I have no doubt that we all are toxic waste.
Is that mean that we all are victims of nuclear disasters in Soviet (today Ukrainian) Chernobyl or Japanese Fukushima-Daiichi? No. Today I want to stress that the whole Solar system, including Sun, Earth, and other planets, derives from the debris generated in many cosmic explosions in remote past time. I already wrote a post explaining why I am a star. While writing this text, I assured myself that I was, indeed, right. Why? Because we are made of practically the same things as stars (carbon, oxygen, iron, etc.). We are ashes of long-dead celestial bodies. We are made of millions died stars that existed before our Solar system appeared. Millions of nuclear fusions made us. Thus, I have no doubts that we all are toxic waste.Â
Is that mean that we should feel like misfits, bastards who should not exist in this world? I do not believe it.
For me, the closer to my heart is the theory that without us, without people experiencing everything that surrounds us, the Universe would not exist. Perhaps, we are not only a toxic waste but also a cosmic “seed.”Â
What kind of “seed?” What’s our purpose of being a “seed?”
Undoubtedly, you could ask me, my Dear Friend. Perhaps, our long-term purpose is to colonize other planets. In this case, Earth would be for humanity only a cradle. I did not invent this magical theory, but a Soviet scientist named Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky did it. No matter the purpose of our existence, I have no doubt that we all are cosmic dust, including toxic waste. The whole planet Earth, including everything that we processed, e.g., plastic, waste that creates pollution, all these things possess a cosmic particle. Still, we all should be responsible for all environmental issues that occur on our planet.Â