Dirt Sick

It’s really easy for me to walk around the city forgetting that there’s actual earth under my feet. After a few weeks of being confined to the little postage-stamp plot of Manhattan I inhabit, the “real world” begins to recede in my consciousness, and the environment starts to seem more of a theoretical object than a lived reality. Since weekend trips to the countryside to rejuvenate my relationship with the planet aren’t really practical for me (I wish), I have to resort to Youtube to get my fix. My little brother turned me onto the channel Primitive Technology about six months ago, and it’s completely addictive. Much like reading Kimmerer, when you’re engaged with it you can’t help but be awed at the wealth the natural world has to offer. The basic notion of the channel is that this random Australian guy with a bunch of land goes out into the woods and films himself making tools, shelter, and food from whatever he finds (he only uses items he’s made in previous videos, so no axes or lighters or cooking pots– I think he started out with just a kind of sharp rock). The videos are completely silent except for the sounds of nature and the sounds of the tools. They’re completely mesmerizing, and while they don’t necessarily connect me to the land I’m on, they ground me in a different sense, forcing me to pay attention to all the ways my life removes me and insulates me from natural processes. At least I can begin the process of imagining the potentiality in the dirt underneath all the pavement.

The hut-building ones are my favorites.

Skip the Car Manual and Just Read This Instead – Easy Fuel Conservation

Many car models as early as around 2012 have a new feature called ECO mode that people tend to overlook unless they have dedicated time to actually reading the car manual. What is ECO mode? ECO mode is activated through a button on the dashboard that reduces the car’s throttle response causing slower acceleration when the car does not need to accelerate quickly. For example, this will be efficient on the highway or long stretches of roads. ECO mode also improves fuel economy by reducing and modifying air conditioning responses and regulating the power used in the car. Better fuel economy means less gas being used and less overuse of natural gases. This is a good way to sustain the environment (though it will not improve it).

My mom discovered the ECO button in our family’s new car (GMC Terrain) and now will not stop using it to conserve gas. Every other weekend, my brother comes home from college in south Jersey and my parents take turns driving him back. So far, I haven’t noticed a difference in gas mileage but maybe I am just not observant of the fuel that we use on a regular basis (What does this say about me?). Because we’re students in NYC, I guess this isn’t as applicable to us as it is to my family in New Jersey but this is still a cool thing to know when you are visiting home and driving around!

 

 

Waste Not, Want Not

A list of things I habitually do to reduce waste:

-Bringing coffee in travel mug to school to reduce use of paper cups (I still buy  2-3 coffees a week from coffee shops though). TIP: If you bring your own reusable mug to the UC dining commons, they only charge you $0.99 for coffee or tea. It’s a great deal! (I could write a whole section just on coffee & coffeeshops. For example: take a stack of their napkins to use later. Or, order your iced drink without a straw or lid, especially if you plan on eating in, or you’re just walking down the block to class.)

-Carrying a reusable water bottle. Are people still buying plastic water bottles???? Knock it off!

-Washing and reusing plastic sandwich bags. I use Ziploc bags as many times as I can before throwing them out and taking a new one.

-Always have at least 1 tote bag on you in case you need to buy something from the grocery store, or CVS, etc. to reduce your plastic bag use. (If you have to get a plastic bag, save it and reuse it later).

-When I moved into my first apartment in Brooklyn, I was horrified by how much food scraps I had to throw straight into the regular trash (at home in CT, we composted religiously). There was a short-lived attempt to compost by putting food scraps in the freezer & then bringing them to the farmer’s market, but I never really committed. (If you’re looking to reduce waste though, it’s definitely an option for composting in the City. I would check out the composting situation at the farmer’s market in Union Square).

-Look at every single-use item and think about how you can re-use it. Even to just save glass jars for later for when you might need them (to store homemade sauces/hummus/pesto, bring leftovers to school or work, as a candle holder, etc). Get take-out as little as possible. If you’re ordering to eat at home, ask them to hold the plastic utensils.

-Always recycle!! I am constantly holding onto empty glass bottles, plastic containers, cardboard coffee sleeves, etc. until I find the right recycling bin. I used to take empty water bottles & other recyclables off the top of trash bins at school and transfer them to the correct bin, but now I think the UC’s recycling situation is so messy that it may not matter which recyclables go into which bin. Last year, I lived with a roommate who had no clue about recycling, or was just too lazy to do it. I frequently took it upon myself to remove her recyclables from the trash, rinse them, flatten them and put them in the recycling.

I think recycling is one of those behaviors that seems to have little impact in and of itself, but is actually quite effective because it reinforces and normalizes ecological values.

Many of these habits I have adopted due to financial need (I love coffee, for example, (as perhaps has become evident) but I can’t buy a cup of coffee from a cafe every day). When you have such limited resources, I think you’re much more likely to attune yourself to ways of saving and reusing, because you just don’t have the funds to buy new things. Perhaps then, the richest countries of the world need to change their mindset to one of Depression-era desperation.

We have extremely limited our resources through climate change, and need to adopt a pervasive attitude of reuse, frugality and gratitude, in a way that it becomes instinctual, normal and automatic.

Fired up

Having learned that Firefox has a lighter carbon footprint than Chrome, I’ve made Firefox the default on my computers.

Is Firefox slower? I think at times it might be. Then I think that it might not be and I shouldn’t blame Firefox when it might be my router or (God forbid) the New School’s server. Then I think that, if it is, I’m happy of the inconvenience.

Unintended consequence: a chance to think. Pebbles of mindfulness.

Welcome.

We might have called this site “calminous,” referring to our shared experience of the Climate Museum. The exhibition “In Human Time” evoked deep time in a way somehow both calming and ominous – but who else would know what we were talking about? Besides, it might seem than any calm in the face of calamity is itself calamitous.

How we can collect ourselves to act in the face of such large-scale challenges is the subject of this site (at least until someone finds better words for it). We’ll be sharing experiments and insights, mostly small scale, and invite you to join us.