The power of water is the power of blood, flood and drought. Water keeps
it real, keeps us real. Forgetting this, we turn the earth into a toxic
dump. Remembering this, we unfurl the future as perpetual possibility.
Water is also the strength of subtlety, quietly making its way through
your body. perpetual is both a gift and a warning from water. Through
drawings and graphic essays by artist Cindy Mochizuki and writer Rita
Wong, the book visits some key sites where people have sabotaged
themselves by desecrating water: the Pacific Ocean, the tar sands
leaking into the Athabasca River, the historical salmon streams buried
in sewers under Vancouver's streets, pressing to be daylighted...
perpetual draws strength from the rivers that still flow wild, like
the Fraser River, and from friendships made along the way in journeys
with and for water. The book is a response to Dorothy Christian's call
to protect sacred waters. Humble and holy, water shows us a way to make
peace and ethics, if we have the heart and spirit to learn.