The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Amateur Cloud Society That (Sort Of) Rattled the Scientific Community’
Episode Date: January 24, 2021The cultural history of clouds seemed to be shaped by amateurs — the likes of Luke Howard and the Honorable Ralph Abercromby — each of whom projected the ethos of his particular era onto those bil...lowing blank slates in the troposphere. Gavin Pretor-Pinney was our era’s.On today’s Sunday Read, the story of the Cloud Appreciation Society and how Mr. Pretor-Pinney, backed by good will, challenged the cloud authorities.This story was written by Jon Mooallem and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publishers like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, my name is John Mualem. I'm a writer-at-large for the New York Times Magazine, and in 2016,
I wrote a piece for the magazine about clouds. Yeah, it's a story about clouds. It doesn't
sound very important, and I get that at this exact moment in history. You may not think
you need to stop everything and sit down and listen to someone telling a story about clouds.
So I get that, but the clouds are actually kind of incidental.
And that sense of triviality, that dismissiveness you might be feeling right now,
is actually an important part of the whole thing.
There's one person at the center of the story.
His name is Gavin Preder-Pinney.
Gavin was living in London in 2003 when, on a whim,
he decided to leave his job and move to
Rome for a while. And when he got there, he looked up at the sky and he saw something unusual.
It was blue. There weren't any clouds. And he realized that he missed the clouds that he used
to see in London. And he had an idea. He started something called the Cloud Appreciation Society,
which was an online community where people all around the world who
loved clouds could look at pictures of clouds, post pictures of clouds, talk about clouds.
It was a ridiculous idea, and he never mistook it for a serious idea or an important idea,
but he committed to following it wherever it was going to lead him with complete earnestness
and passion. And now the Cloud Appreciation Society has over 50,000 members.
And together, those amateur cloud appreciators
have actually helped to rewrite a small part of science's understanding of clouds.
But even that scientific accomplishment is sort of incidental.
Because I think you'll see what the story is really about is these people.
And the way all of us just seem to need to find some kind of beauty or awe or delight in the world
and the lengths we'll go to find it and the way we come together in the process. And the thing is,
I'd argue that indulging in trivial or meaningless seeming things sometimes is actually a pretty
important part of being a human being. It's not the most
important part, but it's there. And as I found writing this story about clouds, it's actually
a really powerful engine to bring people together. So I hope you'll enjoy my story,
The Amateur Cloud Society That Sort of Rattled the Scientific Community. Read by Eduardo Ballarini.
Gavin Peter Penny decided to take a sabbatical.
It was the summer of 2003,
and for the last ten years, as a sideline to his graphic design business in London,
he and a friend had been running a magazine called The Idler.
The Idler was devoted to the literature for loafers.
It argued against busyness and careerism and for the ineffable value of aimlessness,
of letting the imagination quietly coast.
Peter Penny anticipated all the jokes.
That he'd burned out, running a magazine devoted
to doing nothing, and so on. But it was true. Getting the magazine out was taxing, and after
a decade, it seemed appropriate to stop for a while and live without a plan, to be an idler
himself, and shake free space for fresh ideas. So he swapped his flat in London for one in Rome,
for fresh ideas.
So he swapped his flat in London for one in Rome,
where everything would be new
and anything could happen.
Peter Penny is 47,
towering and warm,
with a sandy beard
and pale blue eyes.
His face is often totally lit up,
as if he's being told a story
and can feel some terrific surprise coming.
He stayed in Rome for seven months
and loved it,
especially all the religious art.
One thing he noticed, the paintings and frescoes he encountered were crowded with clouds.
They were everywhere, he told me recently, these voluptuous clouds, like the sofas of the saints.
But outside, when Peter Penny looked up, the real Roman sky was usually devoid of clouds.
He wasn't accustomed to such endless blue
emptiness. He was an Englishman.
He was accustomed to clouds.
He remembered as a child being enchanted
by them, and deciding that people
must climb long ladders to harvest
cotton from them. Now,
in Rome, he couldn't stop thinking
about clouds.
I found myself missing them, he told me. Clouds.
It was a bizarre preoccupation, perhaps even a frivolous one, but he didn't resist it. He went
with it, as he often does, despite not having a specific goal or even a general direction in mind.
He likes to see where things go. When Praetor Penny returned to London,
he talked about clouds constantly. He walked around admiring them, learned their scientific
names and the meteorological conditions that shaped them, and argued with friends who complained
they were oppressive or drab. He was realizing, as he later put it, that clouds are not something
to moan about. They are, in fact, the most dynamic, evocative, and poetic aspect of nature.
Slowing down to appreciate clouds enriched his life,
and sharpened his ability to appreciate other pockets of beauty hiding in plain sight.
At the same time, Peter Pinney couldn't help noting
we were entering an era in which miraculousness was losing its meaning.
Novel, purportedly amazing things ricocheted around the internet so quickly that, as he put it,
we can now all walk around with an attitude like, well, I've just seen a panda doing something
unusual online. What's going to amaze me now? His fascination with clouds was teaching him that
it's much better
for our souls to realize
we can be amazed
and delighted
by what's around us.
At the end of 2004,
a friend invited
Peter Pinney
to give a talk about clouds
at a small literary festival
in Cornwall.
The previous year,
there were more speakers
than attendees,
so Peter Pinney
wanted an alluring title for his talk,
To Draw a Crowd.
Wouldn't it be funny, he thought,
to have a society that defends clouds against the bad rap they get,
that stands up for clouds?
So he called it
The Inaugural Lecture of the Cloud Appreciation Society.
And it worked.
Standing room only.
Afterward, people came up to him
and asked for more information
about the Cloud Appreciation Society.
They wanted to join the society.
And I had to tell them,
well, I haven't really got a society,
Peter Pinney said.
He set up a website.
It was simple.
There was a gallery
for posting photographs of clouds,
a membership form,
and a florid manifesto.
We believe that clouds are unjustly maligned,
and that life would be immeasurably poorer without them, it began.
Peter Pinney wasn't offering members of his new cloud appreciation society any perks or activities,
but to keep it all from feeling ephemeral or imaginary,
as many things on the internet do,
he eventually decided that membership should cost $15,
and that members would receive a badge and certificate in the mail.
He recognized that joining an online cloud appreciation society that only nominally existed might appear ridiculous,
but it was important to him that it not feel meaningless.
Within a couple of months, the society had 2,000 paying members.
Peter Penny was surprised and ecstatic.
Then Yahoo placed the Cloud Appreciation Society first on its 2005 list of Britain's weird
and wonderful websites.
People kept clicking on that clickbait, which wasn't necessarily surprising, but thousands
of them also clicked through to
Peter Pinney's own website, then paid for memberships. Other news sites noticed. They did
their own articles about the Cloud Appreciation Society, and people followed the links in those
articles too. Previously, Peter Pinney proposed writing a book about clouds and was rejected by
28 editors. Now he was a viral sensation with a vibrant online constituency.
He got a deal to write a book about clouds.
The writing process was agonizing.
On top of not actually being a writer, he was a brutal perfectionist.
But The Cloud Spotter's Guide, published in 2006, was full of glee and wonder.
Prater-Penney relays, for example, the story of the United States Marine pilot
who in 1959 ejected from his fighter jet over Virginia
and during the 40 minutes it took him to reach the ground
was blown up and down through a cumulonimbus cloud about as high as Mount Everest.
He surveys clouds in art history and romantic poetry
and compares one
exceptionally majestic formation in Australia to Cher in the brass armor bikini and gold Viking
helmet outfit she wore on the sleeve of her 1979 album Take Me Home. In the middle of the book,
there's a cloud quiz. Question number five asks of a particular photograph,
What is it that's so pleasing about this layer of stratocumulus?
The answer Peter Penny supplies is,
It is pleasing for whatever reason you find it to be.
The book became a bestseller.
There were more write-ups, more clicks, more Cloud Appreciation Society members.
And that cycle would keep repeating sporadically for years,
whenever an editor or blogger happened to discover the Society and set it off again.
There are now more than 40,000 paid members.
The media tended to present it as one more amusing curiosity, worth delighting over and
sharing before moving on.
That is, Peter Pinney's organization was being tossed like a pebble,
again and again, into the same bottomless pool of interchangeable online content
that he was trying to coax people away from by lifting their gaze skyward.
But that was okay with him.
He understood that it's just how the internet works.
He wasn't cynical about it, and he didn't feel his message was being cheapened
either. It felt as if he were observing the whole thing from afar, and he tried to appreciate it.
Then Peter Penny noticed something odd. The way I felt when I first saw it was
Armageddon, Jane Wiggins said. Wiggins was a paralegal working in downtown Cedar Rapids, Iowa in June 2006
when she looked out her office window and saw an impenetrable shroud of dark clouds looming over town.
Everyone in the office stood up, Wiggins told me, and some drifted to the window.
The cloud was so enormous, so terrible and strange, that it made the evening news.
Wiggins, who had recently taken up photography, took out her camera.
Soon after that, Wiggins discovered the Cloud Appreciation Society website
and posted one of her pictures in its gallery.
But the anomaly Wiggins thought she had captured wasn't actually anomalous.
Similar photos turned up in the Cloud Appreciation Society's gallery from Texas,
Norway,
Ontario,
Scotland,
France,
and Massachusetts.
Peter Penny assumed
that this phenomenon
was so rare that,
until now,
no one had recognized it
as a repeating form
and given it a name.
As the hub of this network,
a network of people
who are sky-aware,
he said,
it's easier to spot patterns
that, perhaps, weren't so easy to spot in the past. In fact, many aspects of meteorology already
rely on a global network of individual weather observers to identify cloud types with the naked
eye, filing them into a long-established scientific framework. Not just as cumulus, cirrus, stratus, or cumulonimbus clouds,
as schoolchildren learn,
but with a recondite system
for describing variations.
Atypical clouds are either fitted
into that existing map of the sky
or set aside as irrelevant.
Peter Penny liked classifying
clouds using these names.
He was thankful to have
that structure in place.
And yet, it seemed a shame
to repress the glaring,
deviant beauty recorded
in Wiggin's photograph
by assigning it a name
that didn't sufficiently
describe it.
He supposed if you had to,
you could call this thing
an Angelatus,
the standard classification
for a broad, wavy cloud.
But that seemed to be
selling the cloud
tragically short,
stubbornly ignoring
what made
it so sublime. This was Angelatus turned up to eleven, he said. So he came up with his own name
for the cloud, Asperatus. The word Asperatus came from a passage in Virgil describing a roughened
sea. Peter Penny had asked his cousin, a high school Latin teacher, for help. He wondered how to go about making such a name official.
In 2008, while shooting a documentary for the BBC about clouds,
Peter Penny pitched his new cloud to a panel of four meteorologists at the Royal Meteorological Society.
The scientists sat in a line behind a table.
Peter Penny stood, holding blown-up photos of Asperatus for them to consider.
It was a lot like the X-Factor, he said, referring to the TV talent show.
The scientists were encouraging but diplomatic. A new cloud name, they explained, could be
designated only by the World Meteorological Organization, an agency within the United
Nations based in Geneva, which has published scientific names and descriptions of all known cloud types
in its International Cloud Atlas since 1896.
The WMO is exceptionally discerning.
For starters, Peter Pinney was told,
he would need more carefully catalogued incidences of these clouds,
as well as a scientific understanding of their surrounding synoptic situation.
The process would take years. And even then, the chances of inclusion in the Atlas were slim.
The WMO hadn't added a new cloud type to the International Cloud Atlas since 1953.
We don't expect to see new cloud types popping up every week,
a WMO official named Roger Atkinson told me.
When I asked why, Atkinson said, because 50 or 60 years ago we got it right.
A cloud is only water, but arranged like no other water on Earth. Billions of minuscule droplets
are packed into every cubic foot of cloud, throwing reflected light off their
disordered surfaces in all directions, collectively making the cloud opaque. In a way, each cloud is
an illusion, a conspiracy of liquid masquerading as a floating solid object. But for most of human
history, what a cloud was physically hardly mattered. Instead, we understood clouds as psychic refuges from the mundane,
brist for our imaginations, feelings fodder. Clouds both influenced our emotions and hung
above us like washed-out mirrors reflecting them. The English painter John Constable called the sky
the chief organ of sentiment in his landscapes. And our instinct as children to recognize shapes in the clouds
is arguably one early spark of all the higher forms of creative thinking
that make us human and make us fun.
Frankly, a person too dull to look up at the sky and see a parade of tortoises
or a huge pair of mittens or a ghost holding a samurai sword
is not a person worth lying in a meadow with.
In Hamlet, Polonius' despicable spinelessness
is never clearer than when Hamlet gets him
to enthusiastically agree
that a particular cloud looks like a camel.
Then not a camel at all, but a weasel.
Then not a weasel, but a whale.
Polonius will see whatever Hamlet wants him to.
He is a man completely without his own vision.
We look for meaning, portents, in the clouds as well,
the more grown-up version of picking out puffy animals.
There's a long history of people finding signs in the sky,
Peter Pinner told me,
from Constantine seeing the cross over the Milvian Bridge
to the often belligerent protesters
outside Peter Pinney's talks who are convinced that the contrails behind commercial airplanes
are evidence of a toxic, secret government scheme, and are outraged that Peter Pinney,
the righteous Lorax of clouds, refuses to expose it. In short, clouds exist in a realm where the physical and metaphysical touch.
We look up for answers, Peter Pinney says, and yet we often don't want empirical answers.
There's always been a romantic impulse to protect clouds from our own stubbornly rational intellects,
to keep knowledge from trampling their magic.
Thoreau preferred to understand clouds as something that stirs my blood,
makes my thought flow,
and not as a mass of water.
What sort of science, he wrote,
is that which enriches the understanding
but robs the imagination?
The scientific study of clouds
grew out of a collection
of madly appreciating amateurs
who struggled with this same tension. The field's foundational treatise was first presented to a small scientific debating
society in London one evening in 1802 by a shy Quaker pharmacist named Luke Howard. Howard,
then thirty, was not a professional meteorologist, but a devoted cloud spotter with a perceptive, if wandering, mind.
His interest in clouds started early. His biographer, Richard Hamblin, explains that
as a young student in Oxfordshire, Howard seems to have found school magnificently boring. He
couldn't bring himself to pay attention, except to his Latin teacher, who punished daydreaming
with beatings. Today, Howard might covertly pull out his phone
and read a link a friend shared about,
say, an eccentric society in England
that appreciates clouds.
But poor Howard's boredom was analog.
All he could do was look out the classroom window
at the actual clouds rolling by.
Howard's intention that night in London
was to bring clouds down to Earth
without depleting their loftiness.
After years of closely observing clouds,
his appreciation of them
had hardened into analysis.
He now insisted that,
though clouds may appear
to be blown around
in random, ever-changing shapes,
they actually take consistent forms,
forms that can be distinguished
from one another
and whose changes correspond to changes in the atmosphere.
Clouds can be used to read what Howard called
the countenance of the sky.
They are an expression of its moods,
not just in a poetic way, as Constable meant,
but meteorologically.
Howard's lecture was eventually published as
On the Modifications of Clouds and
on the Principles of their Production, Suspension, and Destruction. It stands as the Urtext of
Nephology, the branch of meteorology devoted to clouds. Howard divided clouds into three major
types, and many intermittent varieties of each, all similarly affixed with Latin names or compounds.
He had learned his Latin well. Like Linnaeus, who used Latin to sort the fluidity of life into
genera and species, Howard used his new cloud taxonomy to wrest our understanding of the world's
diversity from superstition and religion. His signature assertion that the sky, too, belongs to the landscape can be read as a
call for empiricism, a conviction that science can, in fact, measure out the mystical.
Nearly a century later, Howard's work would be picked up by another energetic amateur,
the Honorable Ralph Abercrombie. Abercrombie was the bookish great-grandson of a celebrated English war hero.
He was apparently so meek and frail, never robust even as a boy, one tribute read after his death,
that he was forced to drop out of school and was rarely able to hold a job.
He served briefly in the military, but seemed completely unsuited to soldiering.
Deployed to Newfoundland in 1864, Abercrombie began theorizing about how the fog there was produced. Later stationed in Montreal, he scrutinized the wind. It would have been
tempting for his superiors to label him absent-minded or unfocused, but in retrospect,
it was just another case of a young man intensely focused on something few people considered worthy of attention.
Another case of a young man in love with clouds. In 1885, Abercrombie took his first round-the-world voyage. He was a civilian again, and his private physician hoped the sea air would restore his
pitiable health. But he worked slavishly the whole time, keeping a meticulous weather diary,
But he worked slavishly the whole time, keeping a meticulous weather diary,
photographing the clouds at sea.
He published many scientific papers and a book about the clouds and weather that he encountered.
And he kept traveling.
Scandinavia and Russia, Asia and the United States,
compelled, as he wrote, to continue the observation and photography of cloud forms in different countries.
Looking up, Abercrombie came to realize that clouds looked essentially the same everywhere.
Colonialism was sending goods, resources, and culture around the planet.
Suddenly, it must have seemed obvious that we also shared the same sky.
Abercrombie's primary interest was in refining the science of weather tracking and forecasting, and he knew that meteorologists everywhere would need a standard
way to discuss and share their observations. Eventually, collaborating with a Swedish cloud
scientist named Hugo Hildebrandt Hildebransen, he convened a cloud committee to hammer out
Hildebransen's meticulous nomenclature of clouds.
They declared 1896 the International Year of the Cloud.
By year's end, the committee produced the first international cloud atlas.
The atlas is now in its seventh edition,
and its meticulous taxonomy provides for ten genera of clouds,
fourteen species, nine varieties,
and dozens of accessory clouds
and supplementary features.
The atlas also establishes
a grammar with which
these terms can be combined
to allow for the instability
of clouds,
the way they morph
from one form into another,
or to describe
their general altitude.
A cumulus, for example,
might just be a cumulus,
or it might be a cumulus fractus,
if its edges are tattered, or a cumulus pileus, if a smaller cloud appears over it like a hood.
An alto cumulus lenticularis, meanwhile, is a vast, tightly bunched flock of clouds stretching
across the sky at altitudes from 6,500 to 23,000 feet. Of course, not everything in the sky needs to be
precisely described. As a reference book for meteorologists, the Atlas has been concerned
only with clouds that have operational significance, that reliably reveal something
about atmospheric conditions. As far as other clouds go, says Roger Atkinson of the WMO, one person might look at a
cloud and say, it's wonderful, it looks like an elephant, and someone else might think, it's a
camel. But the WMO doesn't particularly care. It does not see its mission as settling disagreements
about elephants and camels. Soon after Peter Pinney appeared on the BBC,
championing his asperatus clouds,
the media seized on the possibility, however remote, that the WMO would add Asperatus to
its atlas. Suddenly there were stories about the Cloud Appreciation Society all over the place,
all over again. This time Peter Pinney, previously cast as a charming English eccentric with a funny
website, was presented as the crus English eccentric with a funny website,
was presented as the crusading figurehead of a populist meteorological revolt.
Trader Pinney had initially turned defeatist after shooting the documentary and never bothered reaching out to the WMO.
The bureaucracy seemed too formidable.
Now he didn't quite know what to say.
When reporters called, he suggested they contact the WMO,
impishly channeling them as de facto lobbyists.
Then in 2014, the WMO announced it was preparing the first new edition of the Cloud Atlas in nearly 40 years.
The agency felt pressure to finally digitize the book,
to reassert its authority over the many reckless
cloud reference materials proliferating online. One of the WMO's first steps was to convene an
international task team to consider additions to the Atlas. Most public interest, a news release
noted, has focused on a proposal by the Cloud Appreciation Society to recognize the so-called
Asperatus. The task team would report to the so-called Asperatus.
The task team would report to a so-called Commission for Instruments and Methods of Observation.
Last summer,
the Commission recommended to the World Meteorological
Organization's 17th
World Meteorological Congress in Geneva
that the cloud be included.
Everyone seemed confident
that the recommendation would soon be ratified
by the WMO's executive council.
Except, the new cloud wasn't Asperatus anymore.
It was now Asperitas.
The task team had demoted it from a cloud variety, as Peter Pinney had proposed, to a supplementary feature.
And the elaborate naming convention for clouds required supplementary features to be named
with Latin nouns, not adjectives. One of those things that's so close but different,
Peter Pinney told me, with a tinge of amusement and resentment.
When I spoke to Roger Atkinson of the WMO, he stressed that Asperitas would merely be a fourth-order classification,
not a primary genus,
not one of the primary cloud types,
not one of the big nine.
Neither was it
the only new classification
the task team recommended adding.
It was just the most famous one.
The prominence of the cloud
seems to have forced
the scientist's hand.
Asperitas didn't appear
to have any operational significance,
but the public enthusiasm Peter Pinney had gathered around the cloud
ultimately made Asperitas too prominent to ignore.
One task team member, George Anderson,
told me that not giving such a well-known cloud a definitive name
would only create more confusion.
Peter Pinney conceded all this happily.
My argument is not
that this is some hugely significant thing,
he told me.
By now he was mostly using the cloud to make a point,
to needle the human
vanity inherent in the Victorian
urge to classify things,
to put them into pigeonholes, and give
them scientific names.
Clouds, he added, are ephemeral, ever-changing, phenomenal.
Here you have a discrete, scientific, analytic urge
laid onto the embodiment of chaos,
onto these formations within these unbounded pockets of our atmosphere,
where there's no beginning and no edge.
All he wanted was to encourage people to look at the sky,
to elevate our perception of clouds as beautiful for their own sake.
Slowly over the last 200 years, the impulse of cloud lovers like Howard and Abercrombie
to make the mystical empirical had ossified into something
stringent and reductive.
Praetor Penny wanted to clear a little more space in our collective cloudscape for less
distinct feelings of delight and wonder.
His championing of Asperatus was, in reality, somewhat arbitrary.
There were a few other unnamed cloud forms he saw repeating in the Society's photo gallery.
He just happened to pick this one.
The cultural history of clouds seemed to be shaped by a procession of amateurs,
each of whom projected the ethos of his particular era onto those billowing blank slates in the troposphere.
Peter Pinney's was our eras, I realized.
The Internet eras.
He wasn't just challenging the cloud authorities with his crowdsourced cloud.
He was trolling them.
I was one of the many reporters who contacted Peter Pinney
when the first photos of Asperitas made the rounds in 2009.
I'd seen an Associated Press article with Jane Wiggins' photo of the cloud in Iowa
and a reference to Peter Pinney
and his Cloud Appreciation Society
and felt a kind of instant
and exhilarated envy.
Apparently, some people
cultivated a meaningful connection
to what I'd only ever regarded
as vaporous arrangements
of nothingness.
I wanted in.
Also, I was impressed
that these enthusiasts
seemed to be rattling
the self-serious strictures
of the scientific establishment.
And so it was disappointing to realize, in those early days as I checked back with him periodically,
that nothing was really happening yet, and that no one seemed particularly rattled.
Traitor Penny even sounded slightly exhausted by Asperitas.
It's the zombie news story that will never die, he said.
He was by then closing in
on his tenth year
as head of the Cloud Appreciation Society.
And as he'd done after ten years
with the Idler magazine,
he was questioning his commitment to it.
Somehow, being a cloud impresario
had swallowed an enormous amount of time.
He was lecturing about clouds around the world,
sharing stages at corporate conferences and idea festivals
with Snoop Dogg and Bill Clinton,
and appearing monthly on the Weather Channel.
Then there was the Cloud Appreciation Society's online store,
a curated collection of society-branded merchandise
and cloud-themed home goods,
which turned out to be surprisingly demanding,
particularly in the frenzied weeks before Christmas.
The Cloud Appreciation Society
was basically just Peter Penny and his wife Liz,
plus a friend who oversaw the shop part-time
and a retired steel worker
he brought on to moderate the photo gallery.
It was all arduous,
which Peter Penny seemed to find a little embarrassing.
My argument about why cloud spotting is a worthwhile activity is that it's an aimless
activity, he said, and I've turned it into something that is very purposeful, that is work.
At the same time, he realized that he'd conjured a genuine community of amateur cloud lovers from
all over the world, but regretted never doing anything
to truly nourish it.
It felt so fluffy, he said,
with no center to it,
like a cloud.
Soon that spectral society,
that cloud of people on the internet,
would be celebrating
its tenth anniversary.
I'm thinking that it might be
a nice reason to get everyone together,
he said.
One morning last September, Peter Pinney was fidgeting and fretting in the auditorium of
the Royal Geographical Society building at the edge of Kensington Gardens in London.
Escape to the Clouds, a one-day conference to celebrate the Cloud Appreciation Society's
10th anniversary, would be underway in 90 minutes.
And Peter Penny was impatiently supervising the small team of balloon installation artists
he had commissioned to rig inflatable cloud formations around the stage.
This was the first big event that he organized
for the Cloud Appreciation Society.
The evening before the conference, he was expecting 315 attendees.
But there was a late surge of ticket buying,
and now he was panicking about running out of artisanal Cloud Nine marshmallows for the gift
bags. Outside, Peter Pinney kept pointing out, the London sky was impeccably blue.
Not a single cloud. It was terrible. Bounding on stage to kick off the conference,
Peter Pin Penny seemed overwhelmed
but cheerful. He reminded the muddle of cloud appreciators from all over the world,
now crammed into the theater, that to tune into the clouds is to slow down. It's a moment of
meteorological meditation. And he celebrated the transcendence of cloud spotting, how it connects
us to the weather, the atmosphere, to one another.
We are part of the air, he told everyone.
We don't live beneath the sky.
We live within the sky.
Who were they all?
Why were they here?
They were a collection of ordinary people with an interest in clouds.
Behind all these usernames on the Cloud Society website
were school teachers, skydivers, meteorologists,
retired astronomy teachers, office workers, and artists.
Many people had come alone, but conversations sparked easily.
I've just seen the best cloud dress I've seen in my life,
a woman said on the stairway.
A second woman turned and said,
well, yours is quite lovely too. The atmosphere was comfortable and convivial and amplified by
a kind of feedback loop of escalating relief, whereby people who arrived at a cloud conference
not knowing what to expect recognized how normal and friendly everyone was and enjoyed themselves even more.
The program Peter Pinney had pulled together
was a little highbrow, but fun.
A British author recounted
the misadventures
of the first meteorologist
to make a high-altitude balloon ascent.
An energetic literary historian
surveyed English literary views
of the sky.
Peter Pinney,
and a professor of physics,
tried to demonstrate
a complicated atmospheric
freezing process
in a plastic bottle,
but failed.
And between the talks,
a musician named Lisa Knapp
performed folk songs
about wind and weather.
She had saved the obvious
crowd pleaser
for her final turn on stage,
the melancholy
Joni Mitchell classic,
Both Sides Now.
There would be one more talk after Kna but it didn't matter this the joanie mitchell moment was the conference's transformative
conclusion nap had an extraordinary voice bjork like but gentler and performed the song alone
with only a delicate monototonal Indian classical instrument resting in
her lap, a kind of bellows called a shrooty box. It let out a mournful, otherworldly drone.
After hours of lectures and uncertain socializing with strangers, something about this spare
arrangement and the sorrowful lyrics felt so vulnerable that by the time Nap finished the first lines,
Rows and flows of angel hair,
And ice cream castles in the air,
And feather canyons everywhere,
I've looked at clouds that way.
She was singing into an exquisite silence.
The performance moved me.
But it was more than that, and weirder.
Maybe somewhere in this story about clouds and cloud lovers,
I'd found a compelling argument for staying open to varieties of beauty that we can't quite categorize, and by extension, for respecting the human capacity to feel, as much as our ability to scrutinize the sources of those feelings.
Whatever the case, as Knapp sang, I started to feel an inexplicable rush of empathy for the people I met that day The people sitting around me, all these others, living within the same sky
And I let my mind wander, wondering about their lives
What I felt, really, was awe. The awe that comes when you fully internalize
that every stranger's interior life
is just as complicated as yours.
It seemed very unlikely that a meeting
of an online cloud society
in a dark, windowless room
could produce such a moment of genuine emotion.
But there I was, in the middle of it,
just thinking about clouds, I guess,
had turned a little transcendent, at least for me.
Then I heard the sniffle.
With the room so transfixed,
it easily cut through Nap's voice from a few rows behind me.
And when I turned to look,
I saw Preter Pinney's wife fully in tears.
And the woman right next to me, she was crying too. And I heard others inhaling loudly, oddly,
and got the impression there were more. Immediately afterward, out in the hall,
the first person I walked past was bashfully apologizing to two others.
the hall, the first person I walked past was bashfully apologizing to two others.
It was so strange, she kept saying. She just didn't know why she'd been crying.
A couple of days later, I tried to describe it in an email to a friend.
Many people spontaneously cried, just releasing their tears like rain. And I realized that we are all human beings.
That's the truth. In all our different forms and sizes, we are expressions of the same basic currents, just like the clouds. And when I read the email back, I was mortified by how fluffy and stoned it sounded. But still, even now,
I can't pretend it's not true.
This was recorded by Autumn.
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