Archive for Environment

Chute, don’t shoot

Chad and I love the concept of the subway. Because of the subway, we don’t have to own cars in Manhattan. It is a three minute walk to the subway from our apartment. We have the pleasure of having one of the only above ground stops and the tracks pass right by our apartment window so we hear them passing by about every five minutes (less at night). We even have to pause the computer if we are watching something because it is too noisy. Oh, but it’s a great reminder of how urban our living really is. We love the lifestyle and are pleased to contribute less pollution to Manhattan, and the world, because of our complete reliance on public transportation. And not only do we rely on it but thousands, even millions, of others do as well. This is where reality collides with our idealistic notion of how great the subway really is. All those people on a skinny little underground train translates to being regularly squished in to another person way beyond any proximity that one would normally have with a complete stranger. I’m talking being sandwiched in between these strangers and having to rely on them to be a bumper so that you can catch yourself when the train lurches.

So people get angry in these conditions. There is not a week that goes by that I do not witness an altercation. New Yorkers really are an angry lot. That bit is true. My theory–and it is not a profound one, but rather obvious–is that a New Yorker has a lot less control over details than a suburbanite and, because of this, a lot more little things can grate a person and get them worked up to an annoyed, ready-to-lash-out state. Take the commute to work, for example. A suburbanite has the luxury of doing the commute to school in a car with ample personal space. They do not have to wait for their car to arrive like a New Yorker has to wait for the subway to arrive. Then the subway might arrive late but there is no room for you to get on it, so you have to wait for the next one. Or, you can choose to squeeze yourself in and a scenario similar to this one will ensue:

You will get lots of sighs from the others or, worse, get yelled at for getting in when there is no room. In this instance, someone may stick up for you and criticize the standers for not aptly utilizing all the space in the middle of the car. This can turn in to a back-and-forth exchange with expletives inevitably thrown in. At the same time of the argument, the subway conductor may come over the loudspeaker and he or she is irate. People were holding the doors open. People were trying to get in and there is a train right behind this one! So now you’re getting what feels like a lecture from the conductor and the tone they use is threatening. But there’s no real threat from the subway conductor who is not physically present and people will inevitably snicker, make eye contact with another passenger and laugh, about how angry the subway conductor is. It’s a bit like the reaction that teenagers have in a classroom with a huffy old teacher. They’re not taken seriously and become the object of ridicule.  But really, you have to feel for the subway conductor because it’s not an easy job streaming through the sewers of NYC all day long with no fresh air to claim. Did I mention that a lot of subway stations resemble sewers and, if I can conjecture, may have once been a sewer?

It’s worth mentioning that I have never been the object of someone’s wrath on the subway nor have I ever scolded anyone else for their behavior. Which is not to say I haven’t been annoyed: loud teenagers  annoy me most and the way they talk with that bad language and inapproriate content always sends me into a state of pontification about the wrong direction that society is headed. My head will fill with dozens of “my child will never….” statements.

Gratefully, I have kept my distance in these inclement underground scenarios. The only time someone said something to me directly is when I was stuck in the corner at the end of the car and I had to do several “excuse mes” and some gentle shoving to get myself out. A young woman said in a frustrated tone, “why are you back there when you know you’re getting off at the next stop?” I instinctively defended myself and said back to her, “because other people got on at the last stop.” I mean, where else was I supposed to go but back when people were getting on at the last stop and I was not getting off yet? You can’t fight to stay in one position when people are getting on; you have to go with the flow. Not according to her though. But that’s it. My only direct subway verbal brawl and a mild one at that. I, for my part, will try my hardest to keep it that way.

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Blackle

I watched Leonardo DiCaprio’s documentary the 11th hour today and was then at the website where I came across Blackle. It is a search engine created by Heap Media and powered by Google custom searches that has a black background. The black background saves energy because it requires less power to display a black screen than it does to display a white or light screen .

Pretty cool. I am going to set it as my home page.

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The Organic Center

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Certo, e Italia!

I read this article today and my heart swelled with Italian pride and affection. Italians want to use wine as a substitute for gasoline in cars! This environmentally-friendly method has already begun to be used in the European Union.

The articles begins: “Italians maintain a sacred relationship with wine. Giovanni Marani wants them to fill their gas tanks with it…” Read the rest of the article that was published in Wired magazine

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An Inconvenient Truth

I saw Al Gore’s documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, yesterday. He did a great job of relating the very real concern of global warming and did so with scientific facts and data and personal insight and candor. He is very passionate about the way we are impacting our earth. I recommend going to see this movie! Check out the movie’s website, www.climatecrisis.net, which has some awesome tips that you as an individual can do to help decrease the rate that our planet is heating up. It is tempting to blow this off because it is not a threat that is at our doorstep, but if we continue to ignore the ways we choose to live and how they impact the earth, the planet will continue to react to us in increasingly horrific ways. Global warming is a global threat that requires all of the nations of the world working together to battle this impending crisis.

Also here is Whole Foods website, it’s the link as to why eating organic is the way to go!

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Bin Trek

As I walked my recycling to some nearby bins the other day, I proudly realized that my roommate and I produce more trash for recycling than we do to throw away. I try to recycle all that I can, even down to toilet paper rolls and empty plastic bags of lettuce. Recycling brings me much satisfaction. It provides this immediate gratification in knowing that as an individual you are making one of the most impacting decisions that you can make for your environment as an individual. One person can’t solve all the world’s environmental problems, but they can be faithful in doing their part, and thus make a small, but significant, move in the right direction.
Another way that I make a small difference is by not using plastic bags from grocery stores and from other stores. My Aunt Diane bought me these awesome bags for Christmas that I use for my groceries. They are made of hemp and can be bought at www.reusablebags.com . Whole Foods will actually take off 5 cents for every bag that you are reusing. When I lived in Amsterdam, I really loved their policy at grocery stores. If you wanted a plastic bag you had to buy it for 25 euro cents. This charging for bags was a big incentive to bring your own bags.
My sister took not taking plastic bags to the next level by not taking them at the mall. She has actually walked out of a store with a shirt and receipt in her bare hand! If I don’t already have a bag with me at the mall, I will only accept as many as I need. So if I already have been given one, I will combine a later purchase into the bag I had acquired earlier. I will never take a bag if I can carry the purchase and take it right to my car. It’s almost ridiculous to think of the amount of bags that you can take; it almost seems that America has a problem with its companies giving out so many plastic bags. On second thought, the plastic bag issue IS a problem. Here are some of the facts from www.reusablebags.com:
Top Facts – Consumption

Each year, an estimated 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are consumed worldwide. That comes out to over one million per minute. Billions end up as litter each year.
According to the EPA, over 380 billion plastic bags, sacks and wraps are consumed in the U.S. each year.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the U.S. goes through 100 billion plastic shopping bags annually. (Estimated cost to retailers is $4 billion)
According to the American Forest and Paper Association, in 1999 the U.S. alone used 10 billion paper grocery bags, requiring 14 million trees to be cut down.
According to the industry publication Modern Plastics, Taiwan consumes 20 billion bags a year—900 per person.
According to Australia’s Department of Environment, Australians consume 6.9 billion plastic bags each year—326 per person. An estimated .7% or 49,600,000 end up as litter each year.

Top Facts – Environmental Impact:

Hundreds of thousands of sea turtles, whales and other marine mammals die every year from eating discarded plastic bags mistaken for food.
Plastic bags don’t biodegrade, they photodegrade—breaking down into smaller and smaller toxic bits contaminating soil and waterways and entering the food web when animals accidentally ingest.
As part of Clean Up Australia Day, in one day nearly 500,000 plastic bags were collected.
Windblown plastic bags are so prevalent in Africa that a cottage industry has sprung up harvesting bags and using them to weave hats, and even bags. According to the BBC, one group harvests 30,000 per month.
According to David Barnes, a marine scientist with the British Antarctic Survey, plastic bags have gone “from being rare in the late 80s and early 90s to being almost everywhere from Spitsbergen 78° North [latitude] to Falklands 51° South [latitude].
Plastic bags are among the 12 items of debris most often found in coastal cleanups, according to the nonprofit Center for Marine Conservation.

This site has a ton of other information that we don’t hear everyday, including an on-going counter that counts how many plastic bags have been consumed world-wide this year.
I share this with you because first and foremost, I believe it is important because God gave us dominion over the earth, and therefore, taking care of it is a way to honor Him. We should not so mindlessly abuse the beauty He has created. Secondly, to abuse it is ultimately just shooting ourselves in the foot. We do have to live here after all. I really appreciate a quote that an all-natural products company, Seventh Generation (www.seventhgeneration.com), derives their name from and puts on the front of their products. It says, “in our every deliberation, we must consider the impact of our decisions on the next seven generations.” That idea is given to us from the Great Law of the Iroquois Confederacy. It’s such an important reality to keep in the forefront of our minds as we make daily decisions, and that is, how I choose to live today is not without impact and not with consequence for me and for those who will come after me. For this same reason, I also choose to buy organic products. Although they can be more expensive (but not always), the methods of farming without the use of toxic pesticides are far better for our soil and the short and long term sustainability of our earth. So although you may be paying more, you are in effect, making the statement that, “our environment is important, more important than me saving ten dollars a week if I am supporting a system and ideology that is working to support and protect the environment.”
I enjoy playing my part and I would love any suggestions on what else I could do to help be a good world citizen. On that note, you can leave a comment here on my website and I can respond to it!
I haven’t yet figured out how to make direct links, so unfortunately, you will have to type in the addresses to get to them.

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