Showing posts with label consumers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumers. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 May 2020

Podcast Interview Answer #7: What's the Symbolism of a Cocoon in the Story as the Metamorphosis Process in a Consumer Society?



Podcast Interview Answer #7:  What's the Symbolism of a Cocoon in the Story as the Metamorphosis Process in a Consumer Society?


Adolescence is a period of transformation, not unlike a chrysalis changing into a butterfly. If you have never seen this process, it can be painstakingly difficult to watch. The butterfly gradually breaks free of his cocoon, pulling and pushing, stretching and contracting for what seems like an eternity before he finally emerges. If a benevolent onlooker decides to help the process along, the butterfly will likely die, because it is only through the struggle of metamorphosis that he gains the strength to survive on his own. 
    Donna Volpitta, Ed.D   The Adolescent Metamorphosis



Symbolism is using a word or object to represent a real thing or an abstract idea. The symbol of a cocoon in this story represents the persons, places and actions of a consumer driven society. (Ecological Succession of Birchum Birch)
 
This symbol appeared as a real object on one of my walks in the forest. There it hung a small cylindrical shape wrapped in a fuzzy grey blanket attached by a small foot to a twig.  Inside a life cycle was unfolding in preparation for adulthood to survive in the world around it ... from a caterpillar into a butterfly or a moth.

One of the most truly amazing occurrences of nature is complete metamorphosis when one creature can completely change into a different creature. It begins with eggs that hatch into larvae or caterpillars which then transform into a pupa. The pupa hardens its protective covering or builds its cocoon as its home to hibernate until it can emerge as an adult. It can get out by cutting its way out, or secreting a liquid that softens the cocoon enough to break through the walls.

Cocoons are made by moth caterpillars from rather sticky strands of silk that are emitted from glands near their mouths that are woven into external cocoons depending on their species... very loose and open, or strong, tightly woven ones.

Butterflies, with very few exceptions, don’t spin cocoons; instead, their pupae form a  chrysalis of hardened protein for protection as they begin their transformation.   

But here is what is truly amazing about Nature’s handiwork ... a complicated insect recycling process kept as simple as possible. The caterpillar body breaks down, digesting itself from the inside out!  The same juices used to digest food as a larva are now used to break down its own body into imaginal or stem  cells. These cells are undifferentiated cells which means they can become any type of cell as they are put back together to form a new shape and body.

Metamorphosis is one way that nature has to transition from young pupae to adult stage and survival. That day looking at the cocoon attached to the branch, I wondered what kind of metamorphosis young people go through as they change into adults and responsibilities. For the butterfly, the process takes about 7-10 days. For humans, it takes about 10-15 years.

Obviously, this is a volume unto itself; socially, physically, and emotionally. But my main concern is how our society is grounded in the consumer world. 

Consumerism is defined as a society in which people often buy new goods, especially goods that they do not need, and in which a high value is placed on owning many things.

Today young people grow up in a Social Media environment where comparison to objective standards and acquisition of popular trends have high rankings to be a somebody. So much communication is already adult orientated to dress, talk, brag or ‘like’ a certain way to get rewards.The normal social rites of passage are replaced with peer relationships moderated by mass media technology and hyperbole. What juices feed their minds or bodies?

The tragedy is that the adolescent brain runs on emotional amygdala reactions because the logical, deductive part of the frontal brain doesn’t develop until early 20’s. I believe, teenagers, especially teen girls, are manipulated unfairly to value selfish commerce through big business, profits, sales, brands, competition and will probably transition to an adulthood where money, fame, material possessions will determine status or mental well-being.

What about values here to recycle and respect Nature’s finite bio-systems? Where are the values of co-operation, diversity, equality and succession?   

Let’s compare consumerism in the natural world.

In the natural world a consumer is an organism with one job ... to find food and eat for  energy. There are 4 types of consumers; herbivores (plant eaters), carnivores (meat eaters), omnivores (plant and animal eaters), and detritivores (decomposers).

These consumers live in an organized ecosystem that can best transfer food from one organism to the next. Their role is to balance the food chain to keep plant and animal populations at a reasonable number.  If the food supply chain is broken, the ecosystem is disrupted, and the consumer web becomes nonfunctional. Air quality, water and even climate change are all affected.

The Big Picture question is food for thought. WHAT IF nature can set an example for people to consume more fairly and efficiently? Here are some possible actions to start new habits for young people as they metamorphose into lifelong survival:
  • Buy into basic necessities like whole foods not processed cans of food
  • Determine your status by how much less you have in order to be sufficient
  • Do not power your brain to run on material possessions, branding or self-ego
  • Make your opinions and decisions as independently as you wish (do what's right not what others tell you to do with Nature's helping hand.)

Questions and comments are welcome and always appreciated.

What reasons do you have to to change your consumer habits? 

Annemarie
amarie10@gmail.com
1 833 471 4661 (please not a time for a call-back)
https://helpfulmindstreamforchanges.com


"First, what value did they find in nature’s bio-systems starting with the worms and the bees?  Or would their value systems be based on their business ‘Mega Plants’ in order to supply their ‘Mega Malls’ in competition with or even elimination of nature’s cycles? Or would their private and public technology create their own bio-systems to be more important and eradicate nature’s ecosystems?  How would the giant money network, like a cavernous spider, determine their actions? Would the wonders and systems on Earth lose out to broken chains, contaminated environments and artificial food webs because Nature could not speak in tongues and her voice was not heard?  



Wednesday, 20 May 2020

Podcast Answer #4: Why Nature Doesn’t Produce Garbage? 7 Ways to Limit our Own Garbage with New Reality.


Podcast Answer #4: Why Nature Doesn’t Produce Garbage? 7 Ways to Limit our Own Garbage with New Reality.


Environmental pollution is an incurable disease. It can only be prevented. 

Barry Commoner: The Closing Circle, Making Peace with the Planet


First, Nature does not produce waste … it is a unique faulty human flaw.

Think about this … you can draw a straight line to infinity, but you can draw a circle only once.

Nature uses a brilliant cyclical system with a few elements, nutrients and metabolisms that are used and reused in continuous cycles. Every organism contributes to the health of the whole ecosystem. One organism’s waste is food for another where nutrients and energy flow work together in closed-loop cycles of growth, decay and rebirth. 

Simply put, any waste is converted into food.

Simply put, a bag of garbage will be handled differently if it is put on a straight line conveyor belt or into a circular band to manage. 

Humans are take-make-waste consumers who produce waste on a linear system:

 1. Extract materials  2. Process 3. Use ( often briefly) 4. Throw out

Natures works with a circular Ecosystem where materials are used and recycled constantly. There are diverse players, cooperative relationships and feedback loops.
The last stage in an ecosystem is natural decay or decomposition of the soil’s top layer or humus into simple organic compounds that the plants can use again to perpetuate their growth.

So, the big question is how humans can follow more circular systems especially within a new reality of new products. Here are 7 ways to consider:

ONE: Begin some kind of an organic garbage disposal. Use a mini-decomposer in a small space or a compost pile or bin to recycle decaying organic material, such as food and garden scraps, that will be turned into soil.
          Good things to compost include vegetable peelings, fruit waste, teabags, plant                      prunings,leaves and grass cuttings. Also cardboard egg boxes and even scrunched              up newspaper.
          Do NOT include meat, fish, egg or poultry scraps (odor problems and pests) dairy                  products, grease, lard or oils.
          An interesting note is to add specific kinds of worms to your compost pile. They are              called ‘red wrigglers’  that can digest old vegetation from the surface as different from            common ‘night crawlers’ that tunnel through dirt to eat and can’t live on vegetable                  waste. Who knew nature can be so specific?


TWO: Research products that are manufactured to be more environmentally friendly. More companies are turning trash into products from recycled materials. For example, furniture can be made from post-consumer trash, packaging material can be made from agricultural waste and mushroom roots, bottles can be made of recycled plastic from the ocean, even yarn for clothing like shirts, shorts and socks can consists of recycled plastic ...Nike makes each uniform by using 16 plastic bottles. 
However, will consumers pay more for something that’s environmentally friendly?

THREE:  Learn about using different building components for homes' construction. New developments have produced building components that are 100% biodegradable or 100% recyclable. More natural materials are used to minimize the use of timber; for example, plant materials can be bonded with resin or mesh like sisal carpets or soy boards. Even compressed straw bales can built walls.

FOUR:  Lessen personal plastic use as much as possible. Plastic was first invented in 1907 made from synthetic petrochemicals which means it has no molecules found in nature and unable to decompose. Plastic pollution is now a global problem found in our oceans, our landfills, food webs and even in the stomachs of fish, animals and people.

FIVE: Support research on how to manufacture biodegradable plastics from natural proteins. Biodegradable plastics are plastics that can be decomposed by the action of living organisms, usually microbes, into water, carbon dioxide, and biomass. They are commonly produced with renewable raw materials, micro-organisms, petrochemicals, or combinations of all three that can decompose or metabolize naturally in the environment. The end result is one which is less harmful to the environment than traditional plastics.

In fact, one US company has a mission to eliminate plastic single servings like cutlery or trays from the supermarkets or restaurants They are made from fibers that can compose back into natural elements without leaving a toxic residue.

SIX:  Continue to follow your community’s Reduce, Reuse and Recycle programs. Sort and separate products as outlined for clean bottles, cans, paper and cardboard.

SEVEN: On a personal basis:  experience and build community with clothing swaps, repair stations, toy swaps and food-sharing clubs!  Shop in thrift and consignment stores. Check online vintage shops. Waste less food. Make your own home cleaners and personal care products (vinegar is all-purpose). Use reusable water bottles, not disposable. Reduce auto emissions with essential travel only. 

Certainly, I wish I knew more about Nature’s basic laws when I was younger. Simple respect would have prevented such popular trendy accumulation over the years, now tagged as "junk" suitable for the landfill.

Maybe it is one reason why I am so passionate now to tell the story of Mother Nature as if she was a real living, feeling person.  

“If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.” Einstein

One story is a first person narrative of a water sprite with roots in his mission to discover Cyclical Truths.
Another story is about a birch tree who shares his biology, joys, sorrows and his love for his family, community and environment. 
Both are available on my website and as Kindle editions.

Questions and comments are always welcome...

Note for more answers to podcast questions, please check blog. 

Annemarie
amarie10@gmail.com
1 833 471 4661 (please not a time to return a call)
https://helpfulmindstreamforchanges.com


"As you know, our Nature doesn’t produce garbage. We know that any litter is decomposed and transformed into healthy humus to help new growth. But their food webs have processed such specialized consumers that I have seen mountains upon mountains of garbage of bottles and cans and plastic bags. I have seen our oceans polluted with islands of debris and white sand beaches suffocated under garbage that cannot decompose for hundreds of years. Why don’t people, smart as they are, pass some sensible laws to educate and enforce the kinds of decomposition of garbage that follows a natural matter?"



Where to Discover Responsible Skin Care with added Direct Bonuses

 Rediscover your Skin’s Potential for Natural Beauty from Within Skin Care certainly should not be a monolithic profit machine for mass adve...