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Saturday 17 May 2014

'A wonderful thing happens when you give up on hope, which is that you realise you never needed it in the first place, you become very dangerous indeed to those in power'

A little advice from the columnist Oliver Burkeman to campaigners and activists:


Scratch the surface of our hope-fixated culture and you discover 

sometimes, giving up hope sets you free.

This column will change your life: the case against hope | Life and style | The Guardian 

Courtesy of the environmentalist and campaigner Derrick Jensen...

Beyond Hope

by Derrick Jensen

Published in the May/June 2006 issue of Orion magazine


Photograph by Stephen Wilkes

When we stop hoping for external assistance, when we stop hoping that the awful situation we’re in will somehow resolve itself, when we stop hoping the situation will somehow not get worse, then we are finally free—truly free—to honestly start working to resolve it. I would say that when hope dies, action begins.

Another question people sometimes ask me is, “If things are so bad, why don’t you just party?” Well, the first answer is that I don’t really like to party. The second is that I’m already having a great deal of fun. I love my life. I love life. This is true for most activists I know. We are doing what we love, fighting for what (and whom) we love.

I have no patience for those who use our desperate situation as an excuse for inaction. I’ve learned that if you deprive most of these people of that particular excuse they just find another, then another, then another. The use of this excuse to justify inaction—the use of any excuse to justify inaction—reveals nothing more nor less than an incapacity to love.

A WONDERFUL THING happens when you give up on hope, which is that you realize you never needed it in the first place. You realize that giving up on hope didn’t kill you. It didn’t even make you less effective. In fact it made you more effective, because you ceased relying on someone or something else to solve your problems—you ceased hoping your problems would somehow get solved through the magical assistance of God, the Great Mother, the Sierra Club, valiant tree-sitters, brave salmon, or even the Earth itself—and you just began doing whatever it takes to solve those problems yourself.

And when you quit relying on hope, and instead begin to protect the people, things, and places you love, you become very dangerous indeed to those in power.

In case you’re wondering, that’s a very good thing.


Beyond Hope | Derrick Jensen | Derrick Jensen | Orion Magazine

See also...

Endgame is interspersed with what he describes as the inherent unsustainability of civilization. 
In this book he asks: "Do you believe that this culture will undergo a voluntary transformation to a sane and sustainable way of living?" Nearly everyone he talks to says No. 
His next question is: "How would this understanding — that this culture will not voluntarily stop destroying the natural world, eliminating indigenous cultures, exploiting the poor, and killing those who resist — shift our strategy and tactics? The answer? Nobody knows, because we never talk about it: we’re too busy pretending the culture will undergo a magical transformation." Endgame, he says, is "about that shift in strategy, and in tactics."[14]

Derrick Jensen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Endgame (Derrick Jensen books) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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