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Sustainable
Living
Only
after the last tree has been cut down
Only after the last river has been poisoned
Only after the last fish has been caught
Only then will you find money cannot be eaten
-- Cree prophecy
Are
we, as a species, creating our own Armageddon, the end of our
days? The sad truth is that we are.
We're
destroying the ecosystem that gives us life, and doing so at an
alarming rate. Our failure to live in a sustainable way is the
single greatest problem facing humanity today, more important
by far than crime, illiteracy, or the healthcare crisis.
We've
been unwilling to address this situation for far too long. We're
now faced with the bitter fact that, at our present rate of consumption,
we will have entirely exhausted the Earth's natural resources
by the end of this century.
In
short, we will make ourselves extinct, along with most other life
on this planet, if we don't stop the destruction. And it will
not surprise me if, in the final years of waning resources, mankind
brings upon itself many of the End-of-Days scenarios foretold
in virtually every belief system that's ever existed. War, famine,
disease, crime, poverty, despair . . . all of these and more.
Our own careless actions will have brought into being our own
worst nightmares.
So
what's the answer? Can we still save ourselves? Possibly. At the
heart of it, it's all about what each and every individual does.
We can no longer leave it to the other guy to solve the problem.
We must each do our part or the solutions won't come. We all have
a responsibility to make better decisions. The first thing we
need to do is readjust our mindset, and I know of no better way
to do that than to learn from indigenous societies.
"We
did not inherit the Earth from our ancestors; we borrow it from
our children."
Ancient Native American Proverb
The
people of indigenous societies around the world take an exceptionally
long view when considering their actions. Some Native American
cultures have codified the concept in the term "seven generations."
They don't just consider the effects on their children or grandchildren,
but on their great-grandchildren's great-grandchildren -- and
the children they will have.
We,
too, need to think long-term. Seriously long-term. Several centuries
long-term. Millennia long-term, and then some. How many fatal
decisions might have been made differently if that long view had
always been taken in earnest?
If
we'd known beforehand that spraying DDT would actually advance
the belligerent red ants we intended to stop, perhaps we wouldn't
have sprayed it, killing thousands upon thousands of animals in
the process and damaging the health of who knows how many men,
women, and children. But we looked only at the short-term goal,
and even to that extent our view was clouded.
If
we had carefully considered all the problems attached to nuclear
power -- the extreme poisoning of the land and water for miles
and miles around each mine, for starters -- perhaps we'd have
looked for better ways to fill our energy needs. Instead, millions
of acres of land are now unfit to use, and billions of gallons
of water unsafe to drink. The time it will take to restore these
resources is measured in centuries -- lots of them.
Native
societies carefully consider the effects of their actions on the
rest of nature. Hunting and gathering, farming, building -- all
these have some impact on nature. The challenge is to produce
a minimal impact so as to cause the least amount of harm. Here's
a list of ways that we too can learn to interact with the world
in an indigenous manner:
Use
it wisely - Before you take anything from nature -- and that
means anything in your life -- consider whether you really need
it. Is there something else that can do the job without further
depleting our resources?
Waste Nothing - Whenever possible, use it all, and use it for
as long as you can. When the Plains Indians killed a buffalo,
they used every part of the animal: meat, fat, hide, sinew, bone,
hoof, and antler.
Recycle
it - When you have no further use for something, don't just
throw it away to sit forever in a landfill. Many are surprised
to know that recycling includes far more than putting your bottles,
cans, and newspapers at the curb every two weeks. You can also
recycle tires, clothing, cardboard, batteries, furniture, appliances,
motor oil, many plastics, computers and other electronic devices,
and more.
Recycle
it again - If we were to apply long-view thinking to the concept
of repeated use, it's entirely possible that in a few decades
we could reduce the amount of reintroduced waste to a fraction
of current levels. Send nothing to the landfill that can be recycled.
Put
nothing into the environment that doesn't occur naturally
- Yes, this one is hard. Many commercial products release toxic
elements into the environment during their manufacture, during
their use, or at their demise -- if not all three. Yet many available
technologies minimize this problem. We need to stay informed.
It
is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than
our abilities.
Albus Dumbledore
Consumerism
is certainly about choices: which product to buy, how to use it,
how to dispose of it. Each of our choices has an impact, no matter
how small, so we need to begin making better choices. Personally,
I take my own mug to the coffee shop. It saves me a dime and uses
one less non-biodegradable Styrofoam cup. This may sound insignificant,
but by combining this choice with hundreds of others I make each
week, I'm beginning to create less of a negative impact on my
environment.
Here
are some areas in which you can make wiser choices:
Carefully
assess the true cost of a purchase beyond its sticker price:
the cost to the environment when it was removed, refined, and
manufactured, the energy it will consume in its use, the toxins
its use will create, and the impact it will have when discarded.
Be
energy conscious when purchasing a new appliance or automobile
or choosing replacement windows, etc. Appliances vary in the amount
of energy they consume, as well as in how long they'll last. Greener
appliances not only protect the environment; they can save you
money over the life of the purchase.
Build
as green as possible. Emerging technologies make it possible
to consume far fewer resources when building, and also allow for
drastic reductions in energy consumption. Although currently it
can cost a little more to build green, the energy savings will
offset these costs and then some. Over the life of a green home,
an owner can save thousands of dollars.
Purchase
and build to last. Our throwaway society encourages us to
buy again rather than repair. Yet each time we buy a new product,
we're affecting the environment. Consider that two cheap refrigerators
will cost more to buy and operate than one of better quality that
will last twice as long and consume less energy. Not only will
the better unit preserve our resources, it will cost less in the
long run.
The
responsibility doesn't stop at home. We can encourage our employers,
our coworkers, and other organizations in our community to raise
their environmental awareness. It won't happen overnight, but
it won't happen at all unless we do our part to stimulate the
conversation. Many companies are beginning to consider sustainability
as it relates to new construction, manufacturing processes, and
conservation. Help your own company grasp the sense of sustainability
and position itself at the forefront of the new thinking.
We
also have a responsibility to ensure that our political leaders
-- local, state, and federal -- know our opinions. It takes only
a few minutes to send a fax, letter, or e-mail, or to make a phone
call. Let your voice be heard. The more we tell our leaders that
we want to focus on the issue of sustainability, the more quickly
and fully government will address the problems of the environment.
We
can't stay in denial about it any longer. We're destroying our
environment, and we must stop. Each of us needs to share responsibility
for protecting the ecosystem that keeps us alive. We don't have
the right to willfully destroy it.
Must
we cut down the last tree, poison the last river, and eat the
last animal before we finally figure out that our possessions
won't sustain us, that we can't eat our money? That's one prophecy
I hope never comes to pass. The choice is ours. I hope we choose
wisely.
©2001
- Lane Baldwin
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