained my humanity; like nature sometimes unpredictable, uncontrollable but real. Do I like it? Most of the time! Other times, I cry much like any other form of nature whose safety and security is threatened. But then such is life. I am learning the paradox in my transplantation: isolation and anonymity among the population of the city, and togetherness and openness in the vastness of nature with only a few inhabitants.
Maybe now, I will learn to like my fellow humans, rather than as before in my perhaps self imposed isolation from them, fear them for invading my privacy and my isolation within my “box”.
An interesting and ironic anecdote to this simplistic portrayal of the difference of my life in the city vs. life in the country is the fact that I take a more active role as a body politic (politic from the Greek word means “citizen”). In the city I was somewhat immune in my cocoon from those in power. I could hide “my head in the sand”. But here, though there is plenty of sand to hide in J, my cocoon is not so protective. Living in a more open community, I see in my microcosm of the world, the power plays and greed of the governing more easily and therefore feel more compelled to do something about it.
So paradoxically, my move to the country to escape the human community, and become one with nature, has had just the opposite result. I am a citizen, a fellow human, of my community struggling to be a “good” neighbor and a “good” citizen. But more importantly, I am trying to join the human race, which I have had such disdain for in the past out of fear, lack of acceptance, and a self-imposed isolation which the city easily provided me.
This of course in no way implies that city dwellers are like me, nor those living in the country. These are just my observations about my reactions and actions to my ongoing transplantation from one to the other.
And so tomorrow, hopefully, will find me once more anxiously awaiting the sunrise; but, also hopefully, I will be a kinder, gentler human, who is less judgmental and more accepting of all nature and not just nature apart from the human species. A person once told me “be the change you want to see in others.” How wise but how difficult; but I am trying, even at 63.