Can’t you hear the whumpfing?

Can’t you hear the whumpfing?

September 5, 2021 12 By Yve Harrold

Warning. I feel angry today. Some days, I don’t want to be here. I don’t mean not alive versus dead, here. I mean, here, in the midst of suffering, violence, addiction, poverty, disease, hatred, ignorance, natural disasters. The here that we find ourselves in on this planet. I am angry about it. I understand that each of us can play our own small part in making our world a better place to be. I will always believe that, preach it, and do it. But in truth, there are days when I feal weary. And I want to run away.

I have learned in my professional education on change management that, generally speaking, humans get more stressed by changes that occur in their personal lives than large scale, global events.

This is because on a day-to-day basis, things happening outside of our local purview, don’t generally require us to respond. Therefore, they don’t take up as much space in our thoughts, so to speak. One of the ways I interpret this is that we can bury our head in the sand. We can live in denial. We can say, well it’s not my problem. But in my opinion, right now, there are a lot of humans who should be and need to be putting in a little more effort.

I learned a new word in an avalanche awareness class last year. Whumpf. This word has been adopted as a technical avalanche term describing the sound of a collapsing snowpack. For example, “we got a lot of whumpfing today,” or, “the snowpack whumpfed like rolling thunder just before it caught us.” Avalanche.org describes it as “the sound of nature screaming in your ear that the snowpack is unstable.”

The teacher in my class described it as not only a sound, but a feeling, a knowing of pending doom.

I have to say, there is an awful lot of whumpfing going on right now, and it has nothing to do with snow. The ethereal side of my being tells me, stay calm. We are all living out our destiny. So on the whole, the haters, the dumb assess, the spoilers of the planet, they are on their path, just like me. But when my brain takes over, I feel angry and helpless, and I don’t accept that suffering caused specifically by the actions of others is in any way acceptable. I want to grab the collective by the shoulders. Shake them. Tell them to just stop. Can’t you hear the whumpfing?

That’s what makes me want to run.  I do know, however, if I am going to be part of the solution that I need to find my own balance. First take care of myself, in other words, ensure that my own actions cause minimal or no harm to others and the planet. Second, help to educate. Third, take time to retreat so that ultimately, I have more to give.

Reading this beautiful poem by Wendall Berry was enough to help me take a deep breath today, and find a better way to handle this anger. It showed itself to me at a really good time. And, you know I believe that if we pay attention, we get what we need when we need it.

The Peace of Wild Things

When despair for the world grows in me

and I wake in the night at the least sound

in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,

I go and lie down where the wood drake

rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.

I come into the peace of wild things

who do not tax their lives with forethought

of grief. I come into the presence of still water.

And I feel above me the day-blind stars

waiting with their light. For a time

I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

So when I feel like running, I will continue to find what I need in the peace of wild things. Such a beautiful description of where I would like us all to be. But, if we can’t be there everyday, remember this equally profound description of whumpf – the sound of nature screaming in your ear, and let’s try so much harder to be better and do better by the world and those who occupy our planet.