Absolutely, Otterly, Not: This Weeks Proof There May Still Be Hope For Humanity After All
Giant otters, snowy owls, hammerhead sharks, and the stubborn human beings still trying to keep this world alive.
There is something so moving about the fact that even now, even with so many loud and ridiculous men mistaking cruelty for strength, there are still people all over the world spending their days trying to protect a giant otter.
Not just the giant otter, obviously, though I do think any civilization willing to throw elbows for a giant otter has not completely lost its soul. Last week, at a United Nations summit on migratory species, countries agreed to new or upgraded international protections for dozens of animals, including the giant otter, the snowy owl, and the great hammerhead shark. On paper it sounds like the kind of thing that gets filed under diplomacy and promptly ignored by people who think the only important stories are the ones involving power, money, and some jackass in a suit. But it is a real story, and a beautiful one. Human beings got in a room together and said, in effect, these creatures matter, their lives matter, the living world is not ours to bulldoze just because we are in a bad mood and have opposable thumbs.
And the animals themselves are so wonderfully, improbably themselves. The giant otter is not just cute, though let us not undersell the cuteness because it is considerable. It is a top predator in freshwater ecosystems, which means it helps keep rivers in balance, and it only really thrives where the water is still clean and alive enough to support a whole web of life. In other words, if you still have giant otters, the river has not given up yet. Also, I say this with love and scientific respect, but they do have the vibe of a six-foot water ferret who knows the gossip, a blessed design, with no notes.
Then there is the snowy owl, all white fire and silence, like winter itself grew wings and decided to watch us from a fence post. It belongs to the tundra and the open Arctic and those spare, shining places that still make human beings look appropriately small. And the great hammerhead, which sounds like something a child would invent and then draw with way too much enthusiasm, moves through the sea with that ancient, improbable elegance apex predators have, helping keep marine ecosystems in balance simply by continuing to exist in all their weird majesty. Rivers need their otters. The tundra needs its owls. The ocean needs its sharks. The world is richer and stranger and more stable when these animals are in it doing exactly what they were made to do.
That is what gets me. For every chest-thumping fool trying to turn the whole planet into a strip mine with branding, there are still other people choosing something else. They are doing the patient, unglamorous, quietly heroic work of protection. They are studying migration routes and drafting agreements and fighting over legal language and refusing to let another species slip silently off the edge of the earth if they can help it. They are, in the least flashy and most meaningful possible way, choosing life.
Maybe that is what hope for humanity actually looks like now. Not innocence, because that ship sailed a while ago. Not some big cinematic redemption arc. Just this stubborn insistence that the world is still full of lives besides ours, and those lives are not disposable. A giant otter sliding through a river like a wet little miracle. A snowy owl crossing the long cold light. A hammerhead turning through blue water like a thought too old and beautiful for us to deserve. And somewhere, in conference halls and field stations and conservation groups and governments, people still fighting for them.
There is something almost holy in that, I think. Not that humanity is always good, because Lord knows we are capable of some deeply embarrassing nonsense, but that we keep producing people who are willing to stand between the living world and the worst impulses of our own species and say, gently but firmly, absolutely otterly not.
And maybe that is enough for this Sunday. Not proof that everything will be fine. Just proof that the story is not over yet. Proof that there are still people fighting for the rivers and the tundra and the sea, still people choosing wonder over domination, still people trying, however imperfectly, to protect the fragile, astonishing web of life that holds all of us. Which, in a week like this one, feels like hope.




Thanks Shanley! You do me a world of good every time I partake of another uplifting message from you! It's great to know where I can go nowadays to find your stories of hope.
I loved this - a perfect antidote for the unhinged post this morning from you-know-who. Thank you, Shanley!