Looking down
Was it Arthur C. Clarke
who called Earth a pale blue dot?
Isaac Asimov?
Carl Sagan?
I think it was Carl Sagan.
Did all of them think it and just one of them said it first?
Whoever said it was right.
Up here in the starship
looking down,
it’s becoming clearer and clearer
to me that while Earth might have
at one time
been that pale blue dot,
it isn’t any longer.
From way up here,
floating in an organic metal ship,
the Earth looks like a caricature of itself.
Some funhouse mirror reflection
of what it once was,
at one time whole and beautiful,
supporting
those who lived
in harmony with their surroundings.
I remember those years ago when the ship
first came and
the Travellers
first picked me up,
they were curious about humans.
They wondered why
we did all the things we did.
I told them—
like I am some kind of expert—
that we mostly had no clue
what we were doing.
Some of us try
to live the right way,
the slow way,
the long way,
the way that lets as much flourish at the same time as possible;
at the same time,
there is the threat of being
crushed
under the boot heels
of those who want everything
now,
who want everything
their way,
who want to build an altar upon which they can
sacrifice everything
to themselves.
The Travellers asked me what I thought
sacrifice meant
and I told them
I thought it meant to give things up for the greater good
and they told me
I was close.
The Travellers told me
sacrifice means to take something mundane
and to
put our energy into it and doing so makes it sacred.
They told me
what they saw
was human sacrifice
to gods of our own creation.
The Travellers told me
they’d been watching humans
for years—
THEIR concept of years—
and found all kinds of people believed
all kinds of wild ideas,
but no one wanted to
really believe something that isn’t their god
could be looking back down
and judging them.