Posts Tagged ‘environment’

Recycling, Elevated

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

I understand that recycling should be automatic and done out of the goodness (and / or self-preservation instinct) of one’s own heart.

I understand that even if we all recycled, it still wouldn’t be enough — we need to drastically curb, if not stop, our consumption of one-time-use goods.

I understand that we should be moving toward beverages that come from rivers and fruit trees and herbs, not bottles and chemicals and processing plants.

But I can’t see something like this and not be encouraged.  An Austin architectural firm has found a way to make recycling entertaining, and to help concertgoers work together to create a temporary thing of beauty, all while calling attention to a problem most people just don’t want to think about — the incredible amount of trash we generate and the lack of options about what to do with it.

Cup City, you just made my day.

All I Really Need to Know, I Learned in Kindergarten

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Well, not truly.  All I actually learned in kindergarten was that I couldn’t sleep in strange places (I still can’t) and that it was a big deal to know how to spell “butterfly.”  (My mom taught me how to read at 3.  So sue me.)

But oh, man.  How I wish I had attended this school. It’s called Forest Kindergarten, a branch of Waldorf education in which the kids go outside every day for three hours, even in the snow, even in the rain, even if it’s below freezing.  They dig, splash, gross each other out, and do all the other things kids do well.  They spend some time indoors reading and writing, but mostly they play outside.

The bad news?  Tuition is $7000 a year.   It’s ridiculous — this program should be instituted in all public schools, even if they have to plant a garden in flowerpots in a parking lot.  Especially if they have to plant a garden in flowerpots in a parking lot; nature will be all the more precious to those children, and they need as much of it as they can get, and they won’t get it at desks being crammed full of differentiated knowledge to prepare them for placement tests while they’re still young enough to forget to go to the bathroom.

Sorry; that sentence got away from me.  Well, I guess this is why I advocate homeschooling.  It’s the only way you can ensure your children have a balanced education at less than $7000 a year.

La Terroir

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

Last week I found myself struggling to teach the first bars of “Unchained Melody” to a father who wanted to learn to play.  His daughter continued her own lesson on the floor, playing a memory game by herself; we heard her trying out the pronunciation of “fortissimo” as she turned the card over in her hand, tracing the italic f’s softly, an introduction to a new world of sound.

Meanwhile, her father was cautious, bashful, but eager to work.  As we finished, his hands trembling from the effort, he breathed a sigh of relief.  “This is so hard!” he exclaimed. “It’s like learning another language!”

I told him he was right, explained the similarity: when you read something out loud, you don’t read each word individually; your eyes scan the page and give your brain a few moments’ warning before your mouth actually needs to form the words.  Reading music is the same, but there are numerous systems of denotation: tone, rhythm, pitch and expression all intersect in one glorious symphony of Unchained bliss.

He shook his head.  “It’s like taking a Spanish class or something.”

I laughed.  “I can’t help you with Spanish,” I said ruefully.  “I took French instead.  I probably should have taken Spanish.”  It was a lie of which I am ashamed: in truth, I am proud to know a language and culture as lovely as French, even at the expense of something far more practical.  The language itself can move me to tears, as it did once in a Solemn Mass at Sacre-Coeur or in the husky outpourings of Carla Bruni — so much so that reading it during Agape Vespers is difficult.  Even the word emouvant, moving, is far richer a concept in French than in English.

Rod Dreher wrote very beautifully yesterday about terroir, another French word that can’t easily be translated.  As I read his words (tres emouvant) I thought about my own terroir.  Here are the basic elements:

Books. I’m sitting next to a huge shelf of them.  This is a laptop, so I could be anywhere, such as in my bed upstairs, where Rob and my comforter are nestled in a warm, fluffy pile.  But if I leave this room, I won’t be able to grab something I need from one of my color-coordinated shelves, and that’s too much of a risk when I’m

Writing. It is the focus and bane of my existence.  I love it.  I hate it.  I’m good at it.  I suck at it.  These thoughts follow me throughout the day.  I cannot lose them, but I cannot stop, either.  For now, I’m here.

Maia. About five minutes ago  she moved from her perch beside my head, wedging herself into my lap in front of the keyboard.  I have to type haltingly, a few precious letters at a time, to avoid disturbing her.  But I do it, because a warm, fluffy kitty is even better than the warm, fluffy comforter upstairs.  Few people ever see this side of my snobby Siamese diva, but that makes it all the more precious to me.

Pain. She is digging her claws into my lap in ecstasy, and I am protected by only a single layer.  The pain is worth it.  It is my experience that this is true more often than not.

Pajamas. Covered with cat hair.  And my own hair is a mess, half-damp from my shower and uncombed.  But it’s my terroir.  And six days a week I get up early to put on a Catholic schoolteacher’s uniform, so today I get to languish a little in comfort with

Mexican Cocoa. Raw milk, heated just enough.  Sucanat.  Cocoa, cinnamon and a pinch of cayenne to stop my cough (the remnants of what I think is probably a developing mold allergy.)  It goes very well with

Mexican Gangsta Rap. Didn’t expect that, did you?  But it’s pouring out of the car across the street, and in spite of myself, I’m enjoying the beat.  It’s my terroir, but it’s not my world.

Music. Currently from Rob, who is now awake and drifting from David Bowie to Colin Hay and the Cars.  Snatches of his guitar drift downward, as does his strong, gorgeous voice.  Few people see this side of him; he doesn’t like to perform, unlike his fearless and choleric wife.  But hearing him strum away upstairs is one of the great joys of my life.

Beautiful Diversion

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

One reason I love the Internet is that it allows groups like the Cloud Appreciation Society to share images like this, that stop us in our tracks.

photo-by-tanis-danielson

Asperatus, New Zealand (South Island.) Photo by Tanis Danielson.

Think before you click — you could lose an hour in the gallery — but it will be a lovely hour.

One Word.

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Plastics.

Except I don’t think they’re the future; I think they’re a necessary evil, with emphasis on the evil.  This article explains a lot, so read it.  All of it.  This video is also quite sobering; I discovered it while doing research for Green Week last year.

One more tiny piece of the puzzle: plastic bottles are being recycled in increasing quantities (although I do think that in a few centuries, our descendants will laugh at us for using the last of our fossil fuel to package, ship and distribute tiny quantities of something that we could get practically free out of any tap in any building in the developed world.)  The caps are a different story: they are a special type of rigid plastic that can’t currently be recycled in this country.  At recycling centers, they are separated out and thrown — yep — into landfills, if they don’t find their way into rivers and oceans first.

They are much smaller than bottles, and they come in pretty colors and nice neat shapes, so they often go unnoticed.  But once you start looking, you see them everywhere: half-buried in the lawn of your workplace, rolling away from the curb in the parking lot, floating in the water at the dock. Little plastic circles that will never go away.  Over time, they will photodegrade into smaller and smaller plastic “nurdles” that are even more toxic and bear an unfortunate resemblance to fish eggs, e.g., food for sea mammals and birds.

I’ve been noticing them, because I’ve been looking, ever since a colleague told me about Aveda’s new campaign to recycle bottlecaps.  She put a big empty pretzel jar in each one of her classrooms and spread the word in her classes (she teaches Marine Ecology.) It was amazing how quickly they filled up.  I started a little pile on my kitchen counter, and in the two weeks we were off for spring break, I had ammassed quite a few.

Today I made a sign, which I hung around the neck of an empty glass vase that’s already half-full with caps (someone gave us a case of sparkling water, which mercifully is almost gone; the others are from detergent, vitamins, and the occasional juice or soda) and placed it in my studio.  I’m telling my students about it in hopes that they’ll bring their caps to me, and in hopes that they’ll ask the tough questions that no one wants to ask: why is this so complicated?  Why do we have to mail these away to recycle them?  Why did we start producing them in the first place?  And, most importantly, can we stop?