Showing posts with label Green Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Christmas. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2009

The Spirit of Christmas All Year 'Round


Image: Movie still from the 1951 classic A Christmas Carol starring Alastair Sim
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This week's newspaper column: Read it in the Hattiesburg American.
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Everybody is buzzing now with the spirit of the holidays.

The Christmas season is when we Americans - no matter what race, religious affiliation (or none), and national origin – find a space in our busy schedules to come together and spend some quality time with family and friends. At Christmastime, we shower each other with gifts, plan parties, bake assorted sweet morsels, and find ourselves spontaneously wishing merriment to everyone we meet.

Petty grievances are set aside as diverse individuals congregate at family get-togethers and office parties. Disagreements fade as we find ourselves connecting with estranged acquaintances and saying nice things to people who we may otherwise secretly (or not so secretly) hold in contempt and avoid like the plague for eleven and a half months of the year. Festive decorations, over-the-top lighting, and Christmas carol soundtracks remind us to put away our hard feelings and celebrate the good in everybody.

All of a sudden, we seem to appreciate the value of “community.”

The young sage of Charles Dickens’ famous holiday classic of Christmas past, present, and future – Timothy Cratchit, better known as Tiny Tim – poetically captured this sentiment when, at the end of the tale, he exclaimed, “God bless us, every one!”

But how many times do we turn into hard-hearted Ebenezer Scrooge as soon as the tinsel is gone?

Scrooge epitomized an ethic of greed, distrust, and lack of respect for others, especially those he considered “beneath” him. His idea of a perfect society involved separating himself from people he found different, and thus, unappealing. His habit of demonizing those around him closed his eyes and ears to the value of each individual’s unique talents and contributions within the social fabric we vaguely refer to as community. In this cautionary tale, Scrooge’s intolerance, absent some not-so-gentle nudging from three convincing spirits, would have led to his undoing along with everyone else he so piously tried to bring down.

Sustainability is more popularly discussed in terms of physical objects - for example, green buildings – but the principles of sustainability apply quite adequately to the structure of our cultural and civic lives as well.

A sustainable community honors and respects diversity. Nature requires a wide variety of flora and fauna in the same ecosystem to remain healthy and viable. Nature honors and respects diversity; sustainable communities are no different. Demonizing those who have different backgrounds or ideas – a popular blood-sport in twenty-first century America – poisons the spirit of community and separates us as a culture.

Why not take this holiday spirit into the new year with the same energy and compassion? Try seeing the good in people first. Respect the differences in your neighbors, and, like Scrooge, you might wake up with a renewed love of life and a greater sense of “community.”

Too many devil’s advocates make life a living hell.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Have a Sustainable Christmas

This week's newspaper column.


For your piano-side Yule tide singing pleasure – a sustainable Christmas Carol sung to the tune of Deck the Halls.

Deck the Walls with stuff from China,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
Cough up dough and cut the whinin’.
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
Don we now name-brand apparel,
Fa-La-La, La-La-La, La La La.
What to buy for old Aunt Carol?
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.

See the blazing mall before us,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
Stand in line and join the chorus,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
Fight the traffic and the weather,
Fa-La-La, La-La-La, La La La.
Maxing cards out altogether,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.

Fast away the paycheck passes,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
iPods for the lads and lasses,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.
All stressed out for Christmas season,
Fa-La-La, La-La-La, La La La.
Can’t remember quite the reason,
Fa-La-La-La-La, La-La La-La.


In the run-up to Christmas, shopping can be stressful, especially in a sprawled-out world where disconnected strip malls are only accessible by traffic-jammed roads, and angry anxious shoppers over-crowd big box stores. Yet the expectations are clear; we all enjoy exchanging gifts and watching children light up when they rip into their Christmas morning treasure.

Maybe having a greener Christmas can take some of the stress out of it all.

First, keep in mind that you do not have to buy presents for everyone, even if you intend to give something to everyone.

Make something. A hand-drawn card, a crocheted scarf, a handsome birdhouse assembled from recycled lumber – the possibilities are endless.

You may say “I’m not artistic. I can’t make anything.” No Worries.

Do something. Enhance the experience of gift-giving by participating in the gift itself. Take a friend to the museum, rake the leaves in your grandparent’s yard, give your wife a gift certificate for foot rubs – be creative and you may see your gift flower into something even more sustainable.

Now I am not suggesting that people should stop buying Christmas presents altogether. Beyond the macro-economics of it all, it is a wonderful and heart-felt experience to give or receive a shiny new fill-in-the-blank.

But there is a greener way to shop.

Be selective. Look for quality over quantity. Buy something well-crafted, not some trinket that you know, deep down, will wind up in a landfill a few months on. Buy something built to last.

Buy Local. Use your purchasing power to support artisans, farmers, and businesses near you. Look around; the perfect present could be right around the corner - a gift certificate to a favorite restaurant or store in your neighborhood, a painting from a local artist, a basket of seasonal veggies from the farmer’s market. Again, be creative, keep an eye out for opportunities, and you can help sustain your local environment.

So be a little greener, and not quite so red this holiday season. And have a very sustainable Christmas.