#106: Destruction & Resurrection

The developers in my town have torn down a strip of my childhood, the trees have been killed, as have the animals who called their canopies home. I reflect on this strange world we find ourselves inhabiting, where the natural is disregarded, plundered, exploited, and razed — and the artificial is worshipped, protected, and forever exalted.

Alexander Lopez
6 min readApr 13, 2024
John Constable’s “The Hay Wain”

When I was a child, I was particularly enchanted, and in quick succession horrified, by a VHS tape I found at my grandmother Gwendolyn’s home, containing a film you might recall, titled FernGully.

FernGully told the story of a group of peaceful tree dwellers — mythical faeries — exuberant beings, who existed in harmony, free of industry, noise, and pollution— until evil arrived in the form of capitalism and forced deforestation and death upon them.

The businessmen, gruff, unfeeling beings — or perhaps beings who had lost touch with the empathy with which I believe we are all born — saw in that beautiful oasis only the potential for personal gain and decided to destroy everything that lived among those trees in the pursuit of profit. It is no wonder I grew into such an ardent…

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Alexander Lopez

Hi y'all! Happy to be here! My name is Alex. I am a writer & content creator. BA from Dartmouth and MFA from NCSU. Also @alexlopezwrites (44K) on TikTok