Community

Tuesday evening, July 6, over 100 concerned people gathered to hear Dr. Riki Ott and Dr. J. Steven Picou. Dr. Riki Ott has played a pivotal role throughout the Exxon Valdez disaster and Dr. J. Steven Picou has had extensive onsite research experience with the Exxon Valdez disaster. They spoke of what has happened and is still happening in Alaska, how it relates to the gulf disaster, and what we can expect. “Maximum community disruption,” “post traumatic stress disorder,” massive “loss of community capital,” people seeking “escape” and “isolation,” “suicide,” “economic loss spirals,” communities that have gone “corrosive,” “friends who drink too much” because of the disaster, “divorce,” “corrosive families,” “holes in the ecosystem,” “desperation,” “persistent pollutants,” serious and widespread “health problems,” “reluctant resignation,” … They had our undivided attention.

Dr. Riki Ott. and Dr. J. Steven Picou exchanging notes before their presentation

Dr. Riki Ott. and Dr. J. Steven Picou exchanging notes before their presentation, photographed July 6, 2010 by Dawn McKinney

Part of the concerned audience behind me, photographed July 6, 2010

Part of the concerned audience behind me, photographed July 6, 2010

For me and surely most present it was much more than information overload. The emotional content was even more powerful. Even with the very academic approach, the tears from the audience began to flow especially from mothers worried about their children and the future.

Dr. Riki Ott and Dr. J. Steven Picou spoke of how we can change our future too. Move beyond the “warning,” “threat,” “impact,” “blame” cycle to the “mutual assistance,” “charitable action,” “commercial cooperation,” “entrepreneur leadership” cycle to leverage our own immense “experience” and “resources.” Use “collective common sense,” give “hugs not shrugs,” “maintain families,” “rise up,” “be leaders,” “choose … to live … and get control of the tiller,” “your power is from the community … the people … from the bottom up,” “speak as a community,” “have your cry, get through it, and make a plan.”

The following morning I sat up in bed and cried too. Sorrowfully I thought of our natural surroundings and our communities. I saw how we get distracted so easily and make ourselves nearly powerless by dividing ourselves with all kinds of respectable labels: liberal and conservative, rich and poor, this religion versus that religion or denomination, republican and democrat, … Sorrowfully I looked at our bubbles and walls, the illusions of success, comfort, … It’s quite strange how we seemed to need the Deepwater Horizons wake-up call to see the human and natural disasters around us and involving us.

So what’s the plan, the prayer, the dream, …? Listen to the calls within you to hold suffering people, to hold families together, to hold birds and fish too, … Despite all the bad news, together we have an incredibly positive future ahead of us, a future far better than our past. Let me share this prayer with you. I look at each line as springboard for conversing with God, our All in All, and as springboard for my actions and hopes for the day. Let the wind blow where it will.

You-Are-Who-Are, Infinite Lover of All, Eternal Creating Spirit!
Kumbaya to us, Your beloved children.
Live fully in each of us and be our All in All in each moment.

Inspire us to confidently ask for and seek all that we need
trusting day by day that Your abundant help can be found in many diverse places and persons.
Inspire us also to profoundly appreciate the needs, beauty, and gifts of each person.

Liberate us from every attachment, anger, dishonesty, conceit, and fear;
save us from every desire to do or return evil;
and guide us into Your boundless patience, hope, understanding, forgiveness, and love;
for we yearn and ask to be healed and to live fully like You and with You for the benefit of all.

Thank You, God.

[This prayer has been updated here.]

Oil Still Waiting to be Cleaned Up

On Dauphin Island, west of Katrina Cut, old oil on beaches and in tidal pools still waits to be cleaned up from Friday of last week. New oil still is coming onshore. Here are some pictures. Click on pictures to see larger more detailed images.


Tuesday, July 6, 7:00 P.M., the Mobile Bay Group Sierra Club will feature a presentation by Dr. Riki Ott. and Dr. J. Steven Picou. Dr. Riki Ott, is a marine toxicologist with a specialty in oil pollution. She experienced firsthand the devastating effects of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Dr. J. Steven Picou, a Professor of Sociology at the University of South Alabama, is currently working on the human response to the BP oil catastrophe. They will be talking about what we can do to help our community cope with this unfolding tragedy. Meeting place: 5 Rivers, Alabama’s Delta Resource Center, 30945 Five Rivers Blvd., Spanish Fort, AL 36527 – the entrance is across from Meaher State Park on the Mobile Bay Causeway.


Oil all along vegetation on right crossing the width of the Island

Oil all along vegetation on right crossing the width of the Island, photographed July 5, 2010

Lots of tar balls on beach at Katrina Cut, surfer in background

Lots of tar balls on beach at Katrina Cut, surfer in background, photographed July 5, 2010

Oil in and between tidal pools

Oil in and between tidal pools, photographed July 5, 2010

Oil soaking edge of tidal pool

Oil soaking edge of tidal pool, photographed July 5, 2010

Oil across midsection of Dauphin Island west of Katrina Cut

Oil across midsection of Dauphin Island west of Katrina Cut, photographed July 5, 2010

Fresh oil paddy on darkened beach

Fresh oil paddy on darkened beach, photographed July 5, 2010

Oil on north beach of Dauphin Island west of Katrina Cut

Oil on north beach of Dauphin Island west of Katrina Cut, photographed July 5, 2010

Oil soaking edge of tidal pool

Oil soaking edge of tidal pool, photographed July 5, 2010

 

Fish and birds normally abundant have been markedly less numerous on recent trips to Dauphin Island west of Katrina Cut. Exceptionally, sting rays remain abundant and close to the shore.

Hope, tears, broken dreams, memories, tragedy, …


Positive Energy

Sharing positive energy after Hands Across the Sand on Dauphin Island, photographed June 26, 2010 by Theresa Robinson

Sharing positive energy after Hands Across the Sand on Dauphin Island, photographed June 26, 2010 by Theresa Robinson

Dauphin Island is getting a good wind right now, much more than a breeze, but not a gale – pure, positive, refreshing energy.

A good wind is just one of the many positive energies in life. Atoms spin, waters spin, the Earth spins, and we spin. Dreaming, dancing, sharing, enjoying, forgiving – fully believing in and expressing our beauty – spinning – revolving – revolutionizing – loving without end for the benefit of all. What a wind! What clean, positive, refreshing energy!

Positive energy is all around us, a revolution always in the making, never letting go of us. Francis of Assisi, a great friend of animals and a great believer in positive energy, dedicated himself to this revolution of love with these words:

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace,
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy;

O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.

For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

Let the positive energy in each of us find expression in our own words, voice, and life. Let the wind blow where it will.

Hands Across the Sand – And Facts Across the Gulf

Hands Across the Sand at Dauphin Island, Alabama

Hands Across the Sand at Dauphin Island, Alabama, photographed June 26, 2010 by Dawn McKinney

Federal gulf waters closed to fishing due to potentially hazardous conditions

Federal gulf waters closed to fishing due to potentially hazardous conditions

Surface oil in gulf pictured by NASA satellite

Surface oil in gulf, photographed June 19, 2010 by NASA's Terra satellite

Theresa Robinson, Hands-Across-the-Sand participant, summed it up, “I’m into the positive direction of this. I know we can’t stop off-shore oil tomorrow, but I know we need to be moving in that direction.”

Consider the following facts:
• There are over 78,000 square miles of federal gulf waters closed to fishing. A large portion of that water has surface or sub-surface oil or both. The spill area if centered in Montgomery would stretch down into Florida, encompass Birmingham and Gadsden, and stretch into Georgia encompassing Atlanta and surrounding communities.
• Despite better technology including insulation and more efficient cars, Americans now use 50% more energy per capita than Americans did in 1950 (we can learn valuable lessons from those days).
• Domestic off-shore oil only accounts for 8% of the American liquid/gas energy consumption.
• Less than half of the currently erupting oil is being collected even with the cap in place.
• The oil wells are less safe than advertised.
• We do not know how to control or stop the current eruption.

So what can I do responsibly for our priceless gulf? Lowering my energy consumption or conserving helps. Recycling helps. Riding bicycles and using public transportation helps. Affecting public policy to support and invest in clean energy helps too.

The huge area of spoiled environments is home for sea turtles, dolphins, birds, fish, crabs, etc. How would we feel if the oil was erupting in our neighborhoods from Atlanta and Birmingham, to Montgomery, to Florida with no end in sight?

Today, I am so grateful to everyone who came to Hands Across the Sand, not just on Dauphin Island, but everywhere. It was great experience meeting new people and joining hands together for a new direction that needs to happen. We would love to have more pictures of our event, so please send your pictures to uheditor@gmail.com. Thanks!

Enthusiastic college students added much to Hands Across the Sand

Enthusiastic college students on Dauphin Island added much to Hands Across the Sand, photographed June 26, 2010 by Theresa Robinson