Hubris Defanged 

A tiny iridescent fly 

lands before me 

on the green waxy leaf 

of my Mexican Orange shrub. 

Does she sense the chaos and poison 

of the human sullied world? 

Does the hearty Mexican Orange? 

We are all subject to  

the inescapable warming 

of our home, 

the growing scarcity of water, 

the countless toxins 

us humans have spewed upon 

every one of us. 

Are the foraging fly 

and her vibrant shrub host 

spared awareness of this crime? 

Is their ignorance excused 

by the innocence of just standing by? 

If so, it may be the closest they come 

to immunity. 

The fly, by its own nature, 

will die soon enough, 

but the eight foot, twenty-year-old shrub 

will likely face some ravages of our 

overstepping our ecological boundaries. 

And few, if any, will notice, 

or care. 

Until we humans get past 

the notion 

that this world was made for us, 

we will keep wreaking havoc 

on all our relatives, 

whether they discover the fix 

or not. 

Some are wiser than us, 

but not as scheming. 

The vainest and meanest among us 

conspire to hoard and rule 

and leave the rest of us to waste away. 

But some of us see 

the gifts and wisdom 

of our relatives – 

the empathy of elephants, 

the skill of beavers, 

the collaboration among ants, 

the nurturing of wolves, 

the creativity of the Bowerbird, 

the keen mind of the octopus. 

If we step out of the way 

and drop our weapons, 

the wiser ones may just 

lead us to care and sanity.  

About Michaela McCormick

Michaela McCormick is a white-bodied transgender activist currently working with Extinction Rebellion, and a Buddhist student/teacher drawing from many wisdom traditions. Her political/liberatory work includes teaching and organizing for the transformation of white supremacist, colonialist, patriarchal, earth-spoiling capitalism into just, compassionate, regenerative systems and relationships. For 25 years she worked as a teacher, trainer, and practitioner of conflict resolution and public dialogue. She has written two memoirs and now writes poetry and essays on social and spiritual themes.

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