DEEP GREEN resilience: Taming your household waste

Taming your #HouseholdWaste !!!
Video duration 6:33

mini workshop about minimizing household trash

I turned a typical USA American single person one or two days’ worth of trash into basically zero trash! (Thank you to the friend who allowed me to use their trash as an example of what’s possible.)

The practices I mentioned here are not only helpful for the planet, but also great for your household for numerous reasons. For a couple of examples, it keeps food out of the trash which reduces smells, reduces the weight, and reduces the bulk.

This becomes valuable in a whole other way in the wake of a hurricane or other disaster, when landfills can be closed and trash removal services can be suspended. It’s helpful emotionally, not just physically. Because if we don’t feel dependent on someone to come deal with our trash, we don’t feel so vulnerable and helpless.

This works for many other things as well. Please stay tuned for other installments in this series.

#PermacultureHomeEc #ZombieApocalypseWatchParty #DoomerBoomerDomesticScience #DEEPGREENresilience #RiotForAusterity #HouseholdWaste #DisasterPreparedness

Constructive laziness: Ease up on post-hurricane yard fuss

Excerpt from my upcoming book CONSTRUCTIVE LAZINESS: How to help Mother Earth and all Her creatures by slacking off and doing as little as possible:

“People who feel like they URGENTLY have to clean up hurricane debris from their yards, when the wind hasn’t even died down all the way; and furthermore, who side-eye their neighbors for not jumping to it fast enough … I think those people seriously need a new hobby.

“The whole compulsion to start ‘cleaning up’ right away, it’s so uptight and Puritan. A bit of wholesome laziness is surely in order!!”

Throwback Tuesday (a forgotten memory from 2006)

What the throwback memory is about:

This morning after a night of vivid dreams (like I hear a lot of you have been having vivid dreams as well), I woke up with a memory from 2006.

From March thru September 2006, I attended a six-month eco school in New Mexico. (I was living in Austin at the time, in a little travel trailer at a beautiful urban paradise of an RV park. I rented out my trailer to a friend while I was in Santa Fe.)

The application form for the school, one of the questions was an essay question asking applicants to project into the future, and what we envisioned our role would be regarding climate change, community and so on.

In my essay, I was running an emotional support center for people struggling to cope with climate change and biospheric collapse.

Services included: Emotional support, physical resources, permaculture education, practical training, mutual aid. And games, and crafts. And just being there for people.

And this morning when i woke up with that memory in my heart, I was like, oh yeah, that’s this house! That’s what this house is all about. Now, I’ve always known that’s what this house is all about. And furthermore that’s the main reason why I even came to Daytona Beach. From Austin, a place where I also was able to contribute to the permaculture/resilience knowledge base & community before being called here.

But, I had forgotten all about that old future projection essay from 2006, and it was sort of comforting and validating to remember it this morning around 5 when I got up.

I am here to serve! I wish I were a better version of me, but I will keep striving to be that. I get that we are all works in progress.

That said, I really really want us to get very serious and step up our game to do some simple things to help mitigate the stress we are putting on the planet.

I’m going to become more vocal in the wider community; I have struggled with my messaging and all that. Sometimes bad messaging can totally undermine an effort. But I just have to keep working on it.

I am sad sometimes and angry with myself, because I have not been communicating the urgency of things as effectively as I would have liked. And nowhere near as effectively as the level of crisis calls for.

Love you guys always! It is an honor to serve both locally and globally.

If you want to support my efforts to get the word out, please like and follow my Facebook page DEEP GREEN book by Jenny Nazak and blog www.jennynazak.com

Note, not all of the posts are for a civilian audience, so if a post seems too extreme, just know that it’s probably not meant for you, and please just feel free to take what you need and leave the rest.

I am always trying different ways of expressing things so that I can reach more people. My goal is to help the planet — our spaceship & life-support system — but also to help people be more secure and less vulnerable (emotionally, spiritually, and economically).

— jenny nazak, eco educator and community activist, community servant, earth soldier

Fear is the mind-killer 2024

Stirring up xenophobia, racism, transphobia, homophobia is straight out of the fascist playbook.

Hitler rose to power when people felt economically threatened. And when people feel economically threatened, many people (particularly people who don’t have strong community and/or have not learned ways to process their fear and other emotions) seek scapegoats and authoritarian strongman rule.

Sound familiar? Sounds like we’re living a repeat of that.

It would be good if people could take a deep breath and acknowledge their economic anxiety and we could work together on policies that will reduce extreme income inequality and extreme wealth inequality, address the housing affordability crisis, and address other factors that are causing people to be in such economically dire straits.

I’ve heard it said that fear is the mind-killer. (I searched, and it turns out this is a quote from Frank Herbert’s science-fiction novel Dune.)

But, fear is nonetheless a normal and healthy human emotion. In some cases a lack of fear can actually be pathological and lead us into danger.

I have found that it’s good to acknowledge my fear. Speak it out loud and-or write it down as needed.

And then, use the mind-centering techniques I have learned and practiced over the years. I highly recommend that everyone develop a toolkit of simple, quick mind-centering and grounding techniques. There are lots of good ones out there. If you want some suggestions, feel free to get in touch.

Start catching water as far uphill as possible

It often happens before a big forecast storm, that people get upset about a canal that’s clogged with vegetation. “It needs to be cleaned out! The water will have no place to go!” Is what people tend to say.

I want our local governments to get more aware of the fact that water flow starts far uphill of where the canals are, and our General Shermanesque “moonscape landscaping” policy does affect that.

We need to be catching water far higher up on the landscape. Every square centimeter of tree canopy & other vegetation that we remove unnecessarily, causes that much more water to end up down at the canals and other low points, where there will almost inevitably be a bottleneck.

One of the first things we learned in Permaculture class: Start collecting/retaining water as high uphill as we can, because once we are stuck trying to address it at the lower level it becomes a civil engineering project.

Also: I didn’t know this until fairly recently, but a key component of stormwater absorption is healthy soil. Healthy soil absorbs stormwater many times better than soil that has been sickened by poisons, ripping out topsoil, etc.

I learned that there are more microorganisms in a teaspoon of healthy soil than the number of humans on earth. It’s a whole tiny kingdom in there.

Power outage angst

My heart goes out to the people who are dealing with long-term power outages from Hurricane Helene. Multi-days which are likely to extend into weeks and months. Unfortunately we as a society have become very dependent on electricity.

In my book and on this blog, I share various tips for dealing without electricity and other modern conveniences that have come to be considered necessities. Reducing our vulnerability is good for our wallets and our communities.

But, that doesn’t mean it’s easy when people are just hit suddenly by loss of customary amenities. And extended outages. People have meds that need refrigerating; people have essential work equipment they can’t be charged up with a little bitty solar charger etc.

I am very fortunate. The only thing I really need electricity for is charging my phone, which is my main work device.

But, like probably most people in the USA, I have gotten used to being able to have the convenience of electricity.

In one storm a couple years back, we lost power for five days. Overall it was not a big deal for me, I could have gone on indefinitely,but it was a huge big deal for others and I felt bad about that.

For me, I think one of the main challenges of losing power was that I had gotten very used to the convenience of an electric kettle, and needed to relearn how to get good at heating water in the twig stove. Even though it was only for coffee, it was a big deal for me lol I am spoiled.

Also refrigeration. I once did without a refrigerator for three years but that was a voluntary experiment. (Which I have written about here on this blog.) I have done fridgeless experiments of shorter duration as well.

Somehow, though, having a lack of refrigeration imposed, as opposed to being something voluntarily undertaken, made it more of a challenge.

A big part of it was that when I was doing my fridgeless living experiments I didn’t have any housemates who were relying on the fridge and freezer. (I had housemates back then too, always have. But the people sharing my house back then never cooked, always ate takeout etc.)

Photo of my little bag where I keep electric chargers (for Bluetooth headphones, micro projector, mini speaker etc. And for a couple of little battery-powered lamps that hold a charge for a really long time. A friend who did irrigation tech at golf courses gave them to me some year back from their surplus stock).

This past week I embroidered a little lightning bolt on the bag for fun, and to make that unobtrusive little black nylon sack easier to see.

Conveniences are nice; I’m just sad that we have become so vulnerable. It’s just one example, many people in the USA have become dependent on hot showers even in the summer. Probably largely because of the existence of air conditioning, which artificially cools the air inside buildings. Shoot, I’ve even sometimes found myself wanting a hot shower when work or something else has occasioned me to spend extended time in an artificially cooled building!

It also occurs to me that some of the difficulty people have with power outages is simply a kind of emotional overwhelm that sets in. Never underestimate the influence of emotions. Loss of what we have come to consider necessities can just be demoralizing even if we know how to do without. The main antidote that I know for that is community. As with emotional despair in general.

Eating dinner from a cold can of beans alone in the dark is a world apart from sitting together with neighbors. You might still be eating that same cold can of beans but you’ll have company and maybe find it worth lighting a candle. (On that note, I think we all deserve the treat of a candle even if we are eating alone. Thrift stores sell old candles for super cheap. Oil lamps are nice as well.)

If you listen to people’s old-time hurricane stories, a lot of the good ones involve hanging out with neighbors; sharing food and other resources and helping each other deal with the emotional aspects.

One thing I noticed about our 5-day power outage a couple years back is it didn’t necessarily bring those kinds of shared hangouts. Instead it mainly seemed to bring a lot of people individually getting in their cars to drive to Starstrucks to get a coffee. I had visions of my housemates being able to take their melted frozen meat down the block to where someone had a barbecue fired up and might want to share heat in exchange for meat, but that didn’t seem to be going on.

I know I’m always harping on the importance of knowing at least a few neighbors, but I hope many of you will take that simple advice to heart before the next disaster hits your place.

PS. I may be alone in this, but I’m not gonna lie, I loved having the streetlights out for a few days. Those things are oppressive and aggressive, with a merciless white glare. Sometimes mockingbirds stay up all night singing, poor things don’t get any rest. And I can sit on my bench and read a book outside at night, that’s just wrong. I have been talking to my city about introducing more gentle but still effective types of street lighting. There’s a whole movement for environmentally responsible lighting; I’ve talked about it on this blog. Very inspiring examples out there. There are some “Dark Sky communities” where light pollution has been reduced so much that you can look up at night and see the Milky Way.

The real scoop on “Peak Oil”

“Unlike Hubbert, the Peak Oil movement of the early 2000s was concerned about declining oil production volumes. That’s where Peak Oil went wrong. What it got right was its emphasis on the economic consequences of peak oil. …

“For those who think that peak oil was a failed idea, a dead concept, think again. It happened decades ago and that explains why it has been so difficult to regain the robust economic growth of the past.

“The real cause of widespread discontent in the world — whether from the MAGA Republicans in the U.S. or the Gilets Jaunes in France — is the deterioration of economic prosperity for all but the very richest in society. People know that their circumstances are worse than they were a few decades ago.

“Some blame their leaders. Other’s blame the ‘elites.’ Many blame immigrants. The real reason is peak oil. …”

— From “Peak Oil is Dead — Long Live Peak Oil” (Art Berman; March 13, 2024). https://www.artberman.com/blog/peak-oil-is-dead-long-live-peak-oil/