Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
When
I recently wrote about "what
I want", included in the list
was:
To become better at
presenting, conversing and demonstrating, through self-study of
presentation, memory, and effective listening skills.
To become an
exceptional and renowned story-teller.
From my study to date, it would appear that the best presentations
bring together two other skills I seek to acquire: they are all
practiced to the point they are substantially memorized, and they all
include compelling, first-person stories.
So, I wondered, if it is really my
Purpose to make a difference in
the world in one or more of these seven ways:
Helping people cope
with civilization's collapse.
Obsolescing industrial
agriculture.
Helping people find
the right collaborative partners.
Deschooling society.
Helping people learn
about sustainable community.
Helping people learn
to deal with complexity.
Helping people
discover the work they're meant to do.
then could I create an elevator pitch, a short 5-minute personal story,
to articulately explain why I cared about each of these issues, and
perhaps in the process engage others in these causes? This would allow
me to practice memorization on something shorter than a major
presentation, and also practice my story-writing and story-telling
skills.
I started with the first of these seven issues, helping people cope
with civilization's collapse. How could I convey why I cared about this
(and why I believed that collapse was inevitable) in just 5 minutes? It
seemed an impossible task. But that's what practice is about. So far,
I've come up with this story:
A few years ago I
quit my high-pressure 60-hour-a-week job, for health
reasons, and started to read again. In my youth I'd been an ardent
environmentalist, so I started reading the books on the state of the
world and how we might 'save' it. The more I read the more alarmed and
dismayed I became.
When I looked at the major indicators of human activity, they
all looked a little like this -- increasing exponentially, with the
"tipping point", when the curve really took off, occurring in most
cases about 1900, when the oil-powered economy began:
Population, resources extracted, land
used, total consumption, violent human deaths, aggregate wealth -- they
all followed the same mind-boggling curve. When I looked a little
closer, I could see
these curves leveling off very slightly. At first I hoped and expected
that these curves would end up looking like this:
But as I read more, and became a student of history, and
sustainability, I began to recognize the curve to be something
different -- it is the left side of a "normal curve":
I learned that there is no such thing as "sustainable growth". Every
civilization
ends, and when it does, all its indicators describe a normal curve. It
collapses quickly, and then, a shadow of its former self, slowly fades
away. When I read and talked with climate
scientists, and experts in non-renewable resources, and
anthropologists, and population biologists, they explained that
it isn't a matter of if
our civilization is going to end, but how
and
when.
Jared Diamond and Ronald Wright, expert students of past
civilizations, described the inexorable pattern of rise and
fall in great detail.
In fact, I discovered, our civilization is already ending. What
biologists call the "sixth
great extinction" of biodiversity on Earth began millennia ago, and it
is plunging down the right side of the normal curve slope faster than
in any of the first five. Our human population is already twice the
sustainable
carrying capacity of the planet even with no allowance for any other
living creatures, and is on pace to hit six times the planet's carrying
capacity before population peaks at 150% of today's and resource use
peaks at triple today's.
I read more, growing more disturbed the more I learned. I learned that
we are rapidly running out of almost every renewable resource -- most
notably oil, water, nutritive soil, ocean life and forests, and that
species
extinction is accelerating. I learned that we have already surpassed
the level of
atmospheric pollution that will inevitably create almost unimaginable
climate change --
disappearance of all the world's forests, huge sea level rise, constant
storms that will dwarf Katrina in ferocity and decimate vital human
infrastructure,
global-scale drought, flooding, and desertification. Even the most
optimistic climate scientists are now acknowledging that the changes
are accelerating and occurring faster and more intensely than they ever
expected, and that we have already passed the "tipping point" -- our
civilization is now starting to become the latest casualty of the sixth
great extinction. By the end of this century or early in the next, it
is likely that human population will drop 90% from its
mid-century peak, down the right side of the normal curve, even if we
do our best to mitigate and adapt to these
catastrophic changes.
The conclusion of this research, which is never discussed in the
newspapers or other mainstream media, filled me with despair. The
overwhelming weight of evidence was clear: The collapse of our
civilization has already
begun, there is no going back, and its effects are going to be unlike
anything the world has seen since a cosmic accident caused the
extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. The last part of this
century is going to be chaos, as we slide down the normal curve. And
then it's going to get very quiet. Yet everyone seems to be in a state
of total denial.
At first, as I read about what we've done, I thought of our
civilization as a colossal failure. But as I thought more, and read
some books of modern philosophy by thinkers like John Gray who have,
like me, done their scientific research, I realized our civilization
has
been, by every measure, an astonishing success. What our species has
accomplished since the start of the curve a mere couple of hundred
thousand years ago, through ice ages and staggering challenges to our
survival, is nothing short of miraculous. What we have created and
maintained, against all the laws of nature, through thirty millennia of
relentless struggle for 'progress', is simply awesome. We should
be proud, not ashamed, of what we have done.
But, I thought, as I reflected on what I had learned, it's time to let go.
It is time, I concluded, to begin the cleaning up of the
mess we made while we we were having so much fun with the grand human
experiment. And, most importantly, I fervently believe it's time to
mitigate the damage we
are doing now, so the suffering that has already begun can at least be
minimized, and it's time to learn to adapt to the changes we have
unleashed so
that the survivors of the collapse will be prepared for the brave, new,
wonderful, uncivilized world they will inherit after we've gone. I
think we owe
them, and the world, that much.
So I turned my research to possible solutions, and I learned that most
of the well-intentioned projects that got us to where we are today --
industrial agriculture, globalization, the growth economy, high-tech
and so on -- are of no use whatsoever in managing descent, helping us
with the transition to a post-civilization world.
Instead, we need to re-learn self-sufficiency and how to make things
work on a small, community-based scale. So far I've discovered a
consensus, among most of those who are working in the transition
movement, for the value of the following 12 projects, and I offer them
to you, for what they're worth, as my personal action plan and my best
guess answer to what we can do, today, to make a difference, and in our
own modest way, to save the world:
My Knowing and Learning Projects:
Understand
What's Happening: Before I can engage others and act purposefully and
effectively I need to understand how this complex world really works
(not what they tell you in school or in the media about how it works).
I'm pretty far along in this.
Imagine What's
Possible: Next, I need to be able to imagine a better world, one that
is not addicted to growth and consumption. If I can't imagine it, I
will never be able to decide how to achieve it. I'm writing a novel to
do this, based on what I've read about steady-state economies.
Be Pragmatic and
Realistic: There are many things I can do, and many wonderful-sounding
but unenforced, unenforceable and/or ineffective regulations and
actions, so I need to learn what actions actually work.
Know Myself:
Then, to assess what I can do about all this, I need to know myself,
which means giving myself the time and space to discover who I really
am, what my true gifts, passions and purpose are, and -- what is at
their intersection -- what I'm meant to do.
Build Personal
Capacity: I then need to discover and acquire the additional capacities
I need to be effective at bringing about change in the world. This
doesn't entail changing myself to be what I'm not, just
learning some new skills and abilities. In my case, it's presentation,
demonstration and community survival skills.
My Teaching and Sharing Projects:
Converse and
Tell Stories: Once I've learned these things, I can start to engage
others in enthusiastic, passionate, authentic conversation, so my
efforts aren't fragmented and isolated. Not to persuade, but to inform,
explore opportunities, find allies.
Engage
Obstructionists: I need to talk with politicians and business people I
know and meet, show them I care, present them with new, objective
information, and proffer positive, practical ideas.
My Doing Projects:
Be an Activist
and Pioneer: I have to pick a focus: political, social, economic,
health care or (probably for me) educational
reform. We must organize to confront people with power who don't
respond to reasonable conversation and information-sharing. And show
people the way by experimentation and example.
Create
Responsible, Sustainable Enterprises: My experience shows that rather
than trying to reform existing organizations we must create new
'natural' enterprises that let us to do the work we are meant to do,
and at the same time to stop supporting, with our labour and tax
dollars, unsustainable organizations.
Be a Model: I
will live a life that's sufficient (comfortable but not extravagant or
wasteful), loving, tolerant, attentive (listen more than I talk),
responsible (no complaining, just doing), and sustainable. And persuade
people that having more than one child in this overcrowded
world is an irresponsible, unsustainable act.
Create a Model
Community: Likewise, I need to co-create a collaborative, stewardship
community that's a model alternative to the wasteful, ineffective,
alienating, isolating 'neighbourhoods' of wary strangers living near
each other solely because of a mutual proximity to their place of
work.
Be Good to
Myself: And I must be good to myself and those I love, and not be
consumed by guilt, or despair, or grief, or neglect my health and
well-being. We have to pace ourselves and look after ourselves, and
each other, and celebrate our successes, if we hope to continue to make
a difference.
This story still needs a lot of work: it's too long (it needs to be cut
by 2/3 to fit into a 5-minute presentation), and my sentences, those of
a writer not a speaker, are too long and complex. But it's a start. The
challenge of memorizing it, and the other stories I plan to
write, is more imposing. I never had to memorize in school. Am I too
old to learn?
What about you? Is there an issue that you care about that would
benefit from constructing a short, compelling, personal story to tell
others, that would explain why you care and perhaps engage them to join
you? What might your world-changing story look like?
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs