Heading Toward the Dystopic Future of Heart Wood

I take no pleasure in watching the future world unfolding – the future I described in my eco-novel Heart Wood. My aim was to show through storytelling that what we do and what we don’t do matters to the future. I described the actions and attitudes of my ancestors (1800s) and today’s generation (early 2020s), and how we are collectively creating a future world that my imaginary great-granddaughter Amisha must live in (2075-2090).

I’m often asked about the future parts, “How did you know? It’s so unsettling!” I can only say I picked out threads of what I saw today and projected them into the future…asking what would life be like if this continues?

Are you ready to explore with me? I’ve selected six main themes from Heart Wood and contrasted our present world with Amisha’s future in 2075-2090.

 Future: a miniscule bio-electronic Nib is implanted behind all baby’s ears at birth. These directly input information and directions into the brain, eventually overriding much of the person’s thinking. In addition to tracking a person’s location, Nibs also monitor their physical and emotional health, and when it detects an imbalance, automatically delivers “rebalancing” medications from the person’s “Medpak” implanted into their belly. Later in Heart Wood, Nibs subtly begin to deteriorate, giving erroneous information as if it were real.

Present: Where to start? Siri, Alexa? GPS directions? Smart watches? Fitness Trackers? These are part of our mainstream world now. AI wasn’t mainstream when I wrote Heart Wood in the early 2020s, but we’re getting closer to having an AI device implanted (for our benefit and convenience, of course).

Billionaire businessman Elon Musk has developed the NeuroLink in which fine electronic threads have been inserted into the brain of at least seven men with spinal cord injuries, enabling them to move a computer mouse with their minds. Yes! Check it out here.

In 2025, RFK Jr. – current US Secretary of Health and Human Services – is touting wearable electronics, such as watches, bands, rings, patches, and clothes, to monitor our vital health signs, with the data stored in the “cloud.” Current medical treatment includes inserting miniscule Nanobots into the body for diagnosis, treatment, drug delivery, and surgery. https://relevant.software/blog/nanobots-in-medicine/

While most of these health advances are originally designed for a specific medical benefit, they set up a prototype for a future widespread Nib-like implant.

2.  GARBAGE

Future: Garbage is illegal. There is no “away” for throwing things away. New items must be created from material that already exists, which is why there is a fight between the U.S. and China for ownership of the floating garbage island in the Pacific.

Diver in the Pacific Ocean Plastic Garbage Island

Present: How often have you tossed away single-use containers? I know I have, even knowing they’re filling up our landfills and oceans with garbage that’s mostly plastic. Currently, garbage must be separated and put into recycling bins, where some will actually be recycled. Organizations such as Californians Against Waste  are fighting for legislation that eliminates excess packaging, reduces food waste, promotes the right to repair small appliances/electronics, and promotes effective recycling systems.

3.  PLASTICS

Future: “Plastix” is made from recycled plastics and is used to formulate everything imaginable: shoes, furniture, cars, etc. But people also know how deadly plastic is, as in the scene when a young girl gives birth to a baby born with a reproductive system abnormality:

“But we did right” said the curly-headed grandmother, hugging her daughter tighter. “My daughter never touched plastic in her life!”

“You can’t avoid it,” Amisha said. “Plastic deteriorates so small it floats everywhere, from high in the stratosphere to miles deep on the ocean floor.”

Present: Research is finding plastic nanoparticles not only in the stratosphere and deep ocean, but in breast milk, human tissue  and baby poop . A new disease, “Plasticosis” is identified in seabirds that also impacts humans.  Plastic contains hormone-disrupters that confuses the body’s hormone regulation and reproduction systems. Researchers are investigating the connection between low level exposure to hormone disruptors and gender dysphorias.  

4.  FERTILITY

Future: It has become very difficult to conceive, and viable births are a rarity. Amisha’s group created a “Fertility Room.” When a female is ovulating, she allows multiple males to inseminate her in the hopes of increasing the odds that one of the few viable sperm will fertilize her one egg.

Present: Sperm count and human fertility are decreasing. IVF -In Vetro Fertilization centers have proliferated to help couples increase their odds of becoming pregnant. Of course, now, IVF has become politicized, making it more even difficult for couples to conceive.

5. FOOD INTOLERANCES

Future: Due to long term environmental contamination and genetic manipulation of food ingredients, human babies are increasingly unable to process food to support their growth. However, the Pharma industry has found an answer to the problems they originally created, with “PharmFood,” colorful packages designed for specific food intolerances. Food as we know it has become a rarity.

Present: I walk down the grocery aisles and notice large sections set aside for specific health and dietary issues, gluten-free being the most predominant. Package covers tout everything this food is not: “No gluten, no lactose/dairy, no GMOs, no animal products, no tree nuts, no pesticides, no BHT, no artificial colors or flavors, no high-fructose corn syrup, etc. Wow! I can imagine my great-grandmother wondering why in the world anyone would put those things into food in the first place?

6.  WEATHER

Future: California is mostly burned over from massive fires. Rivers hold meager amounts of water, but small pockets of green survive in the foothills. Sea level is rising into the first floors of San Francisco’s Financial District, and Golden Gate Park is now a refuge for Pacific Islanders who lost their islands to the rising sea.

In Heart Wood, Amisha has hitched a ride into the foothills with Charlie, a blind man with a mule and wagon, in search of her family’s old homestead.

Amisha held a small mouthful of water against her sticky dry gums before swallowing. She took another swig and returned the canister to its hiding place. “What's up there?” she asked, pointing to the hint of peaks in the distance.                                                                                          “You're asking ‘bout the hills? Not much,” Charlie replied.                                                           “People?”                                                                                                                                             “They've come and gone, mostly farther north.”                                                                        “Oregon?”                                                                                                                               “Farther. Canada’s still deciding its immigration policy.”                                                                        “They say fires took out most of the foothills. Anything survived?”                                                             “A structure here and there.”                                                                                                                “Trees? People?”                                                                                                                                      “Can't say,” Charlie climbed back into the wagon.                                                                                   “Why are you going up there?” Amisha asked                                                                                        “Can't say that either.”  

I was surprised when I re-read the part about Canada deciding its immigration policy toward US citizens. It seemed far-fetched when I wrote it. Little did I know it could become a political reality!

Present: Forest fires used to be a danger mainly for those living in a forest. Mountain folk learned to have “Go-Bags” ready for a quick evacuation. Now, even those who live in cities are concerned about major fire conflagrations. Fires are larger, fiercer, and create un-precedented destruction.

Homes along coastlines are literally losing ground, as the sea encroaches into lowland communities. Hurricanes and storm damage are more intense. Flash floods, landsides, ice storms all demonstrate water’s increasingly destructive power.

Insurance companies, strained by increasing claims from all the chaotic climate-induced fire, water, and wind disasters, are cancelling home insurance policies. And still, current conservative politicians who refuse to see these massive weather events related to man’s actions on the planet, cancel programs that would have given us hope for either halting or reversing climate-induced damage.

Is there hope?

I often hear two main comments from readers: “This is the most depressing book ever!” and “This is the most satisfying ending I’ve ever read in a dystopian book.”

Future: Yes, Amisha’s future world is depressing, but that’s the point. She is a victim of the world we are creating for her. She survives because she has created a small community that lives with what they have, eats less, and grows or forages for their drought-tolerant food. They learn to listen to and let the earth speak first. Eventually her group will connect with other small groups and share what works. Life is certainly not easy by our standards, but it will be possible for some to survive and, for even fewer, to procreate.

Present: I see the writing on the wall, often feeling helpless because it’s such a huge problem. I do the easy things, of course, like recycle, reuse containers, shop locally (including farmers), turn off lights, shop for previously-used things. On a larger scale, there are (still) so many groups working to educate the population and pressure politicians to “think and act green.” It’s harder than ever to make progress in today’s political climate, but do it anyway. Support these groups however you can. And talk about it!

Group Discussions: One of my favorite parts in talking with Book Clubs about Heart Wood are the thought-provoking discussions: “We see this coming, but what can we do?”  I don’t have answers, but we can collectively ask the right questions.

Heart Wood, Four Women, for the Earth, for the Future can be purchased at your local, independent bookstore (they can easily order it for you!) Or online. If you would like a signed copy directly from the author, contact me at heartwoodnovel@gmail.com.

Elon Musk’s Neurolink: Harbinger of the “Nib”?

Elon Musk has bold visions for the future of humanity. His inventions include the Tesla electric car, Space X Starship, and Starlink– space-based internet. But when he unveiled the latest developments of his Neuralink – a wireless implant into the brain that could someday let human brains directly interface with digital devices, my skin crawled with goosebumps.

Elon Musk describes his “Neuralink” brain implant

I went back to my early 2016 drafts of Heart Wood – to Amisha’s future world (2070-2090) in which everyone has a “Nib” implanted at birth behind their ear– a miniscule micro-chip that eliminates all need for external electronic devices. It would be like having a continual “Siri,” “Alexa,” or “Google” active in your head, clouding or overriding your personal thoughts, providing you with information and giving directions in anticipation of what you might or should want. With less need for other humans, eye contact and physical touch would wither from disuse.

Amisha was a young child when she was retrofitted with the new, mandatory Nib…

“Amisha hardly remembered the time of silence, before her parents took her to the tall building, the line of other little children, the sharp stab in her neck, the prickles that grew behind her ear beneath her skin, and the new voice she began to hear.” (Heart Wood)

I pondered what to call my imaginary implant. “Chip” was too predictable. My friend Mark Jokerst helped me come up with the word “Nib” (Neural Implant Bot Sensor).  I like that “Nib” also had a brief appearance in the late 1800s as the nib of Eliza’s fountain pen – both communication devices, two centuries apart.

Musk describes his Neuralink as like a Fit Bit in the skull with tiny wires that connect the brain to computers/phone via Bluetooth. To insert, an advanced robot surgically implants the Neuralink (0.9” wide/0.3” tall) and its 1,024 miniscule electrodes into the brain matter. Its battery life lasts all day; you charge it at night. Like your Tesla.

“Amisha nodded to the rain pelting the bedroom window and, with a right-flick of her eyes, queried her Nib: Didn’t it already rain twice this year? Last rain: April 14, 2075. Four point six inches of precip in one hour temporarily raised the Bay five inches. Seawall was moved back two feet. Your closest umbrella stand is corner of Grove and . . . Amisha halted her Nib feed with a left-flick of her eyes.”

 Musk is serious about his invention, predicting it will enable people with spinal cord injuries to control their prosthetic limbs. He goes on to say that future applications will cure blindness, seizures, depression, and other mental health conditions. Eventually, he speculates, you’ll be able to record, replay, and upload your memories. Neuralink may one day upload and download thoughts. People with implants would be capable of telepathy—not just sending and receiving words, but actual concepts and images. “The future’s going to be weird,” Musk said.

“Menting” in Heart Wood is a version of telepathy. Like mental texting.

“Orion!” she called from the bathroom. Of course, he was still gaming. She sent him a mental message but got no response to her ment. Breathe in . . . out . . . in . . . out. She left Orion an urgent ment to contact her. –I.P. hours in thirty minutes, reminded her Nib. A pedi.cab is passing in eight minutes. Amisha dropped a handful of general purpose Pharm.food packages into her aquamarine crocheted bag for her midday food, then checked her route for shootings and outbursts and decided it was safe enough to walk. She needed to clear her head from last night’s dream.”

How close is the Neuralink to reality? With great fanfare, Musk held press conferences on August 28, 2020 to show off the Neuralink implanted into normal-acting pigs, and on April 12, 2021, showing a monkey playing video games with its Neuralink-enhanced brain.  Links to these are below.

As new technologies like Neuralink infuse into our future, I see bioethical red flags being raised regarding privacy invasion, consent, and misapplication by military, political, commercial, and government interests.

But I have an additional concern: that something essential to being human will be lost.

As Amisha grew up, she modified her Nib’s voice:

” …first upgraded as girlfriend Talia, then briefly Jordan, until she got tired of hearing a man’s voice. Eventually she installed a nameless voice, programmed to be both competent and comforting to her. Over the last few months, however, she had detected something new, a murmur so faint she thought at first it was static from her Nib. Now and then, a word would break through, then just as quickly be covered over by a wave of Nib drivel. Something was weaving through her dreams at night like a root tip seeking water, seeking her. She’d wake up shivering.”

It’s our inner voice that we stand to lose – the source of intuition, nudges, insights, and the unique expression of our spirit.

Technology will integrate deeper into our daily lives: A.I. leads us to our destinations, Google searches distract us down rabbit holes, podcasts fill our quiet moments, and every click adds to our profile. These probably won’t change. For me, the question is how do we keep our inner voice alive and vibrant?   

I wrote Heart Wood in part as a reminder that beneath all the technology, we have our unique, still, small, voice. The small oak desk is a metaphor for what connects us to a deeper, more universal, earth-based wisdom.  We can ignore it or pile our “stuff” on top of it, but when we finally sit quietly with no distractions, our inner voice can be heard.

I feel this is one of the most important things we can share with our children: to make time every day for the bliss of boredom. Just sit quietly, perhaps out in nature. Notice what you see and hear around you. Maybe close your eyes. And as Shima’a said to the future…

Listen to the Silence

Heart Wood – Four Women, for the Earth, for the Future

Winner of the National Indie Excellence Awards for Visionary Fiction.

2021 Finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award’s Montaigne Medal for the most thought-provoking books that either illuminate, progress, or redirect thought.

Finalist – Self Publishing Review and RECOMMENDED by the US Review of Books

Purchase Heart Wood at your local bookstore (support independent bookstores!), here on Amazon, and in Nevada County, California, at JJ Jacksons, Reflections Skin Oasis, SPD, and of course, Harmony Books and The Book Seller.

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To read more about Elon Musk’s NEURALINK: