Erik Tasso-Johnson Erik Tasso-Johnson

Technology, Culture, & The Living World

We have to stop taking our technologies for granted, and we’d better start asking a whole lot more of them. If a technology does not tend to make life more sustainable on the order of tens of thousands of years, we must realize the importance of regulating or limiting its usage.

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Heather Short & Nicole Civita Heather Short & Nicole Civita

The Bad News is The Good News

Imagine going through your day knowing that everything you do, everything you make, every human gesture, is contributing to making our only home a livable home for all living things, present and future. Imagine the joy that could exist in your lifetime, knowing that you are part of a collaboration of humans bringing a new economic order and new, relational cultures into existence for the next generation and the many to come.

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Nicole Civita Nicole Civita

LOVE PALESTINE

We're asking ourselves what it might mean to truly love Palestine. To love the land, to love her people, to love her more-than-human inhabitants. With ragged voices, we're wondering out loud and in public about how we might summon and practice a radical politics of love and take steps that make it possible for Palestinians to feel and be protected by our love. As we do so, we remind each other that love is abundant. It defies and even subverts scarcity. Loving Palestine does not and cannot reduce our capacity to love other people — including Israelis and Jews around the world. Love can only multiply. And it may be the only thing that we should seek to grow without limit.

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Joe Fassler Joe Fassler

Why Climate Fiction Matters

It’s counterintuitive, but it’s a reality of the human psyche: sometimes stories that should shake us into action only numb us further. When the evidence becomes too overwhelming, we can shut down and refuse to act. Yes, the situation is grim. And because journalists labor in the service of a single, all-important question—what’s true?—it’s their job to render this grimness as it really is. Still, that’s not the only story we can tell, and it’s not the only story we need. We also crave narratives that pursue a different question altogether: what if?

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Ollie Quinn Ollie Quinn

The Nurse Log: Recipes for Community Care

Recipes for community care can be exact measurements of ingredients but it can also be sampling what tastes good together. The most important thing is that we approach the recipe with love and put as much of our care and heart into the outcome as we can at any given  moment.

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Mackenzie Faber Mackenzie Faber

Introducing EcoGather’s latest offering: Wellbeing Economy

I never thought I would like economics. And I certainly never thought I’d design a whole course of the subject. I thought econ was for people in suits, people who cared about finance, people who saw the nonhuman world as nothing but a pool of resources to exploit. It turns out, however, that the version of economics we usually study in classrooms is not the only version out there.

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Mackenzie Faber Mackenzie Faber

A Farm Grew in Brooklyn

So when I finally went back - February of 2024, Aquarius season, about five years since I left - I planned on taking videos of beds resting, weeds falling back, garlic growing patiently under mulch - I had cleared the storage space on my phone. I would record that same walk down Kingston, pan to the smokestacks, round the corner as the hoop house came into view. Maybe open the gate, point out where my beloved broccoli used to grow. Surely the picnic tables would still be under the tree, albeit with fresh paint. But as I walked closer, I noticed tall, opaque, dark green fencing blocking the view. I kept walking in search of an opening. But it never came. Instead, through a torn hole flapping in the wind, I saw…nothing.

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Mackenzie Faber Mackenzie Faber

Some thoughts on joy.

“I didn't think about joy too much until January 31, 2020. It was the day my roommate in Brooklyn, upon walking through the threshold of our fourth floor pre-war apartment in Bushwick - old scuffed floors, funny little entryway in which we hung a tiny disco ball, about ten inches of counter space occupied almost entirely by our always-full coffee pot and a rickety fire escape outside that was likely more of a hazard than any actual fire - sweaty from the gym, announced she had just listened to the best podcast episode on delight while she was on the treadmill. She thought I would like it; the guest was a gardener and a poet. That was, generally, my deal.”

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Nissa Coit Nissa Coit

The Honey Bees’ Secret to Shared Prosperity

For my purposes, I tend to define, or at least explain, eusociality as: cooperative intergenerational care of those in a group upon which the individuals comprising the group rely. Individuals in a eusocial group are necessarily reliant on the group for their own survival, and therefore put the needs of the group (both current and future) before their own. In most animal groups, this will be genetically related individuals. But we inventive, poetic humans might define our groups more broadly. For example, as chosen family, geographically local community members, an intentional living community, online affinity groups, or even all the human and more-than-human beings on whom we depend for survival.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

Why Climate Literacy?

To be climate-literate requires a basic understanding of the science behind the present climate and ecological crises, of how science ‘works’, the social/political/economic causes of these and allied crises, and a willingness to continuously learn about the existing and rapidly evolving science and practical responses to these crises. It turns out that this is very difficult to do on one’s own because there are few practical avenues through which busy adults can access reliable, integrated information and empirically-based and justice-informed analysis about the climate and allied crises, and how to meaningfully respond to them. As a result, most people whom I engage with on climate have an overall sense of doom and helplessness, like there is nothing meaningful that they can do about it. This feeling is totally understandable. It, like the worst-case scenarios of climate breakdown, is also avoidable.

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Michelle Auerbach Michelle Auerbach

Basketball, Empathy, and Deep Coalition

The “how” of thick solidarity, of meaningful coalition building, of showing up for people even when there are ways you will never fundamentally agree is one of the big questions of movement making. And answering it is like answering the question: How do you know how to fall in love? or How do you know how to develop a friendship? It involves some qualities we can name and then a factor of willingness and openness and the ability to be honest about goals, beliefs, and motivations. There is an element of mutual aid, and a bit of goal oriented healthy self awareness. But most of all there is empathy. Thick Empathy. 

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Nissa Coit Nissa Coit

Mindfulness & Watermelon Dal for the Scatterbrained Girlboss

When I find myself feeling overwhelmed by the state of the world, uncertain personal and collective futures, things not within my power to change, or sad that instead of doing art, dancing around a fire with my tribe, spending time with friends and family, I have to instead work for a wage, shop for insurance, or go to the grocery store, I breathe and try to focus my spotlight on chopping a tomato, or vacuuming with my whole being. To appreciate the weird beauty that is the curated aisles of the grocery store (while still being critical of them). And be grateful that I am able to. And sometimes, magic and art and childlike creativity, and ceremony creeps in anyway. And I get to live real life in that moment.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

COP28: Half-empty or Half- full? Unequal and ineffectual either way

So the verdict on the outcome of COP28 depends a lot on framing- whether you are the sort of person who sees the glass half empty or half full. A lot of that framing will depend on your own positionality in the world. Personally, as a scientist who trusts scientific consensus, I still feel culpable, like we somehow haven’t communicated the science and the urgency with which we need to act on it clearly enough. But I know that the motivation for the collective inaction and dithering of my and older generations is much more complicated than that. I also know that there are other, more effective ways to push for meaningful change, and that us adults in privileged countries must urgently move out of our comfort zones for the sake of those coming behind us – and they are paying attention.

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Nissa Coit, Mackenzie Faber, & Lauren Zitney Nissa Coit, Mackenzie Faber, & Lauren Zitney

What a Gift Gives

A gift is a recognition of plenty, of having enough to share. Or maybe it’s a recognition of need. I guess it depends, and I guess maybe it’s both. It’s the constant matching and mismatching, the commitment to place and time. 

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

High-Vibe Denialism: Wellness While The World Burns

I’ve even encountered this sort of denial face to face: on my last day of teaching at my former college (though I didn’t know it at the time) an acquaintance placed her hands on my shoulders and said “Oh Heather, don’t worry. It isn’t our fault. I’ve been doing deep spiritual work for 10 years now, and the climate is changing because our solar system is passing through negative energy.” This is a person who was an environmental activist and had been tear-gassed and kettled by police in riot gear at one protest.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

We Must Do More Than Just Teach Young People About Their Dismal Futures

However, this is exactly what I found myself doing after 25 years of teaching geology, earth systems, and climate science. What was abstract and interesting at the beginning of my career, over time became increasingly dissonant with what was not happening politically in order to prevent climate and ecological breakdown. Teaching young people about the climate system and its human-caused breakdown while they do not have the agency to stop it, while we scientists and educators plod along in our (mostly) secure lives and jobs, is morally problematic.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

Education for a World in Transition

Our educational system ought to be built around a nuanced understanding of ecology, earth systems, and our place within them. Would we be facing the intersection of human and geologic time in the form of climate and ecological catastrophe right now if government and business leaders had earned degrees in Human Ecology? Or Earth systems? If they had to, as part of their formal education, learn how to grow organic food and care for farm animals? To harvest or slaughter, store or process, and cook that food for their community? To live in and be accountable to a community? I doubt it. Because every policy or business decision would have to be made in the context of living on a physically finite planet, informed by real, face-to-face interactions with humans, other animals, and the living systems that enable us to live here.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

We Need to Talk About the Climate Emergency

As we go about our daily lives as privileged people in rich countries, most of us don’t spend much time thinking about the climate emergency, let alone talking to friends and family about it. The problem of the climate crisis is so big, so all-encompassing, and the causes of it so intimately tied to the neoliberal socio-economic reality that we live in and have grown up in, that we cannot imagine a way out. So most of us just don't talk about it- especially not to our families or associates. Especially not during the holidays. But we need to. We MUST.

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Dr. Heather Short Dr. Heather Short

Why Should We Trust What Climate Scientists Tell Us?

Misinformation spreads faster on social media than the coronavirus spreads through a crowded room, and it can lead to poor decision-making by individuals and governments that then affects entire communities and even the long-term viability of life on this planet as we know it. 

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Nicole Civita Nicole Civita

The Giving of Thanks

If I'm absolutely honest with myself, this long weekend still is a treasured time. It offers much-needed space to enjoy several of my favorite things: creative cooking for others (with at least some foods we grew from seeds we keep), a luxurious stretch of slow days filled with reading, snuggling, game-playing and leftover remixing, and giving voice to our gratitude. But that's not something that feels safe or even sensitive to say anymore. In fact, I'm not even sure how the hell I'm supposed to refer to today.

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