Sitting out the Culture War: The 11th Hour and Megan’s Earth Day debacle

Posted by Megan Dietz
Monday, May 05, 2008

Earth Day 2008 started out promisingly enough. I sit on the recycling committee at the giant corporation I work for (of course I do!), and we arranged to get some sweet freebie travel mugs to give to our colleagues, to encourage them to use fewer paper cups in the office.

We set up a table outside the cafeteria and handed out about a thousand of them, and people were jazzed. What a great idea! we heard over and over again. By the time lunch was over, we were almost out of mugs, and patting ourselves on the back.

We also set up a screening of The 11th Hour, which I hadn’t seen at that point. And, flying high from the talk I’d given the previous week which had ended with a truly wonderful conversation, I’d volunteered to facilitate a discussion after the screening. The CEO’s office even kicked in some free soda and popcorn for attendees. We were pumped for another great event.

So ... 5 pm. Screening time. About 15 people showed up, less than half the number that had RSVPed, but that’s to be expected. No biggie. I warmly welcomed everyone and invited them to stay afterwards to talk about the film, then we settled into our seats and the lights went down.

An hour into the film, I was wondering what we’d gotten ourselves into. The first 2/3 of this movie are seriously depressing. How was I going to put a Sunny Way spin on 60 relentless minutes of how screwed we are?

The last 30 minutes throw the viewer a small bone of hope, but seriously? The proportions are all wrong. Leonardo DiCaprio and friends go into a lot of detail on the problems, but just sort of breeze through the solutions, almost as though they are an afterthought.

I suppose I should have been grateful the doom-and-gloom hour came first! Imagine the mood in the room if they’d ended with the falling sky stuff. We would have had to hand out cyanide instead of popcorn.

Anyway. The film ended with a rousing Coldplay tune, the credits rolled, and the lights went up. Discussion time. Things started out innocuously enough: What did you like about this film?

One nice man, the leader of our recycling committee, said he liked the feeling of optimism and possibility at the end. I nodded enthusiastically. Yes, I said. It’s important to stay positive, because who does anything when they feel overwhelmed and depressed? Others in the group murmured their agreement. It’s up to all of us.

At that point, another gentleman jumped in with a torrent of sentences. They should have done a lot more about cars, America was built on the automobile and it was great, at least until unions ruined it. I blinked a few times, then buckled down to talk a bit with him about all that. Pretty soon I was on the history of transportation in the U.S. and he was on how everything comes down to no one disciplining their children anymore.

Twenty minutes or so later, I was not at all sure what was happening, but I knew it was not the positive, proactive conversation I’d been hoping for.

Then, another man got up to leave. He hadn’t said a word, but he stopped by my chair, looked me in the eye, and told me, “I really appreciate you doing this. I have to say, though, I think it’s too late. We don’t have a prayer.”

Stunned, confused, and frustrated, I turned to him and said, “All due respect and everything, sir? That is a cop-out.” His resigned expression didn’t change. He simply shrugged and walked out.

Another guy nodded in agreement with him. So did my union-busting, car-loving, red-blooded American debate partner. I could feel my color rising, so I wrapped things up, thanked everyone for coming, and bolted.

On the subway home, I broke down in tears. How can people be so closed-minded? I wrote wildly in my journal. So deaf to anything other than the sound of their own voices? How are we ever going to get anywhere?

And at that moment, the enormity of the situation rose up before me like a massive concrete wall, so high I couldn’t see the top, so smooth and monolithic I couldn’t see a way to climb it.

Now before you start wondering about my mental health, let me make sure I am clear on this: I am not kidding about what it says at the top of this web page. I am dedicated to this cause with every cell in my body and every thought in my head. This project—creating a context of possibility, encouraging everyone to take part, making responsibility the rule rather than the exception—is the purpose of my life. And it’s not like I think it’s going to be easy. I know the task before us is HUGE.

But we all live in the bubble of our own experience, and my experience is usually filled with people who think a lot like I do. Yours probably is, too. Birds of a feather and all that. Reaching out to a new flock is something most of us don’t do very often. I suppose I shouldn’t expect my first time to be perfect, but I was disappointed in myself all the same. Bitterly disappointed.

Talking with a friend later that night, I got a bit of perspective. Of course we’re going to run into obstacles! Of course people see things differently! That’s why this project is so important—because right now our differences are keeping us from actively working on solutions.

Another truth: these people had stayed at work for 2 hours past quitting time to watch and discuss a movie about the environment. It’s more than possible that the level of their cynicism is exactly equal to the level of their care. Transform that cynicism into action and half our battle is won.

And, finally, on a personal note, recognizing one’s own limitations is the first step in learning how to transcend them. To break through a wall, you kinda have to hit it first. Failure holds more lessons than success.

So, now, several days later, I can see the gifts in this breakdown. My less-than-stellar performance showed me that if I really want to fulfill my mission, I have to grow. We all do. If we want to create something new, we have to let go of what we think we know. That beautiful, elegant future we dream of? It lies outside the borders of the easy and the familiar. It is a brand new place whose gates won’t swing open to us until we learn to see and create in brand new ways.

The question is: Can we lay down everything we think we are sure of and travel to that unknown land together? Are we willing to try and fail and try again?

I am, and I hope you are, too. Stay tuned.


(image by Natasha Tylea via flickr)

Filed under • Books & FilmsCulture WarThe Sunny Way
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Megan DietzSee more articles by Megan Dietz.
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 on  05/07  at  08:48 AM

I think your friend hit the nail on the head about the level of their cynicism.  But I think there may be even more to it. 

Our society is so overly connected in a way that no other society ever has been that it is literally too much for people.  They have to learn to block things out and/or be apathetic to certain issues just to keep moving forward.  So we are all very practiced at that mental filtering that unconciously relagates this advertisment and that activists sign into our personal trash file. 

And much like the trash file on my pc, things tend to remain there never to be looked at again unless some problem causes you to start sorting through it all.  Once that belief that there is no hope becomes ingrained into those men’s subconcious mind’s, it will be hard to break through it (or some related belief that led to that one).  You were beating yourself up too much over what was probably a big learning experience for you.  And in the future you may very well do better with those two.

It is a huge challenge to all people who believe in something to either find the others that are open to hearing it or find the way to convince the rest to open up, which is a monumental task.  I can see it in my conservative friends if I start to talk about something they have relegated to there trash bin as a “hippie issue” their whole demeanor changes to show that they are thinking “hm, she seems so smart I had no idea she was a little crazy.” And the same with my liberal friends. “oh that Sheril. she is a great member of the coop, but she does have that unimaginable belief in God, you just have to ignore those ignorant unscholarly and backward tendencies.  The change in a person’s eyes, and really in their whole demeanor shows it when it happens.  One minute they are with you in a great conversation and the next they are far less receptive to any exchange of ideas.

I have to admit, I have yet to figure out what it takes to help others be open minded and to break through their preconcieved prejudices.  Although I have had a lot of ideas about it rolling around in my head for the last few months.  I’m thinking of trying to write an essay on the importance of sociology in our lives.

Megan Dietz  on  05/08  at  11:48 PM

Sheril,

Thank you for your insightful comment. I laughed a little when you talked about how your liberal friends think you are a Jesus nut and your conservative friends think you are a hippie. I get the same thing—my hippie friends think I’m awfully optimistic (when there’s not much reason to be) and the people I work with think I’m totally a hippie!

It’s interesting that, even though you and I think very differently about things, we end up in the same un-labelable place. I think that speaks to the fact that we are reaching for something new that doesn’t have a name yet.

Part of our challenge as part of this as-yet-unnamed movement is to learn how to communicate about it in such a way that we don’t get pigeonholed into categories that honestly don’t fit the reality of what we are pointing to, which is a new way of thinking that integrates the best ideas from conservatives, liberals, hippies, Christians, etc.

I know the look you are talking about when a person starts to think differently about you. I used to get it when I was a DJ on a college radio station that prided itself on being soooo much cooler than the mainstream. One minute we’d be talking about obscure bands and everything would be cool—the next I’d mention that I love Pearl Jam and I’d see their opinion of me dropping like a stone.

We have to find a way around this. The stakes are a lot higher than simply being uncool for liking commercially successful music.

The best idea I’ve heard so far is to just listen to what everyone has to say, and speak about one’s own ideas with respect and humility. Like I said in the first Culture War piece, no one group has a monopoly on the truth. What we do have is the ability to be with each other as human beings, to listen and learn and discuss and converse without rancor or resentment.

What do you think?

 on  05/09  at  09:25 AM

Megan,

I completely agree with what you’re saying about learning to discuss things without rancor.  It can be quite a challenge, but it should be do-able. 

BTW, very interesting about your dj job.  Do you listen to pandora.com?  I’ve kind of given up on radio in a way.  but I love being able to listen to music without commercials.  And Pandora is really the only site I’ve stuck with.  I get such awesome stuff out of it that I would have never been exposed to without their unique system of choosing what to play.

I’m one of those crazies that listens to about a million different genres of music.  I’ve probably given people one of those awful looks when they’ve said they only listen to pop, or only rock or whatever, that look that says, “really?!”

 on  05/09  at  09:36 AM

i love pandora, too! lately i’ve been getting into last.fm which is similar, but i think pandora is better. i like all kinds of music, too, from radiohead to beyonce to loretta lynn, as long as it sounds like there is a living breathing soul that made it with love.

 on  05/10  at  12:38 PM

Hi Megan,

Getting people’s negative responses is such a huge part of putting yourself out there.  How many times have congregates in a church or temp told the pastor/rabbi “God is dead”? but then turn around and start pray like wild fire when something bad happens.  Or how many times have constituents told their City Councilmember, “your wasting my time, the district’s money?” to then praise him/her as a “true leader who has helped my business in the district, by lowering taxes.”

Let’s just put it in the realm of several hundred trillion.  Anyway, I think it’s interesting what you said about the movie.  I don’t want to see it now.  Sorry you had to experience the negative side effects of reaching out, but most people don’t have the guts to be doing what your doing.

Finally, I bet for the first time that guy went home and said to himself, conscientiously, I better sort this stuff, “metal over here, plastic over here, oh, paper goes in this place...” Keep up the good work.

PS...here’s an excerpt from an engineering friend of mine:

I’m working on a really cool project I thought you’d be interested in…
We’re working with the St. Louis Zoo to see about turning all the animal
waste and trash from the zoo into ENERGY!  Pretty dang cool!  There is
this process which is so environmentally friendly, its pretty scarey.
It takes a large concentration of dry poop and trash to make this thing
work...so zoos are perfect...but it basically fires up all the waste and
generates electricity giving off only water and air, basically...and
some ash that can then be used to fill the beds or make roadways...Crazy
cool stuff.

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