Posts tagged with "recycling"


Mutually exclusive resolutions?

It’s the first day of 2009, so I thought one of my resolutions should be to blog more often. So far, so good…

It’s strange - things have slowed down on the blogging front since Glen Tilt, for all of us, not just me. I came away from Perthshire with a long list of things I wanted to write about, and since then we have all been encouraged with ideas and questions, particularly in relation to the festive period: has NC made us think about Christmas and consumerism differently? What can we do to make it more sustainable? Etc, etc. But, it’s been hard - harder to write than I thought. So of course, the questions running through my head haven’t been those big ones, but instead trying to analyse the blogging block.

Aside from the fundamental worry that anything I have to say isn’t of the remotest interest to anyone outside of our small group, there is a sense of being stuck, but I just haven’t been able to articulate it. So, during this holiday period, I’ve tried really hard to focus, and think about what it means.

It finally struck me today, when I was talking about new year resolutions over lunch - the answer to the question “What are your hopes for 2009″ was that the one thing that I really want is to get “it” back, but I don’t know how.

“It” is the incredible sense of elation that I - we all - felt after Knoydart and Glen Tilt (the former especially). Impossible to put into words, but it was a sense of pieces clicking into place, a calmness mixed with euphoria. Since then, I’ve written about my wondering how to “bring that back” - how to bring the wilderness into my life more, and that is what is proving so incredibly hard. I’m beginning to think that doing so  - given the way in which my lifestyle and I are currently constructed so that they completely mitigate against me spending more time in the wild - is mutually exclusive. It’s been tough enough managing to find the time to go for a walk on the beach during this holiday, never mind when I’m working. Family, home, commitments, my own motivation - they all make it difficult. Then again, I say the same thing about going to the gym more..

But, encouragingly, some things have changed - there has been a fundamental shift. Previously, I think I did my recycling duties and environmental worrying more out of a sense of intellectualism rather than anything else. I was being told I had to worry about it, and that I was a good citizen if I did my bit, so I did. Now, I’m doing it because I WANT to, because it’s important, because it matters - it matters very much indeed.

And I do want to get out more. Put simply, when I do, I feel better. Just an hour on a beach in the late afternoon winter sunshine was enough to make me feel calmer amd more relaxed. So,  maybe that is enough. I’m unlikely to ever do the Knoydart thing again - though never say never - but maybe if I manage, even just once a month, a walk on the beach or a trip to a forest, that will keep the connection alive, as well as keep the passion to make sure I’m one of the ones who tread lightly burning every day.

 

Posted: January 1, 2009 | Author: Louise Macdonald | Comments: 

Logic versus Emotion

Suffering from a real sense of frustration as I write this, which I’m not sure is the best state of mind to be writing a blog, but anyway…

I think I’m picking this up elsewhere in other people’s blogs, and maybe this is all “part of the process”, but the frustrations are multi-layered for me at the moment. A list might be in order, as cogent sentences are tricky right now:

1. It this all just a bunch of middle-class, indulgent nonsense? It’s definitely felt like that sometimes - particularly the look on some people’s faces when you try to explain. I’ve certainly failed in trying to explain it to my hairdresser… a story for another blog…

2. How do you move this beyond a small group of individuals who have had incredibly transformative experiences through their personal encounters with nature, to something which makes mass impact? That really was on my mind as I raced along the street in the pouring rain the other day, caught short in my reveries of the rain on the solo day in beautiful Knoydart by the sight of a homeless man, sat outside a shop, resigned as the downpour fell on him. I bet it’s unlikely he finds beauty anywhere, and that makes my heart hurt.

3. Language, language, language - the communications bit is driving me crazy (which I suppose you’d expect from an ex-tabloid hack). Thinking that if I’m going to take my responsibilities to this project seriously, I need to get more informed, I went to an event on climate change. It was completely and absolutely impenetrable. No wonder people retreat to recycled bags and energy-saving lightbulbs, it’s a darn sight easier. I was left feeling stupid (and I’m not, I’m a smart person - not academic - but smart) - by all the language and theories. But when I spoke to someone after it, they were dismissive, vehemently saying that the ubiquitous “Top 10″ recycling tips just aren’t enough to save us. Which left me thinking: “Well, if they aren’t, someone’s going to have to find a new way of making this accessible” - and, as Dave’s recent post http://www.naturalchange.org.uk/dave-key/dont-despair/  points out, making people feel like the end of the world is nigh ‘aint gonna cut it.

4. Lastly to the title of this post - logic versus emotion. This is how it feels - the logical arguements overwhelming the emotion. I still feel the experience of that first weekend so strongly -I’ve not lost it, despite the “blankets” of daily life - but it does feel, if not diminished, then not powerful enough, on it’s own, to change things. And yet…what the people who have responded to these blogs have shown, it is the emotional side of things which touches them, which moves them: comments on personal testimony, on pictures, on poetry, are clear enough signs of that. Is that the path to natural change? But how does that sit with the arguements over scale of response?

I’m drifting into territory I don’t yet know how to express. There is no neat conclusion to this blog for me - just a jumble of questions - but maybe you have some thoughts you want to share?

Posted: November 1, 2008 | Author: Louise Macdonald | Comments: