I mentioned in a recent post about a wonderful exhibition that we visited with some friends. I had read about it on a blog and was amazed, and delighted, that it was coming to a place near us as we live in a quiet rural area. It looked amazing in the photos but it was of course nothing compared to seeing it in real life. It is always hard to get a sense of scale in photos of places and things you have never seen, that is not a criticism but an observation. I therefore had no idea what to expect when we walked through the door of the host venue. It was one of those wow moments, we had all been chatting amongst our wee group and as we stepped over that threshold we all stopped talking and stood completely still.
Suspended from the high ceiling and slowly rotating round was a scale replica of our beautiful planet. A very blue planet, the BBC series with this name was apt. We read about the percentage of our planet that is water (around 70%) and that is very hard to visualise, the imagery of this exhibition made it very obvious. There is a lot of sea.
I remember investigating sea voyages of long ago with Cameron, of reading about trips that would take years, of those earlier sailors vying, during the age of exploration, to be first to circumnavigate the world. It is hard to imagine the shear scale of those early attempts and later achievements when they are written on the pages of a book, looking up at this slowly revolving globe it was so much easier to. The distances are unbelievable in some parts of the ocean, those journeys seemed all the more remarkable as I stood there and soaked it all in.
I am grateful to Cameron who spent hours as a younger child reading atlases and maps like other children would read books, he taught me so much about the countries that fill the landmass of our planet. I could work out where most of them are. We could see how remote the island their dad spent two years of his childhood living on, and why it took six months to get there by boat from the UK.
As I stood there near that entrance, later in a raised viewing gallery and wandering around the building watching that globe slowly revolving, it pulled you in and made you stop and pause. It is hard when our lives revolve around such a very very small part of the whole to think about the impact our actions have on the planet. Whilst what I was viewing was a work of art, a replica, it drew you into its beauty and majesty in ways that are impossible in every day life in our small corners of the world. It made me stop and think about my actions and the impact they could be having on the whole planet we live on.
I have always tried to tread lightly, to, as a family, live mindful of our impact but sometimes that can get a little when we get swept along by possibilities. It is also all too easy to become disillusioned when we feel like we are doing our best and we still read about wildfires, flash flooding and drought taking place on the doorstep. The impact of which ripples out to effect agriculture, water supplies, not to mention the ecosystems themselves. We hear about industries, companies, corporations who are held up as examples of malpractice, who should be doing more. Those industries, companies and corporations are run by humans, humans who make decisions that effect their lives as much as anyone else's, humans who are feeling the impact as everyone else is, or are they? Am I being naive to think that we really are all in this together and if you are incredibly wealthy or living in a place which is experiencing little climatic change (if such a place still exists) then does it feel like business as normal to you?
I very much hope that our beautiful blue planet continues to be habitable for many generations to come.
Seeing the world like this really did make me stop and think too. We live in a beautiful world and it is still a beautiful world, despite our best efforts to ruin it. Treading as lightly as we can and being mindful of consequences is a good way to think.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes
Ellie
I am so grateful for you blogging about it, I would never known about it otherwise. I could tell that it had had that effect on you from your post, which is why I was inspired to find out if it was coming near me.
DeleteI'm looking forward to the exhibition coming to my city, I really hope I can get to see it. A wonderful post, I hope that seeing the world in this way has had a similar impact on all who have managed to get to the exhibition.
ReplyDeleteI hope it has that impact too Jo. I do hope you can see it when it comes near you, it is amazing.
DeleteOh, I nodded throughout this post. You and your family are one of the most environmentally friendly I know! I saw that installation in the Anglican cathedral, it truly is breathtaking. Snowbird.xxx
ReplyDeleteI am so glad to hear that you enjoyed it too.
DeleteThank you so much for sharing this. I will go along to Derby Cathedral and see it myself.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to hear that it is coming near you, I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
DeleteThat looks like a powerful exhibit. You're right, it is frustrating to see where the climate is headed, and not feel like we can do much about it. We can adjust our personal actions, but when I hear stats like the majority of pollutants are a small number of massive companies, it's disheartening. I suppose we can just keep doing what we can, and keep educating ourselves.
ReplyDeleteIt is amazing. I am trying very hard not be disheartened we are working on reducing our reliance on supplied electricity by increasing our solar panels. I am concerned about the direction our government is heading in but hope that that is temporary and the electorate help them to see sense.
Deletewow! that is something I would love to see in person! We bought passes for our city museums and we try to go once a month, so far that has been a doable goal. The pass is for four museums grouped together.
ReplyDeleteIt is amazing Karen. It is travelling the world so you never know!
DeleteWhat a great post, these are things I think about a lot. I have to avoid too much doom and gloom as well, otherwise it all seems overwhelming. I agree about clothes and things, it is so hard to know what goes into them. I buy a lot secondhand. I cleared out my father's home recently after he died and I was struck how much stuff there was that he had had for 50-60 years that he had kept and cared for. He was very thrifty and I really feel he trod quite lightly on the planet. It has encouraged me to try and be more like that. CJ xx
ReplyDeleteI hear you on stuff CJ. I try to tread lightly and then realise that I have gotten to busy to focus on it at all and that is the time when I am probably not treading as lightly as I could be. I do feel like there are more people out there than we realise who are living that way, I was amazed that we found an electrician who specialised in repairing circuit boards from appliances, that is all he does and he has plenty of work, so there are folks out there who would rather repair than replace.
DeleteWe are all suffering from overwhelm and feel powerless to change things. Everyone needs to wake up and take some responsibility - including the person who was parked on our road for over an hour sitting in his car on his mobile phone with his engine running for all that time. I ask you!
ReplyDeleteThe world is certainly a glorious wow and needs preserving.
How frustrating to have that going on over the road from you. I think I might have been inclined to go and have a quiet word! I hope we can preserve the world for future generations.
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