5 Ways to Think and Grow Green

LIFE DESIGN

5 Ways to Think & Grow Green

Kelly Woods, writer

16 June 2017

Green living is all about being intentional. I love sharing the combination of actions and attitudes that keep me buoyant and inspired on a daily basis.

Green living shouldn’t be a struggle. For me, it is a fun challenge, that stems from a collection of values that I hold for the way I want to live my life and contribute to the world around me.  Having a  few perspectives in place that keep me on track, and hold me accountable to myself, really make a huge difference.  Here are my favourite ways to think and grow…green!

1. Make It Yourself

Making your own products is one of the easiest ways to ensure you are aware of the impacts they have on your health, and that of the planet. With carefully sourced materials, and a select list of known ingredients, you can make everything from laundry soap, to cosmetics, to clothing.

Start small, with a recipe you are keen to try, and integrate DIY into your life, one item at a time. When you do it this way, you can celebrate the little victories, and see how easy (and rewarding) it is to live and love handmade. In our household, we regularly make our own laundry soap and cleaners, based on these recipes, from David Suzuki’s Queen of Green.

2. Stop the Stuff

This is a big one. The only way to compete with our consumer culture, is to reduce our needs and wants. Our households can never be truly green if we continue to see the world through the eyes of unconscious consumers. By reducing (and carefully selecting) what comes into our homes, we can be conscious of the impact of our purchases on the world around us, and the homes we bring them into.  

I’ll be the first to admit – this is hard. We’re working towards becoming a zero-waste home, but we’ve got a long way to go! Don’t get discouraged. A perspective change is the first of many tiny steps that add up.

3. Get Outside

Study after study has shown that people need nature. Spending time outside helps with everything from stress-relief to creativity, to increased levels of fitness and general well-being. Aside from the positive impact nature can have on us, we have a lot to give to our natural spaces.

Getting in the habit of picking up litter, working to protect the natural spaces around us, and advocating for others to spend time in nature, increases the love all around. As we fall into deeper love with nature, our kids will, too. And when we love something, we value it, and make it a priority in our lives.  For our part, we adore our local parks, and couldn’t survive without them!

4. Tell A New Story

So often we hear the “bad news” about humanity’s relationship to the natural world. The news is full of sad tales, and a “too late” narrative. If we want to have a positive impact on our world, and that of the next generation, we have to tell ourselves a new story: one of beauty, compassion and a symbiotic relationship between humanity and nature. When we get into the habit of telling this tale, to ourselves, and to others, we contribute to a vision of a better world. This is often how the biggest changes start: a shared vision for something better. 

Want more on the topic? Read this book*. It was the impetus for my own new tale (and my efforts not to be an environmental “Debbie-Downer”).

5. Share It

If you want to live green, you’ll need support. You can’t go it alone. Find your community, and connect with other like-minded people. Then, as you share your knowledge, you will glean wisdom from others with a different set of skills and experiences. For me, one of the best things about being a green mama is being able to share my passion for the planet with others. Don’t go it alone. Seek support, and share your knowledge. The world needs what you have to give.

I’d love to hear about your favourite ways of going green, or the things you find the hardest about doing so. Do share your secrets and struggles (big or little) in the comments.

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What is Green Living, Anyway?

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What is Green Living, Anyway?

Kelly Woods, writer

9 June 2017

I was reading a green living forum the other day, and I came across this simple question: “What is green living?”  It struck me as a good place to start.

Often, when we speak from our areas of expertise, we are so versed in their language, that we forget what it might be like to be an outsider.

Think of your workplace. How many times have you caught yourself using an acronym in conversation with an outsider, only to later realize that, of course, they had no idea what you were talking about.  Ever heard of “Christianese?” Or “jargon” Or “tech speak?”

When pontificating on green living, it might be a good idea to take a step back and attempt to define it. Or, at least define it in our own terms.

So, what, exactly, is green living?

Without being too esoteric, I do think green living means something slightly different to each of us. We all have different priorities when it comes to green living. Some us care deeply about our oceans, and are passionate about reducing plastic pollution.  Others want to see healthy food enter our bodies, and try to eat pesticide-free. Others want to set an example by living car-free.  Others want to live self-sufficiently, and grow our own food. Others are passionate about advocacy, and changing the larger systems that govern us.

All of these examples have one thing in common. They are behaviours; behaviours that stem from the central place of love.

“Green living, is, at its core, an act of love.”

It is an act of love for our planet. Our home.

It is an act of love for the creatures, animals, plants and humans around us.

It is an act of love for our families, and for future generations.

Sure, for some of us, it might be motivated by fact. It might even be motivated by self-preservation (which is really just an act of love for ourselves, isn’t it?).

But, in order for green living to be sustainable, it needs to come from a deeper place. It needs to hit home in the heart.

In short, green living is acting in a way that expresses our deep love for the earth and its inhabitants.

When you love something, you work to prevent harm to it. When you see it hurting, you actively seek to help it. When you love something, and you are aware of what you could do to alleviate its pain, you don’t hesitate. You act. You act because you can’t not. Because, if you can do anything – anything at all – you will.

Even if you aren’t guaranteed results. Even if, sometimes, you know it’s a dying cause.

I could go on about all of the things green living involves: recycling, advocacy, zero-waste living, tiny houses, cloth diapers and growing and eating organic foods. Many of these things I practice myself. Many of them are evidence of a person who is “living green.”

But, they aren’t really the point.

The point is, that if we act, not out of obligation or even emergency (both good enough reasons to make some serious changes), but out of love, we have a much better chance of living in a way that respects, honours and protects our home and its inhabitants.

Green living is about living in accordance with this love. A love that blossoms – maybe with ourselves, maybe with our family, maybe with our relationship with nature – and propels us to action.

So, as much as I write about green living (the how-to’s, and the what-to’s, and the what-ifs), I will always be coming at it from a place of “why.”

And, for me, that “why” will always be love.

How about you? Do you think we have a better chance of making lasting change, if we come at it from a place of love? What motivates you to care about our planet? Please share in the comments.

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