I love water!
1 minute Vimeo project rules:
No camera moves
No edits
Natural sound
1 minute Lovejoy Fountain – High (1 minute)
October 2, 2012 at 5:45 am (Uncategorized)
I love water!
1 minute Vimeo project rules:
No camera moves
No edits
Natural sound
1 minute Lovejoy Fountain – High (1 minute)
May 16, 2012 at 3:13 pm (Uncategorized)
I love this planet!
Watch amazing NASA / ISS images from space. Earth
January 1, 2011 at 8:46 am (Uncategorized)
Tags: age death green change power transformation worldview
Why in our culture are we obsessed with denying our age, our time spent on earth, every second precious and hard-earned? Why are we fixated on never looking over 40?
My wrinkles are my currency, my record of accomplishment, my score card, my flag of honor. Age is earned – survival and experience are fundamentally valuable.
I challenge you to respect and honor the full life cycle, to embrace the crone or codger you are working towards becoming, if you’re lucky enough to get there.
Denial of death is denial of life. We are all conceived, and if lucky born. We are luckier still to have the chance to grow through childhood, adolescence, early, mid and late adulthood, and finally pass away. You can get taken down on any day along the way. Its said the likelihood of a human life is as slim as a dolphin in the ocean rising to the surface, catching a hoop with its nose: Precious, rare, and powerful.
Denying aging disconnects you from reality, nature, and true beauty. Sure, do the little things to look your best – keep up on the hygiene and haircuts and shaves – but please, let the “crow’s feet” bless your eyes, let the “frown lines” grace your forehead. Be grateful that your face can express your emotions, that’s it not a frozen, bo-toxed mask. (And let’s find better, positive terms for these proofs of your gathered wisdom and experience.)
Above all, look forward to your death. I know that flies in the face of Western doctrine, but I mean it: Look Forward to Your Death! It’s the only thing in life you can be certain of, even though the details are a mystery.
Perhaps the Grim Reaper is not so grim after all. Life, as we say, is hard (compared to what I always wonder). Death is easy: failure really is impossible. You’ll always succeed in dying, you can make no mistakes; your death will be perfect in its own way. The Reaper merely ushers your way home. If the Reaper appears Grim, perhaps its only an expression of absolute certainty that your time has come, and no compromise is possible at that end.
What does this have to do with Green Living? To change your relationships with the natural world and therefore change the human-made world into a humane one to the best of your ability, you must accept nature’s changes in you. Your body is not your own, it is borrowed from the earth and other species for a time, for your use and pleasure. You are a community of countless organisms, your cells and allied creatures coordinated melodically making up the miracle that is you. All symphonies must end, the players of the orchestra that is your body must also rest, disperse, and decay.
Humility is the foundation of true strength. Take up your full power and remake the world into a place worth living in for centuries to come.
January 28, 2009 at 7:19 pm (Uncategorized)
The acceptance and application of sustainable design practices is growing exponentially. Still, the built environment must be vastly improved: curbing climate change and stabilizing our energy future depend on great strides in building design, construction and operation.
First, a critique: Sustainability efforts often focus on “less”: using less energy, causing less pollution, making less impact – perfectly fine and necessary goals. However, these goals can house an unconscious, insidious bias: that we are trespassing on the earth, our presence is harmful, and we must work hard and suffer to be better. The root of this bias is fear. While fear is an excellent motivator in the short-term, it is not sustaining; it will not take us to the next level. I argue that fear drives the very process of destruction we strive to change through sustainable design. What to do? Examine our motives.
The world we build is created by small acts. Since action is initiated by thought, elevating the quality of that world requires new thinking, not just new ways of building. Thoughts are affected and generated by underlying beliefs and attitudes. These filter perception and limit or enhance thought, then design, and finally creation. The world is changed by consciously crafted intention combined with focused energy. In short, we become what we think about; so does the world we build.
How about a fresh direction, a wholesome philosophy? How about abundance without depletion, celebration coupled to conservation, effectiveness enhanced with efficiency and beauty? How about living and thinking beyond fear, motivated by genuine love for this good green earth, family and friends, and the long-term joy of thriving? What if making these changes in thinking, designing, building and living was easy? What if it was fun?!
This is the core of Design Elegance.
(More to come)