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  • Not the Anti-Environmentalist He Thought He Was

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    I once had a sparrow alight upon my shoulder for a moment, while I was hoeing in a village garden, and I felt that I was more distinguished by that circumstance that I should have been by any epaulet I could have worn.

    -Henry David Thoreau

    So. As you know, I have three children. And if you have paid careful attention, you’ve learned that they have a father, to whom I am married. I don’t speak of him much here, and for months I was strictly under orders not to speak of him at all. Why is this?

    Because Jeffrey does not want to play my reindeer games. When I began this blog, he was mortified by my “treehugging bull”. He did not recycle. He went through a can of Lysol a week. He sprayed Raid like it was going out of style. He would wash a single pair of jeans, on hot, and then run it through the express cycle in the dryer. He forbade me to buy any more seed for the backyard birds. “Rats with wings,” he said.

    This led, more times than I care to admit, to a mental and ethical crisis when I would sit to write a post. How could I speak of moving towards a sustainable, environmentally conscious life when I lived with someone who cancelled out my every move? I wanted to give up and give in, on all of it- the greening, the caring, the writing- all the time.

    But I didn’t. Partially because I’m a contrary pain in the butt and given to a certain level of passive aggressiveness. Partially because you can’t unlearn what you already know, and I knew too much about how little acts add up to bigger change.

    But mostly because I think other people’s behavior serves as poor excuse for your own.

    So I kept at it. I grew a garden, and Jeff grudgingly helped (otherwise I surely would killed everything. I have a black thumb). I kept recycling, and one day I noticed I was no longer having to pull Jeff’s recyclables back out of the trash. I mentioned that I wanted Jeff to build me a compost bin, and he didn’t immediately dismiss it.

    Maverick continued to feed the birds, and to tell his father which birds were at the feeder. Soon Jeff was drinking his coffee at the window watching the feeder, and identifying each bird by name.

    On cold days he’ll tsk tsk me for forgetting to feed them.

    Sunday was a rare day with nothing scheduled, nothing particular to do, and Jeff was going batty, pacing the house, when there was a loud thwap against the bedroom window. I didn’t even look up from the book I was reading; I knew what that sound meant. We have an enormous window in that room, and almost every day some poor bird flies into it. Cassidy knows the drill; when we hear the noise she goes and checks that all the cats are indoors, and then keeps an eye on the stunned bird until it recovers and flies away.

    Jeff, however, is not usually home during the day, and went to investigate. Upon looking outside, he cried out, “Oh, no! Tufted Titmouse is my favorite bird!” He then ran out the door- no coat, no shoes, mind you- and cradled the titmouse in his tough-guy, anti-environmentalist hands.

    He held that bird out in the frigid cold and fed it sunflower seeds until it regained its wits and took off.

    Why am I telling you all this? I am offering this story as inspiration to take heart and keep going. The bagger at the grocery store may give you the skunk-eye when you pull out your reusable shopping bags, and your husband, like mine, may favor mass-produced non foods like TastyKakes over the all natural, healthier snacks that you labor over. There are many people who don’t understand or don’t care about the green movement- yet.

    But they see you. They see that you care.

    You are making a difference.

    A little bit here, a little bit there. It happens without you even knowing it.

    And sometimes, you get to witness the difference you’ve made.

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    P.S. I feel I should add that after this took place, I sent Jeff to the store to pick up some fruit for lunches. He selected grapes packed in a plastic bag, which he then deposited into a plastic produce bag, which came home bagged in a plastic grocery bag. So we’ve still got a ways to go.

    But at least now he likes birds. So much so that he has a favorite.

  • Weekend Reading


    What was the worst toy of the year? It’s so hard to choose just one! I think I would go with the FurReal Friend Biscuit My Lovin’ Pup. Sitting at 21 inches high and requiring 6 D batteries, animatronic Biscuit defies all the gentle simplicity of the inexpensive book series and sells at a suggested retail price of $199. I don’t care how many commands that dog responds to (looks like six), I can adopt a REAL LIFE DOG for two hundred bucks.

    Notice I don’t link directly to Amazon here (athough they do get the photo credit).
    That’s because I don’t want anybody getting any funny ideas!

    Rant aside, Biscuit didn’t make the cut for the worst toy of 2008. Check out which toys did and vote for the very worst of the worst! ( Let me know which one you chose!)

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    Bring Back Thrift Week!

    “In 1916, with the First World War looming imminently on the horizon, the leaders of America’s major civic organizations launched an ambitious education campaign designed to ready the American public for a wartime economy. Dubbed “National Thrift Week” and sponsored primarily by the Young Men’s Christian Association (Y.M.C.A.), the campaign became a recurring celebration, beginning each year on January 17, in honor of the birthday of Benjamin Franklin, the “American apostle of thrift.”

    I love this concept of Thrift Week, especially when “thrift” is taken into context as a derivative of “to thrive”. Green living and thriftiness go hand-in-hand; it’s all about not being wasteful, avoiding overconsuming, making mindful decisions, and fully maximizing and appreciating what you have.

    If you also support the notion of a campaign for public education of thrift and personal finance, click on over here for some action points.

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    The most horrifying thing I’ve read in a while: Eight year old kids can identify 25 percent more Pokemon characters than wildlife species. Now, this statistic is dated 2002, which was the absolute height of Pokemania (at least in my house). What do you think the kids would be asked to name today? Harry Potter characters? Spongebob episodes?

    Definitely check that article out, it’s chock full of interesting facts about children’s relationships with nature.

    Like this one:

    Factoring out other variables, studies of students in California and nationwide show that schools that use outdoor classrooms and other forms of nature-based experiential education produce significant student gains in social studies, science, language arts, and math. One recent study found that students in outdoor science programs improved their science testing scores by 27 percent. (American Institutes for Research, 2005)

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    Not eco-related in any way: How cool is this bedside table lamp?

    Only a prototype at present, alas.
    I have begun dropping subtle hints; any bets on how long it takes before Jeff gives in and makes me one?

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    Russ Edelman writes over at the Huffington Post on Change- A Call to Action For All of Us; pointing out that having inspiring, game-changing leadership is only half the story. The other half, the working half, is the execution of the change by the people.

    What I love love love about this article is the list of how to start:

    1. Speak Up when you can make a difference! (Those who know me know I champion speaking up even when you can’t!)
    2. Confront Situations you would otherwise avoid!
    3. Expect Results from yourself and others!
    4. Now is the time to Be Bold!

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    Finally, since I’ve decided I like closing with videos: vintage NWF Public Service Announcements featuring the Muppets! (Email subscribers, you know the drill, click through to the site to view video.)

    Enjoy the rest of your weekend!

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    The least change in our point of view,
    gives the world a pictorial air.

    -Ralph Waldo Emerson

    I am still working hard to find the beauty in our backyard landscape, difficult though it is in this neverending cold. My shoes squelch in the mud formed by the (finally) melting snow. It is a yucky feeling.

    The winter light renders everything as illuminated from within, and reminds me of another favorite Emerson passage:

    A man should learn to detect and watch
    that gleam of light
    which flashes across his mind from within,
    more than the lustre of the firmament of bards and sages.

    Yet he dismisses without notice his thought,
    because it is his.

    In every work of genius
    we recognize our own rejected thoughts;
    they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty.

    Great works of art have no more affecting lesson for us than this.

    They teach is to abide by our spontaneous impression
    with good humoured inflexibility then most
    when the whole cry of voices is on the other side.

    Else tomorrow
    a stranger will say with masterly good sense
    precisely what we have thought and felt the whole time,

    and we shall be forced to take with shame
    our own opinions from another.

    It doesn’t roll trip-trappingly off the tongue, but it stands and roars to me;

    it says that I matter as much as anyone else;

    it says that I knowingly and willingly belittle myself
    when I keep my opinion unspoken because it is mine,
    just little old me, no one wants to hear from me;

    it says that if I keep retreating, I go nowhere, and it is my own doing.

    Undoing.

    Teddy Roosevelt said, “All the resources we need are in the mind.”

    Eleanor Roosevelt said, “No one can make you feel inferior without your permission.”

    It’s difficult.

    I grew up in a house that reminded me, god, over and over, “You’re not so special.”

    I cringed as I was told to shut up.

    I was told “You think you’re so smart. But you’re not. Look, I’ve saved every crossword puzzle you failed to finish.” (I wish that was a joke.)

    It’s difficult.

    The words are inspiring, they call to me; they can only begin to instill feelings of worthiness in someone who has spent a lifetime feeling worthless.

    It’s an uphill battle.

    I climb.