Finding Sustainability In Rural America

August 2, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Where did you first hear about sustainability? Did a friend tell you what it meant to live a sustainable life? Did you read about it first?

I learned from my family and my home state, Vermont.

Are You a Yankee?

I recently heard someone on NPR describing being a Yankee. If you ask a European what a Yankee is, they’ll say an American. An American will say a New Englander. A New Englander will say a Vermonter. And a Vermonter will say a farmer.

Yankees grow up self-reliant. Vermont farmers learned a long time ago to take care of what takes care of them – the soil. Unlike the Western U.S., Vermont doesn’t have virtually unlimited land. You only have so much land, and you have to make it work for generations.

While growing up, I remember watching my mother create balls of soap by melting down soap remains with those small soaps my father brought home from hotels. Granted, for most of my childhood, my mother’s only job was being a mother, so she had more time to devote to sustainability.

The Answer Is in Our Past

Some of us barely have time to handle the necessities of life, let alone spend time mending, cooking, clipping coupons, shopping for bargains, gardening, cleaning…. In our quest to achieve (some might argue, survive), we have lost some of the simple acts of sustainability many of our parents performed. We look to the media, the market place and the future to direct our behaviors. Maybe we should start looking to our past.

In traditional societies, the elders, the connection to the ancestors and traditional way, are honored. When a man or a woman has a problem they can’t solve, they consult their advisors – the elders. In the current Western world, we believe our sole salvation lies in the future and data. If I had more knowledge, I could solve this problem.

Self-Reliance

Obviously, I believe in technology’s ability to assist us; after all, I created this blog. There is great potential with what we are collective creating. Yet, there is something missing. We need more than knowledge and technology. We need the wisdom of our past so we don’t repeat a history we wouldn’t want.

People like my mother, who grew in rural towns in the Depression, understood what it meant to rely on the land—and each other—as resources. Traditional “self-reliance” is being repackaged as “sustainability”. Self-reliance sounds like “I don’t need anyone”; sustainability is about working together.

Sustaining Together

While I was living in Phoenix, my mother got me a subscription to Vermont Life. Every month included an article about a community coming together. Every month I would read the article in tears. Just writing this brings back the tears.

A family’s barn would burn down. That weekend the entire town would show up to rebuild the family’s barn. It was a party. Much like the Amish, Vermonters took care of each other. They took care of themselves.

I remember years ago reading an article about a town that created a halfway house for state prisoners. The community felt it was a good investment to support and train the men who were their soon-to-be-neighbors. My tears were flowing reading about how a local resident developed a new relationship with one of these men. The resident saw goodness in the man. He took great pride in supporting the development of that goodness.

My hope is that we can slow down enough to experience simpler pleasures. As we slow down, we utilize the resources of our past and our community to deepen our collective sustainability. Are you slowing down to sustain a deeper life? Let us know your challenges and your successes with living a sustainable lifestyle.

Zeer - Social network for food

July 17, 2008 | 1 Comment

Zeer is a social networking site focused on food with a database of over 100,000 food items searchable by UPC codes. You learn the “Nutrition Facts” as well as the ingredients of a product. You can also read or generate reviews on a product. The site will allow you to generate a shopping list for your mobile phone and store shopping lists on the site.

It was inevitablethat someone would bring social networking to grocery shopping. Now we just need someone to do it for us.

Off the Wall Green

July 13, 2008 | Leave a Comment

You may have heard of living roof – roofs that are grow everything from
native grasses to gardens. Now walls are getting their chance to grow not
graffiti, but an array of eatable plants. In Los Angeles, this summer a
Rochester, N.Y. company, Green Living
Technologies
is making walls that you can eat. Just like with living roofs,
you get the same benefits of insulations to decreasing urban runoff from
rain.

When Not to Go Organic

July 9, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Greenopolis give us a simple list what foods are the safest when not organic. If we are on a budget, this guide can help.

How Whole is Walmart?

June 30, 2008 | 1 Comment

A week ago, I was at the LOHAS, which stands for Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability. It is a conference for the companies that sell to the whole and green market. One of the interesting panels lead by Simran Sethi was the one with Whole Foods and Walmart. Diane Hatz
Founder/Director of Sustainable Table wrote a great post on how the sustainable food movement is now going mainstream; the fun part of her post is her comment about Rand Waddoups from Walmart.

The green movement is becoming an institution. The whole movement has yet to be defined. Conferences such as LOHAS are beginning to address what is a whole company. As with the green movement, much of that answer will come from the consumer. You will determine what it is to be a whole business.

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