Earth Day is Thursday,
April 22. This will be, I believe, the 40th anniversary of the original Earth
Day, which was held in 1970.
We seem to go through
cycles when it comes to being environmentally friendly to our planet.
The hippies and counter
culture brought this to the fore way back in 1970, and those hippies have all
grown up now, but a new generation is bringing what is now called
"greening" to our attention today.
The premise is the same
today as it was 40 years ago: we have only one planet, let's not ruin it any
further than we already have. Let's be environmentally conscious of what we are
doing, and for those tasks that are not earth friendly, let's change them to
make them so.
It's a good idea, but to
put it into practice is not as easy. Even on the personal front, it takes a
long time to unlearn learned behavior. If you have thrown little pieces of
garbage out the window of your car since day one--such as gum wrappers, used
cigarettes, etc.--it is hard to learn to throw those away in the proper
receptacle.
It is also hard to learn to
keep your bottles and cans so that you can turn them into your local
supermarket for recycling, and the same thing goes for old newspapers.
I remember the first Earth
Day, not because it sparked my interest in preserving the environment, but
because of what myself and a friend of mine did that day.
I believe the first Earth
Day was on a Saturday, or at least we had off on the first Earth Day (maybe it
was the Easter break or something like that). I was 13, still living in Queens,
it was right before my birthday and bar mitzvah, and my friend and I took the
bus into downtown Jamaica, which was a bustling retail area then.
He had heard about an
"underground" bookstore--you know, the ones that sold books about pot
and had lots of nudie magazines, as well as X-rated comic books--and since we
were both into comics, this store had old ones we could buy.
So we trekked into Jamaica,
went to the bookstore (I don't remember the name), and looked around amongst
potheads, hippies, and other curious people.
It was an eye-opener. I saw
my first Fritz the Cat comic book, and even though I didn't buy it, it was a
revelation--not every book had Superman in it, and not every woman in the comic
books felt the need to have clothes on.
Oh well, it is a childhood
memory I still cherish.
But funny, most of the
people who would frequent such a store were probably into ecology, spearheading
this movement way back when.
Now, those people are at
least in their early 60s, if they survived that time. I wonder if they are
still into ecology, or if they have left the movement to their children and
grandchildren.
And what did I buy that
day? I don't remember, but the memory of the day has far outlived the need for
me to remember what I bought from that store.
Have a happy Earth Day!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.