Posts Tagged ‘environment’

I remember seeing this piece of litter on a street I often used to walk. Likely escaped from a bin on garbage day and yet there it sat and how many people had walked past and what was to become of it? Thoughts that go through my mind whenever I see litter, same thoughts that initially prompted this project. The thing that will never ever, EVER stop blowing my mind is that when I send a picture, in this case of a detergent escapee, to a writer, ‘The Future’ happens.

Thanks to Ronna Bloom, who, I’m delighted to say, has included ‘The Future’ in revised form in her most recent book, In a Riptide, in which the future, as a subject, plays a beautiful role, not least in the closing poem ‘A Full Glass’ — “A few days short of New Year’s Eve, a man stands/ on the sidewalk, bundled against the dry cold./ He holds a martini glass full of brownish liquid you hope/ is hot cider made from September’s Macintosh apples/ with a bit of ginger or lemon for brightness, though the drink/ looks a lot like the slush you’re walking on./ To the future! he says to you as you pass./ To the future! you say, holding nothing.”

Enjoy this most wonderful re-post, first published here on February 7, 2020.

And oh how I would love for whoever once owned that Sunlight to see what became of it.

I saw the icons of my generation trashed, pounded, run over.

Sunlight, Madge, we were soaking in it. That box that held our kisses

was flat. Lifestyle came undone so that life was hanging on by the grate

and style underfoot. What happened and is it everywhere?

“The future is in plastics,” said the man in The Graduate and it is.

One night in the last century, I dreamt I sat on a high wall an open book

on the ground and the sea rose. Be careful the book! I called.

The water came anyway. What is precious and who cares and how much?

To each her own footwear in the apocalypse. It’s not just the litter it’s the latter.

But some people notice. Someone took these pictures.

In Australia, fire eats the houses and the vines in California.

In Venice, someone’s couch was swept into the water, someone’s tombstone.

Tourists looted the Vuitton store and swam away with the goods.

Tom Waits is not dead yet so I ask him what am I seeing?

Misery’s the river of the soul, he says. Everybody row.

The young are out mopping because there’s no school

when there’s no school. And the old, well, it doesn’t matter how tired and dazed you are

when you’re up to your knees. All you can do is wait. The tide will turn.

Sunlight. The real thing. Until the next siren. Fire and water and so on.

Sisyphus that old trooper. Sisyphus is us.

Ronna Bloom is the author of eight books of poetry. Her work has been broadcast on CBC, recorded by the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, and translated into Bangla and Chinese. Her poems also appear several times in Best Canadian Poetry and have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Ronna has brought poetry into health care, specifically developing the Poet-in-Residence program at Sinai Health. She has collaborated with filmmakers, choreographers, musicians, and architects. Her poem, “The Future,” originally published in the litter I see project, appears in her new book In a Riptide (Brick Books 2025.) ronnabloom.com

BIGGEST LITTER PEEVE?

RB — Junk in the water. Seeing a tide with plastic bottles, tin cans, tires and other bits of debris coming ashore just deflates me. The endlessness of the fight… I always cut the strings off masks too as I worry for the strangling of birds. 

https://ocean.org/pollution-plastics/shoreline-cleanup/

First published on this site November 30, 2018, I’m happy to kick off this year’s year-end/new year Redux Series with Christine Higdon’s ‘bad rubbish [good riddance]‘, in which the difficulty of breaking up, breaking a habit, or simply moving on is explored through the lens of a littered tube of mascara.

It’s this kind of magic that never fails to delight when I send out a litter pic and the response I receive is the alchemy of random photo and imagination having created beauty from something discarded, something that would otherwise be, and almost always is, overlooked.

For my own interest and as a way of sharing info, I include at the end of each Redux post, two questions I’ve asked each writer: what’s their biggest litter peeve, and to share any drop of good news they might be aware of, sites, or groups that are making a difference in cleaning up the land. Christine doesn’t disappoint… for which, many thanks.

Keep talking trash!

& happy Redux holidays to all.

It’s complicated. We’ve been in a love/hate relationship since I was sixteen. We try it on. It works for a while. Then. Well. You know. It feels like it’s over. A few months later, we’re back at it again. Two or three weeks pass. We’re doing it every morning and I’m starting to feel obligated. I find myself staring at my reflection in the mirror, questioning my sanity.

Hay fever season comes along. I can tell we’re heading for another breakup. I’m rubbing my eyes all the time and Maybelline tells me I look like a raccoon. I say, I’d like a little time to think. I go home by myself. It might be permanent this time.

But I dream weird dreams of Maybelline: Experts say: replace every two months. Two months! Aren’t these the sexiest eight dollars you’ve ever spent? I don’t think so. Are You Dreaming of Bold! Sensational! The False-Lashes Effect? Um. No. Do you understand the latest technique: sweep from the root to tip with a rotational or zig-zag motion? WTF. Rotational?

That’s the tipping point. Like it never happened, I know it’s over. Forever.

Only it’s not. Maybelline is omnipresent. I see that pink and green outfit everywhere. At the beach. In the café. Rolling down Yonge Street at two in the morning. That Maybelline is going to be around for another thousand years.

Christine Higdon is the award-winning author of The Very Marrow of Our Bones and Gin, Turpentine, Pennyroyal, Rue. Another novel is in the works. She has been shortlisted and long-listed for CBC fiction and nonfiction prizes, and her short stories have been published in The Malahat ReviewThe New Quarterlyuntethered, and Plenitude: Your Queer Literary Magazine. She sometimes lives in a cabin near Lunenburg, NS, and sometimes in Mimico, Ontario, where she alternately marvels at the beauty of the world or gnashes her teeth over it.

♦♦♦

What is your BIGGEST LITTER PEEVE?

My biggest litter peeve is cigarette butts—those seemingly small bits tossed out car windows, ground out at bus stops, swept down city storm drains, or left to litter the sidewalk outside bars and restaurants. They aren’t biodegradable! They break down into microplastics and chemicals that leach into the ground and water.

And do you have any GOOD NEWS to share ON THE LITTER FRONT?

Regarding good news on the litter front… My lovely niece, Haley, an ardent environmentalist, has recently joined the board of Mind Your Plastic. https://mindyourplastic.ca/ Among other things, the organization runs a “Circular Economy Ambassador Program” in schools nationwide. They aim to create real solutions to stop plastic pollution at the source by educating students about it and engaging them in community cleanups. Interestingly, the most collected litter item is cigarette butts! Check out their Instagram page!

https://www.instagram.com/p/DSKkVnyEb7N/?img_index=1

It was scary at first, and hurtful, to be
abandoned. Unmoored, unhinged,
no mate. A fear that all I have left
is entropy, microscopic decline, exhaling
my polyethylene breath, my toxins,
on the napes of my verdant companions,
but I am buoyed by the lilypads’ sibilant
there, there, our rhizomatic exchange.
Look how they embrace the cosmos!
Mired in the ebon deep of the pond, yet
they aspire to the firmament, baring
tender green palms. I trust that, with time,
I can learn from them how to be whole –
how to be not just another empty sole.

Sharon McCartney is the author of eight books of poetry, including, most recently, Hey Trouble and Other Poems (Baseline Press, 2024), Villa Negativa (Biblioasis, 2021) and Metanoia (Biblioasis, 2016). She lives in Victoria, BC.

BONUS… B A C K S T O R Y

I love when a writer is willing to share a glimpse into how a piece of writing came to be. When I sent this photo to Sharon as her ‘prompt’ I expected either poetry or prose in response… she chose poetry then added not only backstory, but a fabulous visual into her process.

“My first thought was poor Croc – where is your mate?! Croc looked so alone out there, floating on the lily pads but, as a loner myself, I know how fruitful solitude can be. So I decided to paint the scene, as a way to explore that. I had recently begun working with a Jungian psychoanalyst, who encouraged me to paint. (Jung was very big on all forms of creativity.) I have never painted in my life... and I have no visual art skills, clearly, but painting is interesting. It’s about letting the unconscious have a hand. What I found with this piece was that the lily pads took over. They’re the focus – the way they straddle darkness and light, feeding on both. As I painted, I found that Croc was the voice I wanted but Croc didn’t need to be in the picture. The lily pads are the way. My analysis is ongoing — I continue to paint and write and unearth..”

~ Sharon McCartney