Anger, Frustration, Sadness

Here’s the toughest part about trying to create a completely sustainable environment in an urban setting: I have neighbors on all four sides of me, and not all of them think the way I do. My neighbor directly to the west of me has caused me the most grief. For a while there we maintained a civil neighborly relationship. We borrowed things from each other. We talked over the fence. We even drank beer together on occasion. But from the outset there were signs that our connection would not grow any deeper.
We simply don’t see the world in the same way. First, he dropped off a container of toxic chemicals on my front porch and suggested I nuke my backyard with it in to get rid of the mosquitoes that plagued us last summer. Then he asked to borrow a piece of particle board to use as a backstop so that he could shoot the opossum that lives in our neighborhood. But the last straw came the night he laughed at me for believing in global warming. I fled his house in horror, but he wouldn’t let it go, emailing me the following morning. “If you have any facts to backup [sic] your ridiculous position, I’m all ears. I know you haven’t a clue, so I’ll respect that and leave it where it is. And now I’ll leave you with a simple thought… the polar ice caps on Mars are melting at the same rate as on earth, yet no CO2 emissions, SUV’s, evil rich, or coal-fired power plants exist on that planet. Ask one of your egghead experts about that one.”
Curious to discover what the hell he was talking about, I researched the matter and found that he was quoting from a story in National Geographic about Habibullo Abdussamatov, head of space research at St. Petersburg’s Pulkovo Astronomical Observatory in Russia, who attributed the simultaneous warming of Earth and Mars to changes in the sun’s heat output. What my neighbor didn’t mention was that Abdussamatov’s radical theory was quickly refuted by every leading climate scientist in the world, including Colin Wilson, a planetary physicist at England’s Oxford University. “His views are completely at odds with the mainstream scientific opinion,” Wilson said. “And they contradict the extensive evidence presented in the most recent IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] report.” I didn’t speak to this neighbor for six months.
We have since reestablished a neighborly relationship, but every time I smile at him across the fence it’s through clenched teeth. We not only see the world differently, evidently we speak different languages too. Last week, he told me he wanted to chop down a tree that was on his property but hung between our houses. His reasoning was that the opossum used the tree to climb on to his roof. I told him I didn’t think he should do it, that I wasn’t an advocate of cutting down any trees, and certainly not one as beautiful as this one. It was a Texas redbud, which sports beautiful pink flowers each spring. I used to enjoy staring at it from my kitchen window, but I won’t be doing that any longer. Yesterday at 6:30 in the morning, my neighbor destroyed it with a chain saw.
Tags: global warming, neighbor, oppossum, redbud
July 7th, 2008 at 11:14 am
Oh that really is sad. Sorry you have to look at that poor tree now
July 7th, 2008 at 2:52 pm
Maybe it’s time for you to move the idea for your free-range possum farm in the backyard up your priority list.
July 7th, 2008 at 6:54 pm
on the other hand, he is doing his part to “keep austin weird.”
July 9th, 2008 at 1:08 pm
I can’t stop myself: And this is the same guy who has to walk his motorcycle across the corner of your lawn, preventing you from putting up the post/fence deals I suggested like Jenny’s? I agree with Trip’s suggestion.