Taste
the ash, see our pink
sun: Sydney's dead future is
here
SMH,
10
December, 2019
I
can’t breathe. They say something like 100 bush and grass fires are
raging across the state. The city I live in feels like a scene from
Blade Runner 2049 come to life in 2019. There is no other way to see
it: our dead future is here.
The
mornings are smoky and grey. The afternoons distinctly eerie with the
sun a shrunken disc that is by turns eggishly sick, bright pink, or
burning orange in the seemingly permanent haze.
My
eyes water. My breathing is shallow. My throat trickles with foreign
matter. On my back verandah, the washing machine and wooden shelves
are covered in a gritty film of ash. I see what I am breathing in.
Like tea leaves left in a cup predicting bad things.
Last
week, I struggled so badly for air I had to leave work early and
drive back home 10 minutes away. Yes, I am mildly asthmatic. Yes, I
am vulnerable to air pollution. But this was different to anything
I’ve experienced before.
I
felt frightened for what was happening as I gripped the wheel. The
struggle to get oxygen into my body. The growing tightness. I
recognised my system was constricting and closing down. It came to me
that I was being buried alive. And that I am not the only one. All of
us slowly smothered.
When
I got inside I lay on my bed in the cool dark. All the doors and
windows shut. I began to feel better. But it took me most of the
afternoon to recover. And something else occupied me. A kind of
anxiety and dread. A profound feeling of futility and depression.
Through
my window, I watched the outlines of a tree like some undersea
creature swimming in the silver wind. Its clumps of leaves and
branches move this way and that, communicating a message to me that
speaks of something gone deeply wrong with the world.
This
week temperatures are soaring again. Friends say the fires will burn
for weeks, maybe months. It’s likely there will be no rain till the
end of January. On social media, everybody keeps taking pictures of
the sky and the sun. Someone writes a note: “How long before the
birds start dropping from the sky?”
Pollution
levels are rising to 22 times the accepted safety levels. Driving
over the Bridge, the great cloud that occupies my city reminds me of
past visits to Tehran and Beijing. I associate the pollution with
something totalitarian I can’t put my finger on, a form of
oppression manifest in nature.
It
is as if the smoke and ash is going so deep into our lungs it is
entering our bloodstream and our consciousness. In the final week of
our national parliament there was no word about climate change,
little sense of much that is urgent, just platitudes and worries and
scandal.
My
experience of the city and its skies feels like an omen. I fret for
my children getting home from school and the world that is coming for
them. Towards the back of my head, right at the base where my neck
joins it, a dull cloud sits in my mind and I struggle to think
straight in this atmosphere that has become a part of me. I’m tight
and tense, and I register that I am becoming desperate and have no
voice that matters. I can barely call out for help as I suffocate
spiritually as well as physically. A state of emergency has settled
in around us all. I can taste the ash. I can see the pink sun.
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