Archive for the ‘Part of the Solution’ Category

The Journey

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

As many of my friends will know I am working on a documentary film called “Part of the Solution”. In the many conversations I having about people are asking for links to some of the resources which I’m discovering on the journey. I’ve created a new Part of the Solution category so if you want to follow the trail with me, you now can.

Here’s a really interesting video by Leo Murray called “Wake Up Freak Out – then Get a Grip” which gives a lot of food for thought. Depending on where you are on your journey you will react to it in different ways.

 
Wake Up, Freak Out – then Get a Grip from Leo Murray on Vimeo.

 

 

Our Greatest Teachers

Friday, October 24th, 2008

The financial crisis is one of the most profound teachers of our time. Whether in America, Iceland, the UK, the rest of Europe, Asia or beyond it is showing us that everything in this world is interconnected and we cannot survive without considering each other and pulling together. Boundaries, flags and the “me culture” ultimately count for nothing. The more important lesson is that greed created the problems, fear magnified it but neither play a part in the solution.  Although we are just students, as guardians of our planet, we should be inspired to know that we finally ready to learn from these lessons.

“Slow down you move too fast. You gotta make this moment last”

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

The credit crunch could be a good thing. We might start living life at half the speed we currently do, which means we would only be consuming the world twice as fast as we should.

Don’t Save the Planet

Monday, October 20th, 2008

I’ve come to realise that we don’t need to “Save The Planet”. The planet will be fine without us. We need to save humankind. The solution lies in all of us taking 100% responsibility for everything we do every minute of every day in order to start healing our home, a home we are consuming faster than it can replenish itself.  The starting point? Gratitude. The minute we become grateful for what we already have in life, we shift our focus from a constant desire for more to a realisation that we can have a much higher quality of life with less. There is no greater love we can give to our children and their future. Today, write down five things you are grateful for and see how different it makes you feel.

Let Your Light Follow You Around

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

In August I heard of the launch of an excellent idea called One Hundred Months (www.onehundredmonths.org). The web site says:

“We have 100 months to save the planet. When the clock stops ticking we could be beyond the climate’s ‘tipping point’, the point of no return.”

I really like the idea behind the site as in the same way that I hope 4000 Saturdays focuses people’s attention to the importance and timeliness of their lives, One Hundred Months focuses our attention to making a difference at home (our planet) today.

On signing up, you receive an action by email to do each month which will make a positive impact on climate change. I received the first action today – switch to a 100% renewable energy supplier. Another action was to make suggestions for future actions, so here is mine:

LET YOUR LIGHT FOLLOW YOU AROUND

Much of the focus recently has been about changing to energy-saving light bulbs and now there is a big push to change to renewable energy suppliers. These are fantastic and two things which I have done. However it strikes me that this focus is not really getting to the route of the problem. What’s that? It’s our habit of a lifetime - leaving lights on.

When I was a kid, my Dad always used to grumble about us leaving the lights on (more purse-string driven than environmental back then). As a father, I can now totally empathise with him. With the nights drawing in, the lights are coming on sooner. With energy prices skyrocketing and winter upon us, we’re going to soon find out just how much it’ll cost us to light up our homes like Christmas trees. As we “travel” around our homes moving from one room to the next, many of us simply leave lights on as we’ll “be back in a mo”. For many it seems pointless turning lights off. With a family, this is multiplied by the number of people travelling around the home going about their routines. I’ve realised in my own life this is really just a daft habit which has never been questioned until now.

Over the last few days I set myself a new rule… Let The Light Follow Me Around. It’s painfully simple but has given me a focus which I think has halved the amount of energy we use in the home overnight. The premise is based on two ideas: (1) How our ancestors lived (carrying a candle from room to room) and (2)A new eco idea of removing all light switches in homes and replacing them with movement sensors on the doorways (I’m sure someone has invented this but if not, you are welcome to it). As you enter a room the light comes on, as you leave, the light goes off. Now there are lots of unanswered technical questions about this idea such as what if someone else comes in the room, but you get the general idea. I’m sure in ecological terms, the idea of ripping out light switches, manufacturing (and powering) sensors and refitting is not worth the energy saved, so in absence of this, let’s all start to do it manually…

The more we focus on the cause rather than the effect, the better we can look after our planet. I always remember the story of the garbage men/dustmen striking in Los Angeles. As the rubbish piled up on the street, the city became infested with rats. Rather than focusing their attention on how to resolve the strike so the rubbish would be collected, the council focused on getting rid of the rats. Energy-saving bulbs and renewable energy suppliers are with us now because of our bad habits of the past.

Habits are formed and can only be broken when they are replaced with a new habit. Life is not about being the best, but trying to just be better than we were yesterday. In a way, that means striving to replace one of our many habits with something slightly better. As creatures of habit, most of our day (and therefore our life) is dictated by the routines we have all become.

If letting my light follow me around has halved my illuminating energy usage, that’s half of the energy-saving bulbs to be manufactured, and a good 25% less demand I am putting on my renewable energy supplier. Multiple that through the country, and then the world and the effects could be stunning.

So who wants to start the “LET YOUR LIGHT FOLLOW YOU AROUND” Campaign?