A lot has been written about mental illness. Chapter 21 is written by someone who knows the subject well. The author's mother and younger brother were schizophrenic. My father, older brother, sister, and I had bipolar disorder. I've spent a lot of time visiting people in psych wards. I spent two very unpleasant weeks in one myself. As you read what follows, be assured that this is how it actually works.
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I remember the moment I cracked.
Someone who knew I like science handed me a copy of the Sept. 8, 2019 issue of
New Yorker
magazine. I don't read that magazine regularly, but I knew it printed pretty good stuff. When I was a college freshman, one of my English professors regularly had us read reprints of articles from the
New Yorker
.
This particular article was called
What If We Stop Pretending
? It was written by Jonathan Franzen, who is best known as a bestselling novelist. But Franzen has an interesting background. Before Franzen discovered he could make millions writing fiction, he was an accomplished earth scientist who published dozens of respected articles in major scientific journals. He spent most of his career working at a research facility operated by . . . wait for it . . . Harvard.
As an earth scientist, Franzen developed a sophisticated understanding of environmental problems, especially global warming. He became particularly passionate about bird watching; if you've ever known any birders, you probably know it's like a religious cult that worships all things feathered. Franzen became frustrated with the way scientists communicate news about global warming. Franzen wrote that people are pretending something significant can be done to reduce global warming, when that is clearly untrue.
There is no chance humanity can avert a climate apocalypse. No matter what happens, global warming will cause floods, fires, famine, mass extinction, and the ultimate death of most (if not all) of the human race. The story is over. A disaster is inevitable. Nothing can stop the ice caps from melting; even if we stopped pumping greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere tomorrow, we've already released enough to guarantee that low lying areas around the world will be underwater in fairly short order. Most of humanity lives in low lying cities. Most large cities are on land that will be underwater in a surprisingly short time.
It is theoretically possible for humanity to mount a massive effort that would prevent the disaster from becoming a catastrophe, but any sensible person who looks at what is going on knows nothing like that has any chance of happening.
In short, Franzen wrote, humanity is well and truly fucked. We should have started working on global warming 50 years ago, when we became sure it was happening. Instead, we dump more greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere every year. It's almost as though we are racing to see how quickly we can kill the earth. Why do we keep pretending there's any chance of fixing any of it? Most leaders just don't care about things that will happen after they retire.
I'd been vaguely aware of this for years, but I'd never known the level of detail and certainty revealed by Franzen. In truth, I'd already figured that the environment is doomed anyway because humanity is not capable of working together on a goal that doesn't primarily focus on generating money. It hadn't been necessary for me to know the equations. Still, I'd gone about my life without thinking much about something I couldn't control. Then I read Franzen's article. I got interested in finding out how other experts responded to Franzen, and it told me a lot.
The basic response was that Franzen was doing a Bad Thing by telling the truth. It was important that the public remain ignorant of the extent of the problem. If people know how bad things are, they'll just give up. Giving up seems like a sensible response, in my opinion, but many disagree. I found it telling that the biggest complaint about
What If We Stop Pretending?
was that it did too much to tell the truth. Yikes!
For some reason, this particular bit of information hit me at a particularly sensitive time. The foundation was growing into a national charity, with offices located in most major metropolitan areas. Our annual report looked like something put out by a premier charity, with a lot of pie charts, bar charts and text boxes that combined to tell a story of staggering success. Victoria was traveling constantly, and
Time
magazine listed her as one of the 10 most important Americans under the age of 30. I hadn't expected Victoria to become such a celebrity, but it made sense. She was young, beautiful, brilliant, and powerful. There was objective evidence that she was one of the finest CEO's in America. You're probably thinking the credit went to the sonic stimulator, but that wasn't true. I was able to give Victoria an opportunity to excel, and she'd used that opportunity to reach the pinnacle of success. People all over the world - especially women - loved Victoria and cheered her success. There was no one anywhere who wouldn't take her call.
On one level, it was amazing. I'd wanted to help individual women, and I was exceeding every goal I'd ever made. I wanted to make my own life better, and that had happened in spectacular ways I hadn't imagined when this began.
But I happen to be someone with "quantitative skills." I got straight A's in my calculus classes. Most people who looked at the Gaia Foundation saw a big success, and in many ways that's just what it was. When viewed against the backdrop of everything else happening around the world, it was trivial. I was trying to bail out the ocean with a teacup.
I went a little crazy. More than a little. I stopped sleeping much, and I started having very strange thoughts. When this happens to celebrities, they check themselves into posh facilities that specialize in the treatment of "nervous exhaustion," which is a euphemism for things like bipolar mania. That's what I had. Everyone in my life was concerned.
I came home one night and found Mary, Victoria, Mariana and Alana ready to stage an intervention. They started giving me that whole spiel that starts with the phrase "I've seen your behavior change in the following ways" and I immediately called it off. "You ladies are preaching to the choir. You don't have to convince me I'm losing my mind. I lost it some time ago. I've been looking, and I can't find it anywhere."