Mood:

Topic: Daily Eruptions
I have been watching Sundance Channel's The Green since it began, and the program is really growing on me. They aren't really telling me anything I don't already know about the state of the environment and the planetary costs of our daily choices, but they are exposing me to lots of people and companies that are doing some very cool green things.
I had heard of the book Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things by William McDonough and Michael Braungart but had never read it. Afterall, I had been pushing the "cradle to grave" concept in relation to the use of toxic chemicals when I worked for U. S. PIRG in the early 1990s, so the title of the new book made intuitive sense. Instead of thinking about the lifetime environmental costs and effects of a product from its creation to its destruction and final resting place (i.e., what negative effects will it add to the landfill it will join?), you plan each thing you create with a blueprint for how it will be disassembled and made into something else at the end of its useful life. I figured once you groked the title, why bother reading the book? (I didn't realize that the book was printed on pages made from recyclable plastic. Pretty cool!)
The Green showcases William McDonough frequently (and Michael Braungart in at least one episode), and I've since added Cradle to Cradle to my pages-long list of books to read. Here's a link to a TED speech that gives a great glimpse into what the man is all about.
What I love about him and the life he's created for himself, aside from the environmentally-friendly, amazing things he's accomplishing in Detroit and China and around the globe, is that he has found one idea that is so huge, he can do it every day and still have every day be new. Much like Janine Benyus's biomimicry. That's what I've been looking for my whole life. One door to walk through, knowing the whole world waits on the other side and the sky's the limit when it comes to learning and doing new things. I knocked on the biomimicry door a few months back, had a nice conversation with some wonderful people, and was sent back out into the world to continue my search. I still haven't found my door, but I know I am at least on my own path. So far, the path includes teaching and writing and helping other people disseminate their art or achieve their creative potential. This path has been sustaining me pretty well, and I can't say whether I will ever truly have an opportunity (or create an opportunity) to carve out my own portal into some completely new landscape. But, until I do, I can enjoy watching McDonough, Braungart, and Benyus blaze new trails.