Wednesday, October 31, 2007

LOW IMPACT


Its been ages since I blogged. But yesterday, while reading some blogs on the internet, I had an "a-ha" moment, which I then excitedly shared with J and now it's a joint project we are going to try and implement starting tomorrow.

Let me backtrack a little bit here. We've been talking about moving next year sometime, and working in development for a few years. This made me start thinking of the practical side as well, including what we would need to leave behind packed up, and what we could take with us. And with this came the realisation that we have sooo much stuff!
We're not the most commercial or material of families. Some might also think of us as slightly crunchy :-) However, we enjoy the luxury of two incomes, and budgeting hasn't really been a necessity. A cute new T-shirt for Mira here, a new handbag for a change, a new release book that was recently reviewed... they all seem to quickly find a place through our wallets into our house!


So what is low impact? Low impact is an attempt to reduce the amount and impact of our consuming habits. What this will mean in practice:

1. For the next four months, we will not buy anything new!
(Of course there are exceptions, which include health/safety/food/ personal care purchases)
2. For food products, we'll buy packaging free as far as possible

3. If we need something new, we'll explore the second-hand, borrow or create avenues first!

4. In general, we'll try to minimise bringing more plastic into our house


So there you are... four simple rules to stick by for the next four months.


Will this be easy? No way. Specially with Christmas, birthdays, and a holiday to Latvia. We'll have to be inventive with Christmas presents. J and I already have an idea for Mira's gift. It will be a woodwork project, new for both of us, but hopefully fun and satisfying. Our gifts to each other could be something handmade too, or an experience, not necessarily wrapped in paper.
In Latvia, we'll try to buy souvenirs from markets or cooperatives, instead of a souvenir shop. Or bring back something edible...

Starting tomorrow, we are also part of a "climate neighbourhood" project (Klimaatwijk), which looks at reducing your energy consumption without a change in comfort. We need to record our meter readings, and get helpful hints and specific suggestions from energy experts... The goal is to reduce energy consumption by 8% in the next six months.
Our low impact project will fit well with this.

I'll post regular updates about this, and be honest about our attempts!


We don't expect our family and friends to do the same of course, but we hope they will be understanding and supportive :-)

Friday, October 12, 2007

flandersnews.be - Life for Hans Van Themsche

flandersnews.be - Life for Hans Van Themsche

This trial received massive media attention in Belgium over the last weeks. Rightly so, a young boy randomly shot some people in the centre of Antwerp (usually a safe place) last year. A young white girl (2 years old), her black nanny and a Belgian with Turkish background all got hit, only the Belgian lady survived. The three biggest communities of Antwerp were affected and a big debate about violence and racism among youth is still going on. The parents are relieved, as far as you can be after losing your child.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Our daily bread - Home - Geyrhalterfilm


Our daily bread - Home - Geyrhalterfilm



Mira is asleep and I am watching Our daily bread while tidying up old newspapers. I am really shocked by these simple images of our food industry. Is that the way the chicken and pork is handled before landing on my plate? It makes you wonder about industrialization, because it is more than just farming on a large scale.

BTW, the Meatrix II deals with a similar issue but is so much fun to watch (if you know the Matrix of course). American's tend to get similar messages across in a very different way than Europeans. I also saw Al Gore's Inconvenient Truth and immediately put the pledge button on this blog, because it is worth seeing, even though you think you know what it is about! What are we doing about it, we live in a Klimaatwijk (climate neighborhood).