Archive for category Social movements

Worth Reading

Credit: Search Engine People Blog

I love compiling the Hopeful Weekend Links that I post each Friday. But I must tell you, some weeks it’s difficult to find six hopeful stories relating to New Urban Habitat. I find myself flipping through one depressing story after another. And I’ve become increasingly aware that most of the news I consume is bad news. For instance many Sundays the front section of my local paper does not include even one uplifting story. I’m not sure I would have noticed that if I wasn’t compiling Hopeful Weekend Links.

But usually, I enjoy searching for the links. I look all over the place, but find myself relying heavily on a few sources. And I want to share those with you, in case you don’t already know about them. (They’re also all listed over there on your right under Hopeful Reading.)

  • Ode Magazine – Based in the Netherlands, the publishers of Ode call themselves “Intelligent Optimists.” They dedicate themselves to reporting on “the people and ideas that are changing our world for the better”, and they compile good news all week, every week.
  • YES! Magazine – The publishers of YES! write that they want to “give visibility and momentum to these signs of an emerging society in which life, not money, is what counts; in which everyone matters; and in which vibrant, inclusive communities offer prosperity, security, and meaningful ways of life.”
  • GOOD Magazine – According to their website, “GOOD is the integrated media platform for people who want to live well and do good.” They specialize in slick visual info-graphics.
  • Utne - The editors call the print magazine and website, “Not right, not left, but forward thinking.” They often feature interesting and hopeful happenings in their blogs.
  • Shareable.net – A newer online publication, Shareable is dedicated to covering “the people, places, and projects bringing a shareable world to life.” They routinely run stories on inspiring innovators and collaborative movements.

I also just discovered Sightline Daily, a compendium of “Northwest news that matters”. And it’s made me wonder, what else am I missing out on?

So please tell me … what magazines, newspapers, blogs and websites do you think are worth reading? Where do you find hopeful news or news that matters to you?

, , , , , , , , , ,

8 Comments

How to Share a Waffle

YES! Magazine picked up my article “How to Share a Waffle” for their online edition! They ask, “Bartering for your breakfast: One step closer to a local economy?”

The article begins:

Off the Waffle in Eugene, Oregon is not your typical waffle house. You won’t find pads of butter, bottles of fake maple syrup, or sides of hash browns and eggs here.

The owners, brothers Omer and Dave Orian, are in their mid-twenties and usually sport matching red afros. They and their seven employees serve traditional Belgian Liège waffles made from yeast-leavened batter. They use pearled sugar imported from Belgium, which caramelizes through the waffles, making them crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside.

And if you’re low on cash, Omer and Dave are happy to make a trade, because they’re big fans of bartering.

You can read the rest here.

, , , , ,

3 Comments

A Snapshot of Waste in America

Photo credit: D'Arcy Norman

Pounds of trash the average American generated in a day in 1960:

2.68

Pounds of trash the average American generated in a day in 2008:

4.5

Percentage of U.S. municipal solid waste that was recycled in 1960:

6.4

Percentage of U.S. municipal solid waste that was recycled in 2008:

33.2

Percent increase in the amount of waste recycled in the U.S. between 1960 and 2008:

1,480

Number of aluminum cans Americans use each year:

65 billion*

Percentage of aluminum soda cans that were recycled in the U.S. in 2008:

48.2

Percentage less energy it takes to make a can from recycled aluminum than to produce a new one from virgin materials:

90

Number of plastic bottles Americans throw away in an hour:

2.5 million

Number of years it’s estimated it will take for a plastic bottle to degrade in a landfill:

1,000

Pieces of plastic the UN Environment Program estimates float in every square mile of ocean (2006):

46,000

Number of plastic bags found in the stomach of a gray whale that beached near Seattle in April 2010:

20

Percentage of the world population that lives in the U.S.:

5

Percentage of the world’s timber and paper resources Americans consume:

33

Pounds of paper the average American uses every year (2002):

678

Pounds of paper the average South American uses every year (2002):

77

Pounds of paper the average African uses every year (2002):

8.8

Percentage of American paper waste that’s recycled (2008):

55.5

Click on the hyperlinks to see sources for statistics. *All other statistics were compiled by the Clean Air Council.

This is part of a New Urban Habitat series: Snapshots of America. Part one was A Snapshot of Car-Usage in America and part two was A Snapshot of Education in America.

, , , , , , ,

7 Comments

Learning to Listen

“The first step in the acquisition of wisdom is silence, the second listening.” – Solomon Ibn Gabriol

Photo credit: NJ..

Recently I wrote a post about acoustic ecologist Gordon Hempton’s search for natural silence, and something he said to a New York Times reporter caught my attention:

“When you become a better listener to nature, you become a better listener to your community, your children, the people you work with.”

We’ve become so good at blocking out the jarring sounds of our modern world – the sirens, jets, garbage trucks, lawn mowers, leaf blowers, honking horns, barking dogs, and blaring televisions – are we also ignoring each other?

Margaret Wheatley thinks so. She’s a writer, teacher and consultant, who travels the world advising organizations going through times of change and stress. She’s worked with the U.S. Army, Fortune 100 corporations, the Girl Scouts and numerous foundations, public schools, government agencies, colleges, churches, professional associations and monasteries. Several years ago she visited an organization I worked for, which seems to be in a constant state of tumult.

Wheatley says that our natural state is to be together, but we keep moving away from each other. And she thinks the reason for that is that we’re all trying to tell our own stories, but nobody is listening. In her book, Finding Our Way, she writes:

This is an increasingly noisy era — people shout at each other in print, at work, on TV. I believe the volume is directly related to our need to be listened to. In public places, in the media, we reward the loudest and most outrageous. People are literally clamoring for attention, and they’ll do whatever it takes to be noticed. Things will only get louder until we figure out how to sit down and listen.

Gordon Hempton says we can learn to listen by spending time in natural places and listening to silence. Wheatley says we should practice by approaching someone we don’t know, don’t like, or whose way of living is a mystery to us, and sit quietly and listen to what they have to say.

Could you keep yourself from arguing, or defending, or saying anything for awhile? Could you encourage the person to just keep telling you his or her version of things, that one side of the story? … I know now that neither I nor the world changes from my well-reasoned passionately presented arguments. Things change when I’ve created even just a slight movement toward wholeness, when I move closer to another through my patient, willing listening.

In 1971 activist John Francis saw two oil liners collide beneath the Golden Gate Bridge and decided to stop riding in and driving motorized vehicles. In the weeks afterward, he announced his decision to his friends and family and found himself in countless arguments. He soon got tired of fighting and decided to spend a day just being silent and listening. In his TED speech he explains:

So on this first day, I actually listened. And it was very sad to me, because I realized that for those many years, I had not been learning. I was 27. I thought I knew everything. I didn’t. And so I decided I better do this for another day, then another day … Well, that lasted 17 years.

While Francis was listening, he walked across the United States, got a PhD in environmental studies, and even taught university-level classes.

Lately I’ve noticed the healing power of listening in my own life. The other night my son resisted going to sleep. He lay tossing and turning, restless. We sang songs. We told stories.

“Are you scared of something?” I finally asked.

“Trash truck outside,” he said.

Our garbage had been picked up earlier, and we’d watched from the window as the truck’s mechanical arm lowered and snatched our garbage pails. “You’re scared of the trash truck,” I repeated.

“Yeah,” he said, and within minutes he was asleep. It made me reflect on all the times I was grieving or anxious or couldn’t sleep, and I told my husband about it, and he heard me, and that was enough.

Some believe just listening might even be enough to help heal some of the world’s most violent and entrenched stalemates. Participants of the Compassionate Listening Project travel to the Middle East to listen to Israeli and Palestinian people’s stories. Leah Green wrote about it for YES! Magazine in 2001:

After years of listening, it has become so clear to me: all are suffering, all are wounded, all want to live with security, justice and peace. All are worthy of our compassion.The question remains, how do we break the cycles of violence? Perhaps listening is one of the keys. I’m now holding the vision of a new, global listening movement.

What do you think? Have you experienced the healing power of listening? Do we need a global listening movement?

, , , , ,

11 Comments

A Snapshot of Education In America

Photo: Sidewalk Flying

Number of hours the average kid spends in school each year:

1,067

Number of hours the average 8 to 18 year old spends playing video games, going online, and watching TV each year (Figure based on average of 7 hours and 11 minutes a day.):

2,634

2007 Department of Education budget:

66.4 billion

2007 Department of Defense budget:

539.9 billion

Average starting teacher salary in the U.S. (2005):

$32,367

Average starting teacher salary in Luxembourg (In U.S. dollars) (2005) :

$70,908

State with highest 8th grade reading scores:

Massachusetts

State with lowest 8th grade reading scores:

Mississippi

State with the highest high school graduation rank (2005):

Nebraska, 87.8%

State with the lowest high school graduation rank (2005):

Nevada, 55.8%

Percentage of kids who attend private schools (2005):

11.2 %

Percent of kids who are homeschooled (2003):

2.2%

Rank of U.S. in the world by literacy rate:

19

Percentage of male public school teachers in 1961:

31.3%

Percentage of male public school teachers in 2001:

21%

*Click on hyperlinks to see sources for statistics. All other statistics are from the 2009 World Almanac.

This is part of a New Urban Habitat series: Snapshots of America. You can read part one, A Snapshot of Car-Usage in America, here.

, ,

7 Comments

The Future of Green Jobs

Today Shareable.net published my article about an inspiring summer jobs program that taught a group of young people how to build green infrastructure and ended up transforming one participant’s life.

The article starts:

John Williams calls himself an aquarium fanatic. “I have six tanks right now – a 125 gallon, a 55 gallon, a 30, a 16, a 29…. The 125 gallon is ridiculously huge, especially because it’s all glass,” Williams says. “I stick with fresh water. Something like 75% of the world is covered in salt water, so I find fresh water more exotic.”

Williams is 22. He lives in an apartment in Cottage Grove, Oregon, a small town about twenty miles south of Eugene. Last spring he was working as a bartender when he heard about summer jobs designing and building an aquaponics greenhouse at Aprovecho, a 40-acre center outside of Cottage Grove dedicated to researching and teaching sustainable living practices and green skills.

Aquaponics is the cultivation of fish and plants in a recirculating environment. The fish waste flows to the plants and fertilizes them, and in turn the plants clean the water, which returns to the fish. Aquaponics is gaining in popularity in green circles in the United States, because it makes it possible to grow a lot of food – both fish and vegetables – quickly.

In a recent New York Times article, Micheal Tortorello wrote, “There is something about aquaponics that seems to inspire this quirky blend of entrepreneurialism, environmentalism and survivalism.”

That certainly seems to describe Williams, who fears that climate change will devestate the water supply. He immediately signed on for the Aprovecho summer jobs program. “It was right up my alley,” he says of the opportunity to help build an aquaponics greenhouse just a few miles from his home.

You can read the rest of the article here.

, , , , , , , ,

2 Comments

Adults on Bikes

Shareable.net published my article about three different bike cooperatives today. It starts:

Over a hundred years ago, H.G. Wells famously quipped, “When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race.”

When Wells wrote his novel Cycles of Change in 1896, the world was in the throes of a bicycling craze. James Kemp Starley’s 1885 invention of the modern bicycle enabled the working classes to travel quickly and cheaply for the first time. Women who had been constricted in corsets, hoops, and petticoats were donning bloomers and discovering a newfound freedom of movement.

Today in the United States it can be harder to muster Wells’ optimism about the bicycle. Only one percent of urban trips in this country are made by bike, and only 0.55 percent of people commute to work on a bicycle.

And although Susan B. Anthony once credited the bicycle with doing “more to emancipate women than anything else in the world,” today the vast majority of American cyclists are white males. According to research by John Pucher, American men make three times more trips by bicycle than women. Plus, a 2008 NSGA Sports Performance Study found that while African Americans and Hispanics make up 12 and 15 percent of the U.S. population respectively, each group represents only about six percent of bicyclists.

Obviously there are some huge barriers to bicycling in the United States, especially for women and minorities.

Nevertheless I discovered ample reason for optimism about the future of American bicycling. In cities across the country, people are coming together to form bicycle cooperatives with the mission to make buying, building, and repairing bikes an affordable, accessible, and shareable experience. And many of them are reaching out to women and minorities.

You can read the rest of the article here.

, , , , ,

1 Comment

Appropriate Technology

I recently visited Aprovecho, a 40-acre non-profit center about 15 miles south of where I live. They research green skills and sustainable living practices. They also tend a 1.5 acre garden; sustainably manage 23 acres of forest; and teach workshops in subjects like green building, permaculture, rainwater harvesting, and eating a 100-mile diet.

In addition, they develop something called Appropriate Technology (AT). On their website they define AT as devices that are “energy-efficient, nonpolluting, and renewable” that are made from “available materials, many of them recycled”.

Aprovecho was founded in 1979 by a group of back-to-the-land hippies interested in a specific type of AT: stove design. They wanted to develop affordable, fuel-efficient cooking stoves for use in the third world. And they developed something called the rocket stove, which is designed to use a small amount of wood, fully combust it, and keep smoke out of the house.

In the last thirty years, the Aprovecho staff has done over 100 stove projects in 60 different countries. Last year Prince Charles awarded them with the prestigious Ashden Award for one of their designs.

The group of people specializing in stove work recently moved off the Aprovecho campus and spun off into a separate non-profit. But they left behind an outdoor kitchen equipped with all different types of efficient cooking stoves. One of them is called a haybox. It’s a box that is so tightly insulated that you can bring rice and beans to a boil, stick the pot inside the box, and in several hours, the rice and beans will cook, with no extra energy expended.

After visiting Aprovecho and learning about their efficient cooking stoves, as well as their solar showers and composting toilets, I’ve been thinking that it would be fairly easy for more people to switch to at least somewhat more appropriate technologies, like:

  • regular toothbrushes instead of electric toothbrushes.
  • mixing spoons instead of electric mixers
  • clotheslines instead of dryers
  • bicycles instead of cars (at least for shorter trips)

I think I’ll stick with my flush toilet and electric range for now. But I’m a lot more mindful that the most high-tech tool is not always the best one for the job.

What types of Appropriate Technology do you use? In what ways do you try to conserve energy?

, , , , , , ,

7 Comments

From Coal Country to Bee Country?

Tammy Horn, also known as the “Bee Lady”, is waging a one-woman campaign to reclaim land throughout Eastern Kentucky and West Virginia previously destroyed by strip coal mining. She wants to reforest reclaimed mine sites with sourwood trees and wildflowers and turn Appalachia back into a honey bee corridor. (Beekeeping was once a common vocation for many residents’ parents and grandparents.)

Horn would like to train hundreds of residents in beekeeping. They could jar honey, make cosmetics, and also learn more advanced beekeeping skills, like queen-rearing and  pollination services. She hopes beekeeping can restore Appalachia’s damaged ecosystem and boost its ailing economy.

You can read more about Horn’s Coal Country Beeworks here or visit her website here.

, , ,

1 Comment

One Million Acts of Kindness

Bob Votruba, 54, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, is dedicating the next ten years of his life to spreading kindness. He and his Boston terrier Bogart plan to visit 100 college campuses to try to convince young people to aspire toward pursuing one million acts of kindness in their lives. That would add up to 50 acts of kindness a day for 55 years.

Votruba once ran a successful home-building business and owned a 10,000 square foot home. What motivated him to sell his house and all of his possessions, move into a bus, and go on a kindness tour? He says September 11, Virginia Tech, and the suicide of two close acquaintances convinced him that kindness is the only thing that will make the world a better place.

Votruba writes on his website:

Imagine… if we simply hoped for the best toward every person we come in contact with during the day. If each one of us, day by day, shared acts of kindness with those we know and those we don’t know…how would the world change? How would YOU change? How far would our kindness spread?

He encourages young people to aspire toward being “kindness millionaires”.

You can read an article about Votruba here, read his blog here, or connect with him on Facebook here.

, , ,

1 Comment

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 312 other followers