welcome to DEEP GREEN blog!

Greetings! This blog is dedicated to helping you reduce your eco-footprint for personal and planetary benefit.

Although a low-footprint lifestyle is fun and rewarding, it is not always easy, even if you are doing it for your own benefit (for example, to attain financial freedom; to free up your time; to radically simplify your life so you can focus on what really matters to you.) The dominant mainstream culture has waste and hyper-consumerism baked into every layer of life. A person setting out to live light on the earth encounters many obstacles both physical and cultural. (Car-dependent housing developments; unavoidable single-use plastics; buildings designed to require climate control 24-7 … to name just a few.)

That’s where this blog comes in. I’m here to offer you tips, resources, and moral support. The posts aren’t in any particular order; I write about things as they pop into my mind. This blog does have a search tool, which I hope will help you find topics you’re most interested in. If you ever can’t find a topic, please feel free to give me a shout and I will try to dig it up for you.

You could also start by reading my book DEEP GREEN, a concise orderly guide to crafting your own ultra-low-footprint lifestyle. You can read it for free here on this blog; and you can order your own print copy as well. The book was published way back in 2017, and a lot has happened since then! But the basic premise still applies.

Also, I have added a 2023 preface (which is currently available only here online since I didn’t get it done before deciding to make a mini print run of 50 copies for the FRESH Book Festival).

A final note: I don’t post here every day. I might even go weeks or months without posting. Important as writing is to my mission, it’s only one of my channels for actualizing the “Grassroots Green Mobilization.” Whether or not you see new posts on this blog, I am always active and always here for you. You can engage with me on Facebook (DEEP GREEN book by jenny nazak). I’m also on Twitter, YouTube, and Tiktok; look for me under my name on any of those platforms.

Enjoy this blog, and thanks for joining me in the grassroots green mobilization to create a kinder, saner, greener, equitable world!

Having a smartphone is not being a hypocrite

Very very important! This is something I see a lot of in the doomer/collapse groups. Having a small communication device, particularly when we’re not constantly buying the new model, is not being a hypocrite. These tools have actually helped promote beneficial movements.

There’s no contradiction between striving to minimize unnecessary consumption, and having a phone. In fact, if we really use the technology in the mini great ways it offers, we can avoid burning a lot of fuel and money by making best use of phones, telecommunication, teleconferencing, electronic documents.

I agree 100% with what UPP US has to say about this. Having a smartphone doesn’t make us capitalist sellouts.

We don’t need to make more babies

No, I am not one of these hard-core “zero population growth” people who believe that we will solve all the human problems by ceasing to have children. And I don’t get mad at people who have children. Some people in the various eco circles think that nobody should have any children, which is not a viable plan.

In any society, there are some people who naturally want to have children, and some who do not.

That said …

We don’t need to go out of our way to make more babies. We don’t need the government to incentivize people to have more babies in order to shore up the consumer economy, Social Security, and so on.

In case I haven’t made it clear here and on my other channels, as an eco activist I am in favor of Global North countries allowing a steady flow of immigration to maintain a vibrant population while supporting climate refugees.

As opposed to each Global North country trying to maintain a vibrant population by prodding its existing citizens to make more babies. The planet doesn’t need for countries to be thinking individualistically like this.

If you haven’t heard about the “pro-natalist” movement and policy proposals, it’s something we need to keep an eye on and speak up about.

A plug for Milk the Weed

A big part of restoring ecological health to this planet is changing the public perception of manicured landscaping as the gold standard.

Really there’s no more reason to prefer it than there is to prefer a certain haircut. It’s just a very deeply socially conditioned preference.

And, according to everything I’ve read and studied — and witnessed firsthand in my practice — a preference that we must override. For many reasons, our very lives depend on our ability to accept a new aesthetic standard.

If the photos in this post I’ve shared from Milk the Weed, and similar ones going around, look messy and unkempt to you, and speak to you of neglect, recognize that that is our social conditioning.

And also, there are ways to introduce touches of neatness which can please your aesthetics without having disastrous consequences for life on earth.

Please follow my page if you want to see more posts like this, and practical action steps. Yes there are a lot of political posts on here too, but you can scroll past whatever you don’t like / need.

And also definitely follow Benjamin Vogt /MILK the WEED if you are not already! They give excellent webinars BTW.

Flower Power! Wildflowers in a vase

One fun and simple way to promote wildflowers as legitimately beautiful flowers is to put them in a vase. Generally, I do not prefer to cut flowers. I prefer to let them grow. However, if they are encroaching on the sidewalk etc., I cut them back.

Blanket flower is my favorite flower. They are gorgeous, salt tolerant, drought tolerant, and to me they totally symbolize feral beauty and resilience.

I have brought them up often in my discussions with our city public works department, planning board, citizen input boards and so on. Because they’re so pretty, they are almost like an ambassador for natural low maintenance approach to landscaping.

But it never occurred to me till yesterday, that by putting them in a vase after I needed to cut some back, I was actually helping to legitimize them. In the mainstream public eye. This may or may not be true, but it’s just a thought that occurred to me. Your input and experiences welcome as always.

(Note, nobody — person, plant, animal, insect, microbe etc. — should have to be “legitimized.” They are all part of our world and we owe them respect and we need to let them live.)

But, in a society where a multi-billion-dollar industry is dedicated to defining some plants as “weeds” that need to be eradicated, sometimes a bit of social boost might be helpful. I like this example because it’s on social media, and it’s also right next to a sidewalk that gets a lot of foot traffic. Including tourists as well as residents.

celebrating wildflowers; natural dune beauty; respecting the ecology

pix here

“In 2020 I had a wonderful food garden …”

If I had a dime for every time I’ve heard that. Someone in my feed was mentioning how great her garden have been in 2020, and how it had gone fallow in the years since “we went back to real life.”

But, I say:

Such a lovely garden! And glad you have such a good experience to build on as you move forward with getting it going again.

And, Side note: “Real life”?? Is that what we went back to? I think it was more like we accidentally (via Covid shutdowns) had a temporary experience of how wonderfully, multidimensionally real life could be. Unexpected silver linings. (And no I’m not denying the suffering.)

And then we just went back to the planet-destroying treadmill. BAU (Business As Usual.) <desolation crying emoticon> Back into our gray tiny boxes.

With (for the people who happen to have any extra money) only “revenge travel” <nausea emoticon; vomit emoticon> and ordering constant shipments of trashy online crap as consolation.

(I mean we collectively, not me, I’ve always been very fortunate/privileged to be able to work outdoors a lot, have creative & occupational freedom, and know my neighbors — and be engaged deeply in community. Including this wider online community. And deeply engaged in immediate surroundings of urban nature etc.)

(I talk about this extensively here on this blog, and elsewhere; it’s a pretty major soap box of mine.)

See the OP with photos here.

Hand-built memory-collage; emotional micro-climate

It wasn’t a conscious process at first, but over the years at some point I realized I was creating tiny microcosms in my personal space, an attempt to replicate — even imperfectly — some time or place that has a left a deep impact on me.

Even though I’ve become aware that I do this, I will sometimes still find that I’ve created one of these niches without having consciously tried.

First photo, with the net and the sunglasses, turns out to be a re-creation of the backyard of a delightful rambling multi-storey wooden fishing shack/general store that I stumbled on in a small town on the gulf coast of Louisiana, in 2005. A few months pre-Katrina. The town name wasn’t even in my big atlas, so I wrote it in, with India ink and my fine-tipped pen.

The whole space is kind of a composite re-creation of that, plus other places like that. The heightened state of mind and visual bliss that I’ve experienced on the grounds of Buddhist temples in Japan (back in the early 90s when I was living and working in Tokyo); and at faery camp-outs and urban RV park community with my sweet witchy tribe back in Austin, ca. 2000-2010.

And before that, Zen koans I first stumbled on in the public library back in my teen years …

and and and.

I guess it’s sort of like a memory-collage sculpture that’s always evolving.

Full disclosure: I simply love the beads outdoors, but — even with aforementioned faery wicca Austin tribe influence –- probably would not have thought to do it … except that I was having terrible terrible trouble keeping track of my enormous bead collection, which I purchased from a lovely lady who had had a shop and was ready to pass them on to the next bead-fanatic steward. So now there is at least a bit more breathing-room in all of those bead-boxes and jars that live in my garage/crafting shed.

For many reasons, I no longer travel to speak of, other than family visits. I am very fortunate to have experienced so much when I did. And I feel obligated to make the most of the lavish life-feast I’ve received, by sharing it in my art. Both verbal and visual.

Photos here.

Fallen leaves as outdoor decor

I have often written about the ecological benefits of leaving fallen leaves in place, using them as valuable ingredient for mulch/compost pile, etc.

But also: Fallen leaves left in place can just be really beautiful! (pics at link)

I sometimes leave them deliberately for that very reason. (As long as they are not slippery and causing danger on a pathway.)

I also leave them deliberately as a way to de-escalate what I call “relentless fussbudget tidying-up of the great outdoors.”

It’s possible that if some spaces look a little softer and less rigidly tidy, people in neighboring spaces might feel a little less compelled to constantly keep things clipped and sanitized.

And, if the environment is not super rigidly edged, it doesn’t give people as much to fixate on, so it makes the job of code enforcement personnel easier – freeing them up to address situations that are actually dangerous and harmful, as opposed to a flower or leaf sticking out here and there.

I notice the psychology of this indoors as well. If you don’t want to be nitpicking all day, don’t have bright-white carpet or a fancy bright-white sofa. (Off white or beige can actually be very good and user-friendly.) And don’t have a lot of things that have to be symmetrical in order for your place to look tidy.