Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Friday, October 5, 2012

Goodbye... I'm so happy and sad all at the same time!

Well, everyone, this is it: the last post. I have exhausted my resources for this blog, and so it's time to move on to other things in my life. I feel so happy that I have completed this blog, yet so sad that I have to let go. I will definitely think about this more before I post this for real.
To those of you who are seeing my blog for the first time, feel free to look around! I have spent many hours working on this blog. But for the rest of you...

On the weekend, I attended the 2012 Youth Summit for Biodiversity and Environmental Justice, as an Ontario Nature Youth Council member. It was one of the best weekends of my life. I didn't have time to post anything that Friday, because the moment I got home from school, I had to have lunch and then pack my bags.
One of the workshops I attended was about Global Governance and Environmental Justice (or something like that). A particularly memorable moment was when the presenter, who worked as a critic of global governments, took a look at the colourful masses of acronyms that she had written on a paper on an easel and joked, "So this is my life. I'm trying to figure it out." The moral of the story: don't get bogged down by a bunch of terminology and super-long acronyms unless you have to.
I'm trying to figure out my life, too. Has Hug A Tree Today, Seriously helped me with that? Perhaps. It has definitely given me a chance to make a difference in my own way, in my own time.
Sign from the YMCA camp where the summit was held.
The guest speaker was Simon Jackson, a Canadian from British Colombia who founded the Spirit Bear Youth Coalition. His story was an inspiring one. It made me realize just how easy it is to get public attention for your organization. Apparently, when the royal British princes came to visit Canada, Simon maneuvered himself right up to the front-- amidst hordes of screaming girls-- and asked the princes to help him save the Spirit Bear (which is a white variety of  black bear). And they did! Although the Spirit Bear is still in need of protection, he has come a long way towards saving this unique species.
 I am incredibly hopeful that we can make a difference in the world. I'm not giving up on my environmental activism by ending this blog. I still am on the ON Youth Council, I have a print 'zine on environmentally-friendly living, and I do other cool things on and off that I can't remember right now. Remember to continue to do your own things to help save the environment during your lifetime!

Oh, and I have a few more eco-tips for you all:
  • If you want clean, smooth, glowing skin, use sea salt! Simply wet your face (or hands, or whatever) with warm water and then rub sea salt onto your skin. Rub it in well and then rinse it off. Do a final rinse with cool water to close off your pores. It works really well.
  • Have you been considering alternative energy? Well, I want you to know that you shouldn't be too quick to jump on the bandwagon. Solar panels can disrupt bird migration patterns and take up large quantities of land. Wind turbines chop up tens of thousands of birds in the U.S. alone every year, and they also take incredibly large amounts of energy and land to operate. The best way to go is simply to conserve energy!
  • I suggest that you find another blog to follow now that mine is done. Find ways to be in nature. Keep up your eco-friendliness-- you will not regret it.
Now, a few parting words:
  1. To all the followers (official and unofficial) of this blog, you rock! You rock because you care about the environment and you are willing to do something about it. You rock because you've helped me reach and surpass my goal of 1000 pageviews by the end of the year. (Keep reading to find out how many pageviews I've achieved at the time of this writing.)
  2. Around New Year's Eve in 2011, I set the goal of reaching 1000 pageviews by the end of 2012. At the time of this writing, I have reached 3701 pageviews! And it's only October!
  3. If you have enjoyed following this blog or reading my posts, please go to The Animal Rights Action Site, which is now my official primary blog. I may start another blog at some point, but it most likely will be under a different name, for privacy reasons!
  4. Bye!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Have a good life, everyone.
Cat, signing out, ready to take on the world...

Friday, September 7, 2012

Earth-Friendly Meal Preparation

As an environmentally-concerned vegan, I have to put a lot of thought into how I prepare my food and what goes into it. I've already posted about the latter (the food you eat), but today, I want to talk about the former (how you prepare it).
Like most people, I do enjoy a hot meal, and am not particularly fond of half-cooked or boring foods. However, eco-friendly meal prep can be so much more than that-- read on to find out how!
  • Try a solar oven before winter settles in! You can find out how to make one here: http://www.ehow.com/how_2083_make-solar-oven.html. Please note that it may take twice as long for the food to cook in a solar oven, and you should not use it to cook raw meat or other foods that must be cooked in order to be safe. You can make vegan cookies, re-heat veggie lasagna, and more, and from what I've heard, it works!
  • Eat a cold meal once in a while. Chickpea salad, PB&J, vegetarian sushi, bean salad... the list is endless. To see a portion of the endless creative recipes you can use, please see http://goneraw.com/.
  • Instead of using an electric mixer, mix those ingredients manually by hand-- use that muscle power!
  • Buy food in large containers that can be re-used.
  • Avoid using plastic wrap to cover your food in the fridge. Either cover it with a plate or transfer it to a resealable container.
  • When washing food, put it in a bowl filled with water instead of running each piece individually under the tap.
  • Raw Vegan Food can look just like typical westernized food!
    Photo courtesy of www.lucidnutrition.com
    Until next week!

Friday, August 10, 2012

Want To Be REALLY Eco-Friendly?

For some of you, I'm sure that the day-to-day ways to go green aren't enough for you. You feel like you should be focussing everything you do on sustainability-- and if that's you, kudos to you! (If it's not, read this post for inspiration.) Here is my advice on how to truly live "the green life"... at school and work!

Beating the Consumeristic High School and Elementary School System
I have to say that school SUCKS (ahem, I mean, "does not meet my expectations") when it comes to eco-friendliness. Your teachers constantly expect you to use fresh-from-the-rainforest paper, pencils, and duotangs. Of course, you can get the recycled versions of these-- see my post Looking Forward to my Summer Vacation... And Eco-Friendly Office Supplies for details-- but there are also the myriad textbooks, paper handouts (enough to fill an entire binder for each class), lab assignments, etc. etc. etc. All highly consumeristic; enough to drive any young environmentalist up the wall and back down the other side again!
Sometimes it is just best to say goodbye to the regular high school amd elementary school system once and for all.
Wait! Don't drop out quite yet! Before you make any life-changing decisions, I want you to look at the alternatives.
For one thing, there is the homeschooling option. Homeschooling is sometimes misrepresented, however, so I feel the need to re-explain it to you by quoting Grace Llellewyn, editor of Real Lives: Eleven Teenagers Who Don't Go To School Tell Their Own Stories:
[Most Americans] probably associate homeschooling mainly with fundamentalist Christianity, and to most of us there is nothing fascinatingly wonderful or inconceivable about the idea of a miniature school-- complete with curriculum, parent-as-teacher-and-disciplinarian, rigid daily schedule, etc.--at home rather than in a school building... Anyway, if your definition of homeschooling is "school at home", you are partly right: For many people it is just that. But for thousands of others, it is nothing of the sort. Thousands of children in [America] grow up without being told what to do, without being formally taught to read and write, without being require to study biology, algebra, and Ernest Hemingway, without ever once being forced to read a particular book or complete a particular worksheet-- or any worksheet whatsoever."
And yet these children and teenagers go on to go to college (if they want to), get jobs (if they want to), and do pretty much what they want to with their lives. (Read the book if you are interested in hearing "success stories" about these people. I have the book open in front of me right now.)
If you decide to homeschool, you can make all your "classes" eco-friendly or environment-related. Wouldn't that be fun? Maybe I'm just obsessed with the environment, but it sounds downright groovy to me.
The particular strand of homeschooling in which there are no set classes and there is no rigid schedule is also known as "unschooling". Unschoolers learn the way they want to-- experiential learning at its finest. Unschooling is legal, although you may have to apply for an inquiry in order to get permission. It does not sound like a big deal, though.


Definition from www.homeschoolmosaics.com
Going to an Eco-Friendly University or College
There are plenty of environmentally-friendly universities and colleges to go to, as well as post-secondary schools which have environmentally-themed programs.
  • For a list of some of the best international eco-friendly colleges and universities, click here.
  • Click here for a list of some good ones in the United States, provided by the Princton Review (whatever that is).
  • If the two above links do not meet your needs, please do more research into the topic.
There are also groups on campus that focus on making your university/college a greener place. Again, look around and see how you can get involved. You should also strive to find eco-friendly housing while at your school, as well as continue living eco-friendly while you are there.

Eco-Friendly Careers
What about green careers? It turns out there are a lot of those, too. Any job that you want can be greenified. Here are some examples:
  • If you want to be a lawyer, work for an environmental organization to help them with their legal issues!
  • If you want to be a deli store owner, open a vegan deli store that uses recycled packaging!
  • If you want to be a writer, be an environmental writer (either freelance or for a magazine or for an organization)!
  • If you want to be a musician, weave your eco-values into your songs and merchandise!
  • Etc.! Etc.! Etc.!
There are also very environmentally-focused jobs. You can become a conservation biologist, an environmenal consultant, or an activist with an environmental organization.
I think that it is also importatnt to stress that if you are not happy with your current job, perhaps you should get out of it. Find something that you really want to do with your life-- greenified, of course. You certainly should not be wasting your life stressing about money and doing things you don't believe in!


So, if you are really serious about living a very eco-friendly life, try taking some of these ideas into consideration. You certainly won't regret it!
See you next week!

Friday, July 20, 2012

The Problems with the Internet

Whenever I hear Internet fanatics and well-intentioned fellow activists ranting about utilizing "The Power of the Internet", I release a little groan of annoyance (after all, I'm just reading their Internet rants at my computer, so they can't hear me!). They seem to think that the Internet is one of the best things that has ever happened to humanity. Now, I know that I shouldn't be saying this on an Internet blog and all, but really-- the Internet has some serious problems, and today I'm going to write about it.
1) The Internet is a myth.
Well, sort of, anyway. Not your typical fire-breathing, sword-wielding myth, but instead, a lie that we convince ourselves is true. Tell me: what IS the Internet? A bunch of electric signals shooting about space? Is it the servers which store all the information? Or is it everywhere you go, so long as you have the equippment to pick up a signal?
Everything you see on the Internet-- including my blog-- isn't real. It's just an image. If the electricity failed, it would be gone, and those of us who invest too much time in virtual reality would be left all alone in the real world, hopelessly confused as to how to truly live.
Although I still do use the Internet for my blogs and e-mail (and the occasional time-wasting mindless web-surfing), I try not to waste away very much of my life on something that isn't real.

2) The computer gobbles up a LOT of electricity.
American adults spend an average of 8 hours per day in front of a screen, according to http://www.sixwise.com/Newsletters/2009/April/22/Americans-Spend-Many-Hours-a-Day-Watching-Screens.htm. The average computer uses 100 to 330 watts of energy, according to http://www.wisegeek.com/how-much-electricity-does-a-computer-use.htm. Imagine how much electricity this uses! It is best to steer clear of screens in general!

3) The Internet takes away from REAL life.
Real life! I hope that those of you who are reading this have a real life. I'm sure some of you do, otherwise you would have clicked the "X" in the corner of the screen in disgust by now upon seeing that I was critisizing your religion of technologism!
Anyway, people can be so much happier when they aren't glued to a screen. The spontaneity of finding a silver quarter on the beach, the joy of talking with friends face-to-face, the thrill of standing at the top of a mountain that you just climbed-- *sigh*. Real life is amazing. The computer isn't. Even if you have written work to do, isn't it so much more relaxing to go and sit outside with a notebook and pencil than it is to sit and stare at the computer inside a stuffy basement? Well?

4) Computer systems become outdated within a few years. More and more computers are being thrown away every year.
It's quite a shame that we can't seem to be thankful for what technology we have instead of constantly trying to "improve" it to make it more "advanced". This only brings us farther from nature and deposits more toxic waste into our landfills. The less you use your computer, the less tempted you will be to buy a new one. Strange, perhaps, but true.

5) The Internet ruins community.
I have never gotten too excited about "building community", but it bears mentioning that the Internet replaces real community with a fake one.

6) The Internet is an advertising tool.
You want to sell something? Go to Google and they'll connect you with all the computer users who frequent websites and send e-mails that relate to your product. Which leads to my next point...

7) There is no privacy on the Internet!
Believe me, they don't want you to know this, but it is true. Your e-mails are not private. Nor are your "InPrivate" web surfings. Sure, your history teacher can't see them, but the web providers and the government can. And they can tell whoever they want. I read an article once in which the Canadian secret intelligence divulged information to us on what a Canadian official said in his private e-mails to a woman he was flirting with. I read the leaked portion of the e-mails, of course-- who wouldn't? But they shouldn't have done that. Apparently the workers who found the e-mails were all laughing behind his back and sending around the e-mails to their friends and family. What a disgrace!

8) The Internet sedates you and numbs your brain-- it's like a drug.
Is this intentional? Do the big corporations purposely try to placate us so that we don't think for ourselves? I'm not taking any more of this drug of modern society than I have to, thank you very much. It's like in The Hollow People by Brian Keaney-- read the book to know what I am talking aboiut.

9) The Internet keeps you from being physically active.
Simple, and obvious. Not only does it waste time that could otherwise be spent in a physically active way, but it also sedates you, making you not in much of a mood for exercise (see #8 for details).

10) The Internet keeps you away from nature, and this harms your mental health.
It has been proven that nature is good for your emotional well-being. Again, this should be obvious!

I strongly urge you to try to reduce your Internet and computer time right away. Still, come back to my blog to read my posts-- it's only once a week! Of course, if you are going completely screen-free for the rest of your life, then this is likely the last you will be seeing of my blog. But I doubt that most people would be prepared to do that, so there is no need for goodbyes.
Make a plan as to what Internet time you could cut out. Then, write up a schedule or a daily computer-time limit, and follow it! It's worth it, believe me!

See you next week!

Friday, July 13, 2012

Inspirational Filler Post, Or, Inspiration for Environmentalists

Last night I couldn't sleep very well. So I'm going to write a filler post.

Inspiration:
1) Never give up on what you believe in. Environmentalists are too smart to give up.
2) If you ever feel like nobody cares about the environment, tell yourself that they'll snap out of it eventually. Then they'll all adore you for being a trend-setter.
3) You can live according to your beliefs.
4) Don't procrastinate anymore. I mean it. I have to wait until I'm 18 to do a lot of the things I want to do it my life. So, I get a little annoyed when people do have the power to act now, but they don't act.
5) Start a blog. Or not. Maybe you could go leafleting. Or not. Go invite over all your friends to an eco-friendly party, just to show them how fun it is. Or not. Get a bumper sticker for your moped about eco-friendliness. Or not! I don't know! Just do something, please!
6) Keep reading my blog. I'm not being a very good writer today, but if you have read my other posts, I think you'll want to stay. Then I can reach more people with my message.

Ta-ta! See y'all next week.

Ontario Nature Youth Council
The Ontario Nature Youth Council. Guess which one is me!