I've always wanted to read the memoir of Julia Butterfly Hill, the young woman who, in the late Nineties, spent two years living on a platform attached to an ancient redwood tree to prevent it from being cut down. Thanks to my daughter thoughtfully giving the memoir to me for Christmas, I finally got the chance to do so.
It's a very honest account. Julia leaves out little detail about how she lived on the platform. Nor does she make any effort to mask the extent of the psychological and physical torment she endured. Living 180 feet off the ground in the middle of a redwood forest is not always a glamorous exercise. Although Julia found much beauty in the forest, the harsh winter storms and constant wind throughout the year left their mark on her. She often suffered brutally.
But she persevered. Some might think devoting two years of one's life to saving a single redwood tree is plain silly; others might laud the intention but question whether it was the more effective means of protest. Still others would accuse Julia of flagrantly breaking the law. Regardless, her quest to save "Luna" (the name she assigned to the tree) and her meditations on the relationship between humans and the natural world should strike home with all of us. We humans are intimately connected to the world of which we are a part. And we should care for it.
Moreover, how interesting that although Ms. Hill has left her childhood religion (her dad was a traveling Christian evangelist) far behind, she continues to pray. She prays to a loving Creator.
Shouldn't we all? A universe absent love is a universe unknown.