Sunday, August 7, 2011
Monday, August 1, 2011
How Can I be less Wasteful
Your toy breaks. What do you do? You throw it in the trash. You don’t like supper. What do you do? You throw it in the trash. You leave the water running while you brush your teeth. You let things pile up and get destroyed rather than let someone who needs it and will take care of it have it. All this is wasteful.
So how can I avoid a wasteful lifestyle. Indeed, I have been guilty of everything I just listed. So how can I not be wasteful? Should I just kill myself because I’m a parasite to the world? Or is there a less dramatic way?
First of all, when a toy breaks, I can try and figure out a way to fix it. If I cannot, then I can try and see if anyone else can fix it. If no one can fix it, I can try and figure out if I can use the pieces to make something else. If I cannot reuse it, then I can see if it is recyclable. If it is, then I can recycle it. If not, then and only then I can throw it away. Unfortunately, it is very hard for us to recycle where I live.
I can bag aluminum cans to be taken away to be recycled, but we don’t use to many aluminum cans anymore.
I could give away toys I don’t use to kids who’ll play with them.
I could turn off the water when I brush my teeth … wait, I already do.
I could make sure we eat all the leftovers that go into the refrigerator. Even if they taste nasty and bleh. I can put them all in a stew, re-season them and make them taste good. I can make sure the salad supplies are all used up before they go bad.
I can plant my own garden so that the vegetables are fresh as long as possible. I just have to make sure that I don’t water them too much and waste water. I also would need to make sure that I use the food I grow, and especially make sure that insects don’t get the food I grow first.
I can turn off lights when I leave the room. That’s something I really need to work on. I can also make sure that the door is locked behind me when I leave. That’s to keep my little sister safe.
I can pick up trash along the road.
It is very hard to find people to take second hand things, though. This is sad. Why do Americans think that everything has to be new? This is wasteful. It’s also a reason that other people hoard, which is also wasteful, because they are willing to take the used and aren’t willing to let it go to people who’d just throw it away.
Sigh. It’s a sad, sad world we live in.
But, all in all there is a lot I can do. I just need to do it.
How Selfishness Leads to Waste
There is a television series called Hoarding: Buried Alive. In each episode, a person with hoarding issues is helped to overcome their hoarding. Hoarders are people who collect things - anything - but to the extent that all the stuff they collect piles up in their house and a great deal of it is destroyed.
Hoarding often springs from emotional issues - but it almost always boils down to selfishness. The person, in their childhood, was denied something, and now that they’re adults, they can’t get rid of anything because of that. Other times, it begins when they loose someone they love, and because they couldn’t hold on to the person, they hold on to stuff.
But it still almost always boils down to selfishness. Because they were denied something, they want everything now. Because they want everything, the stuff they have never leaves their house. Things get buried and eventually they are worthless. What they attempted to save, they are destroying and wasting. Often they hold onto trash!
Quite often roaches, mice and rats get into their house and destroy what’s at the bottom of the piles. That’s wasteful.
People who hoard are don’t want to let go of what they have. They’d rather it fall to waste than it leave their house and find a new home and get taken care of. It’s a very confusing mentality, though there are few who don’t suffer to a degree. People who can’t get rid of stuff are selfish.
Oh, they have reasons. They don’t want someone else to have it because that person might throw it away or break it. What they don’t realize is that they’re ruining it, which is just as bad - or worse, because there was also a good chance that that someone would have loved and kept it in wonderful condition. But, through hoarding, this chance was denied.
It’s the “I don’t want to share my things” attitude. And while there is the principle of ownership and one shouldn’t be forced to share anything they don’t want to share, one shouldn’t keep things they aren’t using and will never use. Some people save things for emotional reasons, and while that is okay to an extent - keeping too much for that reason is not.
Saving stuff you can use later and stuff that really means something to you is one thing - saving things you’ll never use and that you attach some ambiguous attachment is not. Remember - you don’t have to keep things just so you don’t offend someone. Most people be much more offended by your impenetrable house than by your getting rid of something they gave you.
And if they don’t - they have serious selfishness issues!
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Sci-fi meets Reality
Sci-fi, science fiction. Science as we think it might be in the future. Spaceships that travel faster than light, aliens, time travel … how much of this is real? How much of this is possible? Some of it we have already attained. Some we probably never will.
In the sixties, a TV show called Star Trek was popular. In it were these amazing things called automatic opening doors. Automatic doors had been seen earlier in a book by H.G. Wells. Some time in the sixties, some smart inventors got together and figured out how to make real ones. We now see them everywhere and we consider them a necessity of life.
We have a sort of teleportion. Although we cannot teleport actual matter, we can teleport information through computers and the Internet.
We have not mastered time travel – but scientists have been working on it. It would require extreme amounts of energy, though. We haven't met anyone claiming to come from the future, though, so chances are, it won't happen.
The modern submarine was very well described in the book, “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” by Jules Verne The Atomic bomb was explained in a book by H.G. Wells. Both of these books were written well before the modern submarine or the atomic bomb. Indeed, if it hadn’t been for the book by H.G. Wells, WW2 would have ended very differently.
At one time, traveling around the world in eighty days was considered sci-fi, now it can be done in fact in 90 minutes!
We haven’t figured out how to achieve speeds greater than the speed of light, or warping, but we can go faster than sound. We can travel into outer space, just not with a cannon, as Jules Verne suggested we might. We have visited the moon, but found it lifeless. We haven’t visited Mars, but we have sent probes, and they have discovered it to be lifeless as well. We have discovered all of the planets to be lifeless, proof that God knew what he was doing when he put us on earth.
Telephones and intercoms have come to life out of science fiction, as have TVs. We have brought cell phones out of books - indeed, cell phones today are beyond what they were in the movies and books of yesteryear, and far less clunky.
We have computer generated voices that sound almost natural, and touch screens!
And the Internet! There is so much technology today, much of it at least partially foreseen. Much of it was inspired by science fiction. We aren’t driving to work in hovercars, or goofing of on hoverboards, and jet backpacks are yet to appear, but we do have cars that can “see.” Cars that can sense things happening on the road, and can compensate faster than the driver! It can even take into consideration the unpredictability of the driver.
A question to consider, had Jules Verne and H.G. Wells not done all of the writing they did, would we have ever developed all of the science we have? It is possible.
It’s also possible that we would not of.