
Today is my favorite day of the year -- Earth Day.
Mother Earth was kind enough to give presents -- a gentle rain shower that  turned our Arkansas back yard into a rain forest. The sun is shining  now. Like all females, Mother Earth is prone to changing her mind. As I  look out the window into the woods, droplets of rain on the still new  leaves sparkle as the warm sun caresses them. The landscape shimmers as  if dressed in sequins. Thank you Mother Earth. The effect is  spectacular.
Almost thirty years ago on this day, I experienced a kind of environmental awakening that has forever  changed how I see and think about things. This new kind of spirituality  inspires deeper thought, a kind of peripheral vision that takes in new  dimensions, and a sense of connection to all living things. 
"When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe," said John Muir, founder of the Sierra Club, who was born  on this day. 
That quote has been my favorite  since I first heard it. Connections are not always clear. Sometimes they are difficult to discern, but we must not be blinded by the obvious. 
On that day so long ago, I walked with a group of other nature lovers along a trail. It was a time when "Save the Earth" was a popular  slogan. I was disturbed about oil spills, killing dolphins in tuna nets, too much plastic that never degrades, landfills overflowing with trash  that could be recycled into useful products, and the very future of the  only planet we can call home. But as I walked the trail, in the forest  remnant that had been largely untouched since it was carved out by  glaciers hundreds of thousands of years ago, I realized that humans  aren't able to save the earth any more than they can affect it. Mother  Earth will save herself, even if it is at our expense. I fear for humans who totally miss the point. The only thing that man's work will destroy is man. 
I'm saddened that little has been  accomplished since that day in 1990. And I am frustrated -- no angry -- at recent political attempts to reverse protections of the environment.
Even though I'm unhappy that there must be legal efforts to thwart man's  destructive behavior against himself, it is too important not to be  supportive since not everybody gets it. My hope for the environmental  future of mankind is that more people realize the connections. 
...initially posted in 2010, but still relevant today
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