Monday, February 19, 2018

The Edge of Entropy ...


Camping in the Colorado Rockies we had a little disaster. One of our small personal inflatable mattresses sprung a leak. After one night of sleeping on the cold dank ground I had an idea. There were some large patches of moss spread along the river bank we were following and I moved the tent over to where part of the tent covered some moss. The others used the remaining air pads while I slept in the corner where the moss was. I was fine. It was warm and soft, which is odd because it was literally growing on a large flat crumbling plate of rock. I felt a little bad afterwards because I’d flattened the patch where I slept, but it looked like it would rebound. The decent night’s sleep helped me stave off the ever-creeping altitude sickness and the always present headache mitigated only by drinking ridiculous parcels of water.

That moss, growing on a sliding schist, drawing from a mineral detritus, siphoning elements, spinning them in a symbiotic concert designed ... to keep the moss alive …

Why?

Natural selection … this moss surviving where other less magnificently adapted mosses may have failed …

But the elements themselves, moving from scattered decay to an orchestra of chemical symmetry in the breath of life that occurs somewhere between the stone and the nimble rhizoid fingers leaching on its edges. It defies entropy, it defies physics, it uses the decay.

Why would life fly in the face of the physical confines of this universe?
Because, obviously, as is the case with the moss ... it is designed to.