climate change

19 11, 2012

Ken Burns’ “Dust Bowl” – stories of our past, and future

By |2012-11-19T10:41:22-07:00November 19th, 2012|Tags: , , , , |

  • I caught Ken Burns’ documentary “Dust Bowl” last night on PBS.  It’s a deeply engaging story, giving us a real sense of the spirit of the Dust Bowl farmers and the grinding misery of a decade of deadly black storms. I watched with an eerie feeling of presentience, like seeing the Sandy coverage, of what we are doing to ourselves again by heedlessly disrupting the natural world that we depend on for our very survival. I was especially touched by their continuous refrain “It will be better next year” in the face of steadily worsening conditions. My fear is that people will be grasping desperately to that hope around the world in the coming decades with the same heart-breaking disillusionment as the weather only gets worse. So, I stayed with this Ken Burns masterpiece, unable to walk away, with growing unease.
    Part II, upcoming, appears to tell the story of the Okies who out-migrated, beaten by the dust. Again, parallels to 2012– more humans today are refugees from catastrophic climate changes than from all the wars in the world, and the curve is rising rapidly. Where do they go, how do they survive, what kind of “welcome” do they get? I can only hope the stories of our 21st century refugees are more compassion-filled than the stories from the ’30s.
23 03, 2011

Extraordinary free environmental sustainability and social justice program

By |2017-01-13T11:28:09-07:00March 23rd, 2011|Tags: , , , , , , , |

In 2009 and 2010, an exquisitely crafted program on sustainability and social justice was presented at the Academy of Management.  I’ve just found out that it is available, free, for downloading and presentation.  Since I heard from many faculty that they had conflicts with attending the programs, and/or attending the trainings in their area, this is good news.  I can tell you, there has been quite a debate about turning this loose in this manner, but the creators at the NGO, the Pachamama Alliance, have decided that the urgency of the global crisis demands that they give it out, without insisting on pre-training, and rely on the innate integrity of the design to carry the day.

This program has been presented to more than 200,000 people in 52 countries worldwide, and has 3000+ trained facilitators.  It contains a wealth of exercises, information, and 85 minutes of beautiful and powerful video.  It’s being used in universities, companies, governments and NGO’s around the world.  It is not political, nor religious, and contains no orthodoxy, prescriptions, or enrollment.  It does report on and draw on the finest minds, from Paul Hawken to Bishop Tutu, from Hunter Lovins to Brian Swimme, from Julia Butterfly Hill to Van Jones and Robert Reich.  It is sobering and inspiring, thought-provoking and motivating and community-building.  All that and more.

Here is the link to the front page, where the short video gives you a taste of this delicious program.  www.AwakeningtheDreamer.org 

After you’ve seen the trailer, I think you’ll want to know more about how to either attend a Symposium or how you can access the materials.  This link will take you to the downloadable material.  http://awakeningthedreamer.org/get-involved/presenters-kit/

Here is all that I ask of my colleagues:  that you use this material with high integrity, seriously considering bringing the entire program into your classes or community groups, so that the real power of the experience comes to bear.      In addition, if you are willing, I would very much appreciate hearing from you if you download the material and how you are using it, so that I can bring that information back to the larger volunteer community.

I’m eager to support you with this.  Contact me with any questions!

Kit Tennis
Kit@SanchezTennisAssociates.com
+1-303-449-5921

20 09, 2009

Awakening to the possibility of a sustainable, equitable and healthy humanity in our lifetimes!

By |2017-01-13T11:28:45-07:00September 20th, 2009|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

I’ll admit it, I spent more than two and a half decades depressed about the lost opportunities to create a renewable energy economy that would spare us from the environmental disasters attendant on burning fossil fuels.  Once Ronald Reagan ripped the solar panels off the roof of the White House and our government abandoned serious improvements in transportation fuel efficiency standards and pretty well killed off renewables R&D, I lost a big part of the hope and optimism of my youth.   Year after year, we failed to make even the least sensible steps toward converting away from fossil fuels, and I got more and more resigned to the prospect of looming catastrophe.

(more…)

20 09, 2009

Is U.S. healthcare debate solely about politics…or something else?

By |2017-01-13T11:29:16-07:00September 20th, 2009|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , |

I was recently asked that question, and having just come from a really stimulating presentation on recent insights about the brain (Thanks to Ginny Storj0hann), here’s what I’m thinking today about the emotional content of our national health care conversation.

The current phenomenon of healthcare debate seems to me to be made up of several overlapping and interacting elements, some of which are explained by brain-based change research, U.S. culture and political maneuvering:

1. Fearful reaction to having a Black President and all the changes in status that implies for a great many people (If People of Color are going to take real leadership positions, then the old order in which Whites, no matter what their position in the world, were always socially superior, is shifting).

2. A strong sense that the world is changing in ways that are unpredictable, uncontrollable, and potentially painful.

3. Fear that the government (or any other source of identifiable authority) will dictate important aspects of our lives at a time when many are feeling especially powerless

4. “Katie bar the door” polarity thinking that believes that any cooperation or compromise foretells eventual utter defeat

5. A U.S. cultural bias, rooted in our majority Euro-American heritage, toward individuality that leads many to be innately suspicious of new programs for collective assistance, believing that we are morally responsible to take care of ourselves, rather than falling back on help from others to meet our needs.

6. A resurgence in the long pattern of cynical and historically successful race-baiting and commie-calling by political operatives that oppose progressive change and loss of profiteering freedom.

All of these elements, and more, are weaving together to greatly intensify the natural debate on this complex topic. I think this is likely predictive of the reactions we will face as we confront many more big challenges, such as global climate change, economic restructuring, population shifts, etc.  I’m not looking forward to the arguments, invective, and panic behavior we may experience, but it does seem like part of the process of hospicing the old ways and midwifing the new.

Myself, I’m hoping to stay centered on my belief that humans can find our way to ingenious collaborative solutions that will take us beyond the turmoil of these “interesting times” and into a new, more sustainable pattern of living on Earth and with each other.