Archive for the ‘community’ Category

Going Local is a Matter of Life and Death!

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

jessicaIn Memory of my sister, Jessica Brigida Stevens.

When my sister died last summer suddenly, I was struck by the most amazing realization. She had lived in Alaska with her family, my brother lives in Sydney, Australia with his family, and the rest of the family lives here in San Francisco. It seemed ridiculous to be so spread out as a family. How could the most important people in your life be the ones that you saw the least?

Asian cultures view the family differently. It is not uncommon to support your parents in China, for example. Actually, many people don’t have a choice. But, in our western culture with everything at our fingertips and supposedly little free time, how did we separate so much from our families and friends?

Everything can change in an instant. I know that when I came into close proximity with death, my priorities changed. My whole outlook changed, actually. I wanted to be close to family and friends. I wanted to get more involved in the community and build something special right where I lived.

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Get Informed!

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

If you are wanting to see change in the world, you need to become more proactive. Become a leader and lead by example.

I encourage everyone to get informed. Do lots of reading about the issues and try to get a good picture of what’s going on in the world. Many of us are solely dependent on media to hype up the latest trends and news. This is why we are in the “Green” revolution and feeling overwhemed with it all.

We need to read on our own and become informed citizens. Become an inspiring local organizer and leader. Get involved in your local communities to work on things that you feel are important. Make it your job to be as educated as you can. Don’t be complacent.

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Edible Education: Food for Thought

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

This post was authored by my friend, Lee Hwang.

chezpanissefoundation.org

chezpanissefoundation.org

Last week, I attended a lively panel discussion in San Francisco titled “How We Eat and the Slow Food Nation.” The panel featured Alice Waters, one of the most famous chefs in America and founder of the Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California. Her talk highlighted the ways in which we can strengthen and revitalize our sense of community through a more mindful approach to food. She recounted that when she was a teenager in the 1960s, she visited France and observed that the people there visited the market every morning, buying only the freshest ingredients available that day. No processed food, no food shipped from far away. She noticed how food connected family and friends together in the “rituals of the table,” making life so much more enjoyable and vibrant. Thus inspired, she returned to America with a mission: to bring back that same sense of community, enlivened through delicious food bought directly from farmers and cooked with an emphasis on letting the simple, natural flavors predominate. Eventually, this approach became known as California cuisine, and history was made.

These days, Alice is promoting edible education in the schools. Her program, called the “Edible Schoolyard,” provides urban schoolchildren with a hands-on, concrete learning experience in growing their own organic food and cooking it in a kitchen classroom. In the process, the kids learn about ecology, biology, and nutrition, while also enjoying the tangible fruits of their own labors. As described on the “Edible Schoolyard” website, the program’s mission is two-fold:

Children learn about the connection between what they eat and where it comes from, with the goal of fostering environmental stewardship and revolutionizing the school lunch program.

In this way, not only do kids learn important lessons about taking care of themselves and the larger world through a more direct experience of food, but they also eat more nutritiously. Sounds like a win-win to me!

If edible education sounds like a good idea to you, I urge you to take action. Discuss this idea with others in your community and persuade your local school to establish its own “Edible Schoolyard.” The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Start now and you can make a difference, too!

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“Green” means “Community” and Starts from the Bottom-Up

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

community gardeningI think the word “Green” should just be replaced with “Community” – that is what is lacking the most.

Maybe we needed to wake up to how much damage we are doing to our surroundings, but are any of us really that surprised? We have been over-worked and have not invested properly in family life, nor our local communities. If we prioritized theses things, given an example by the right leaders, we might be able to start from the bottom up. Nobody has taken the leadership reigns in this country to show us values beyond mindless consumerism and the hunt for wealth.

Talk to the guy in the check-out line. Reach out to someone. Start small and build up confidence to lead by example in your local area. Do all you can to audit your ecological footprint [http://www.myfootprint.org/en/], but don’t feel you need to make it a career unless you have some true value to bring to the table.

Check out BetterTogether.org, which was founded by Robert Putnam calling for a nationwide campaign to redirect a downward spiral of civic apathy. Warning that the national stockpile of “social capital” – our reserve of personal bonds and fellowship – is seriously depleted, the report outlined the framework for sustained, broad-based social change to restore America’s civic virtue.”

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