get wild

Chapter 26514 wordsCompleted

On a balcony the narrator watches a tropical storm roll in: the night sky fills with frantic lightning, birds flee, and an eerie silence precedes a deep exhalation of the earth. Magnolias and murraya release their waxy scent as barometric pressure drops, and the first rain drops fall. Thunder erupts, heavy rain pours, and fierce winds rip roofs from houses. The next morning she shuts the windows, watches the aftermath—trees strewn on the beach, roofs torn off—and reflects on a summer marked by record heat, an 800‑year drought, and bushfires that pushed air‑quality to 26 times hazardous levels, equating to smoking a pack of cigarettes daily. She notes how the world views her country as a portent, but she sees nature as “royally pissed off.” Citing economist Rob Watson, she frames Mother Nature as chemistry, biology, and physics gone out of whack, describing the breakdown of ecological equilibrium. She invokes Timothy Morton’s “hyperobjects” to illustrate the overwhelming scale of climate crisis, and argues that the Anthropocene has forced recognition that humans are inseparable from nature—our waste returns to us, “biting us in the arse.” Concluding, she calls for a radical alignment with nature: to become “wholly wild” and abandon the comfortable, profitable, and safe, embracing ignorance of former teachings and a notorious, reckless identity as prescribed by a Rumi quote.