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This
past summer, I, along
with everyone else in
Tucson, watched with
dismay and helplessness
as the Aspen Fire scorched
the
top of our mountain – Mt.
Lemon. Though not the first,
this was by far the worst
forest fire we had witnessed
on our dear mountain.
An entire town, not to
mention hundreds
of years of growth, was
burned to the ground.
It burned for weeks.
During the day, the smoke
filled the town, and
at night, the fire line
stretched
across the northern sky.
To me, it was like having
one of my organs being
slowly taken from my body.
As horrific and awesome
as it was, it was just
another of the countless
acts of nature.
Like
floods, tidal waves, hurricanes, tornados, volcanic eruptions, and
earthquakes, the
Aspen Fire was just another natural disaster – and
actually, it was not nearly as devastating as other disasters have been.
On several occasions, I have been able to look at the aftermath of a
disaster, but this was different because I watched it from a distance
every day for the weeks that it burned.
As
horrible as disasters may be, they are also positive. Creating havoc,
loss and devastation on one
hand, the disaster also prompts rebirth,
change, improvement, renewal on the other. (Many years ago, while going
through a personal tragedy, I was told that good things come out of
tragedies. For me this turned out to be true, because my tragedy forced
me to confront
difficult issues, and to actively decide to rise above them. In the
process, I re-evaluated my life and I moved forward as a wiser and
stronger person.)
True, everyone doesn’t emerge from tragedies or disasters. Those
that do emerge are not only lucky to have survived, but richer from
the experience.
For
me, the Aspen Fire and
its lessons, demonstrates
the cyclic interweaving
of good and bad, beginning
and end, and life and
death, and it is dramatic
reminder of triviality
of the individual in
the larger scheme of
things.
My
desire is to use my art
to embody
the forces of nature – complete
with the drama, irony
and complexity.
– 11/15/2003
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