My friend Probyn Gregory has been writing about his nervousness being near the fires in LA.
Probably a lot of people have.
I assume it helps people dissipate stress, or to feel less alone.
Fortunes might change on a dime, so perhaps some want to leave a realtime record of what's going on, just in case they suddenly blink out of existence.
Some are poised to run, and want to leave hints about where they might be found in case they are delayed or blocked from their chosen destination.
Some probably want to communicate the urgency of dealing with Climate by personalizing the risk. It's too easy to think this happens only to other people. Within the US, it's often portrayed as something affecting only far away countries.
Today Probyn wrote:
“We may not live in Altadena but our lives are enmeshed in it. I see people just a mile or two away driving in rush hour presumably to work and it seems positively surreal, this facsimile of normal juxtaposed with what I feel inside, this aching sadness and not-quite-coming-to-grips.”
—Probyn Gregory on Facebook (Jan 12, 2025)
I think this is a metaphor for our nation.
And the world.
It's not just our neighbors' world that is on the brink of collapse. We live in that same world.
Individually, some of us get it. But, collectively, as a society, we're still not quite coming to grips with how serious this is.
Time to wake up.
Author's Notes:
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The image was generated at abacus.ai using Claude Sonnet 3.5 and FLUX 1.1 [pro] Ultra. The initial request was for “a generic part of downtown Los Angeles, looking down a street that divides the image into two parts. on the right hand side, show ordinary buildings and people casually moving among them, cars parked, cars driving normally, business as usual. On the right side, show parked fire engines, buildings in flames, a world in collapse.” Some post-processing was done both by the LLM and by me using GIMP.