Divine Surrender – Telegram
Divine Surrender
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Spiritual channel with content relating to crystals, nature, health, humor, and esoteric things.
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"On December 10, 1997, Julia Butterfly Hill climbed 180 feet up a 1,000-year-old California redwood tree named Luna. She stayed there for 738 days—over two years—living on a tiny platform through winter storms, isolation, and constant threats. Her goal: prevent the Pacific Lumber Company from cutting Luna down. She won. Luna still stands today.

The redwood forests of Northern California were disappearing.

Ancient trees—some over 1,000 years old, standing since before Columbus reached America—were being cut down for timber. Clear-cutting was destroying entire ecosystems.
Environmental activists were trying to stop it, but the logging companies had money, legal rights, and political support.
Then a 23-year-old woman named Julia Butterfly Hill decided to do something radical: she climbed a tree and refused to come down.
The tree was a coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) in Humboldt County, California. Activists had named it "Luna."
Luna was ancient—estimated to be between 600 and 1,500 years old, with 1,000 years as the most common estimate. It stood approximately 180 feet tall with a diameter of about 10 feet.
Pacific Lumber Company owned the land and planned to log it. Luna was marked for cutting.
On December 10, 1997, Julia Butterfly Hill climbed Luna and established a small platform about 180 feet up in the tree's canopy.
She planned to stay until Pacific Lumber agreed not to cut down Luna.
Nobody—including Julia herself—imagined she'd be up there for more than two years.
Living in a tree sounds romantic until you consider the reality:
Julia lived on two small platforms—each about 6 feet by 6 feet. One for sleeping, one for supplies. That was her entire world.
She had no running water, no bathroom, no shelter from weather beyond a tarp. She used buckets that were hauled up and down by rope.
Northern California winters are cold and wet. Storms battered the tree with winds exceeding 90 mph. The tree would sway violently—up to 40 feet in any direction. She had to strap herself to branches to avoid being thrown off.
She was completely exposed to the elements—rain, wind, cold, occasional snow.
In summer, the heat was intense with no shade beyond the tree's own canopy.
She was isolated—alone with her thoughts for days at a time, though supporters would climb up occasionally to bring supplies and provide company.
And she was constantly under threat. Pacific Lumber wanted her gone. Security guards tried to prevent supplies from reaching her. Helicopters would fly close, trying to intimidate her with noise and wind.
At one point, loggers cut down trees around Luna, creating a barren landscape—a psychological tactic to break her spirit.
But Julia stayed.
She communicated with the outside world through a solar-powered cell phone and later through radio interviews. She became a media phenomenon—the woman living in a tree to save it.
Her message was simple: these ancient trees are irreplaceable. Once cut, they're gone forever. The short-term profit from logging doesn't justify destroying 1,000-year-old ecosystems.
She spoke about Luna not as property but as a living being deserving protection. She talked about the broader environmental consequences of clear-cutting—habitat destruction, soil erosion, loss of biodiversity.
Her tree-sit gained national and international attention. Supporters sent letters and donations. Media coverage intensified pressure on Pacific Lumber.
But the company refused to negotiate. They insisted on their legal right to log their land.
The standoff continued. Days became weeks, weeks became months, months became years.
Julia celebrated two birthdays in Luna. She endured two winters. She watched seasons change from 180 feet up.
She later described moments of profound connection with the tree and the forest—understanding their rhythms, their resilience, their ancient patience.
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But she also struggled with isolation, physical discomfort, and the psychological toll of such an extreme protest.
Finally, in December 1999, after 738 days—more than two years—Pacific Lumber agreed to negotiate.
On December 18, 1999, Julia descended from Luna.
The agreement: Pacific Lumber would permanently preserve Luna and a 3-acre buffer zone around it (approximately 200-foot radius). The company received a $50,000 payment (donated by supporters) as compensation.
Luna was saved.
When Julia's feet touched the ground after 738 days, she could barely walk. Her body had adjusted to constant swaying—on solid ground, she felt dizzy and unbalanced.
But she'd won. One person, one tree, 738 days of determination—and an ancient redwood was permanently protected.
Julia Butterfly Hill's tree-sit became one of the most famous acts of environmental activism in modern history.
It demonstrated the power of nonviolent direct action. She didn't destroy property or harm anyone. She simply refused to move—putting her body between a tree and destruction.
Her action inspired environmental movements worldwide. It showed that individuals could make a difference against powerful corporations.
Luna still stands today—over 25 years since Julia climbed it. The tree survived the logging era, and its protected buffer zone remains intact.
Luna itself has faced challenges—in 2000, someone vandalized the tree with a chainsaw, cutting through about half its diameter. But the tree survived, reinforced with steel cables, and continues growing.
Julia Butterfly Hill went on to become a prominent environmental activist, author, and speaker. She's written books, given talks worldwide, and continued advocating for environmental protection.
But nothing she's done since has matched the symbolic power of those 738 days in Luna.
Because Julia proved something fundamental: sometimes saving the world requires one person willing to take an extraordinary stand.
December 10, 1997: Julia Butterfly Hill climbed a 180-foot redwood tree.
December 18, 1999: She came down—738 days later—having saved Luna and inspired millions.
One person. One tree. 738 days.
Luna still stands—a living monument to what's possible when someone refuses to give up."
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