Green Moms Carnival! Our Take On Global Warming
I am absolutley delighted to have been invited by Lynn Miller of Organic Mania to join a group of green mom bloggers and to explore a particular topic once a month in relationship to green.
I have never participated in a blog carnival before, so bear with me as I venture into this project. Some of these moms I am very excited to get to know better, support their green bloggy efforts and to share the sisterhood we all have as moms.
For those of you visiting Best of Mother Earth for the first time - welcome!
This month's topic is Global Warming. My thoughts follow:
Imagine yourself in the woods, surrounded by silence, sprinkled with light as it peeks through the trees. The hush envelops you, and you are reminded of peace and harmony. Nature does that. I have such an awe for the way nature speaks to us. It reminds us. It calms us. Nurtures us. Nature nurtures me. I was taught to respect nature, to leave the campground as we found it as they say, or better.
In the woods we find ways to use sticks, berries, and tree stumps. Look around, make do with what you have. Improvise. Be resourceful. How inspirational nature is!
The fall after my first divorce had us switch to a new school. That first morning on the playground I was desperate. I had just landed a new job and I had noone to watch my kids after school. Hi - my name is Karen - I'm new, can you watch my kid ? I so hated the way that felt.
Later in the year I took on my first project as a school mom and volunteer. The project was about creating something bigger than us, something that left a deep footprint. Something ever lasting. The image of that footprint really meant something to me. I wanted to be remembered for the good I brought to the world. My project 12 years later is still a function of 5 grammar schools in the district. Kindof cool.
Global warming and nature tell me something different. They inspire me to tread lightly. They warn me that it's better to leave not a single thing behind. They shout at me and says leave the campground as we found it - or better. No footprints.
An article in national geographic years ago took all the plastics found in a typical american home and put it all out on the front lawn. It was a 2 page spread of junk, or things at the time I didn't even know were plastic or petroleum derived. I was shocked.
Ever since then I have had this silly image in my head. What if graveyards instead of marking our resting place with a headstone, stacked the remains of our household instead? Can you imagine what that would even look like? Here rests Jane Doe with enough plastic stuff to float someone around the world. Here's Jane Doe with a paper stack as tall as the sears tower. Here's Jane Doe with more chemicals than a chemical factory. Here is Jane Doe with enough food in her fridge to feed a family of 12 and then some.
The mere thought of this has had me reconsider not only my demise - death by plastic or global warming. It's also had me reconsider my consumption, my needs, my wants. The shift is slow and frustrating. An entire society does things the way they always have. Me? I am learning. I am deciding otherwise.
I personally want to be remembered for the footprint I don't leave behind. I want the peace and harmony of the woods to still be there for others to enjoy. I want my resting place to have a very small stack.
What about you ?

earthy footprints collage flickr image credit
Karen Hanrahan ~ Wellness Educator/Nutritional Consultant/Blog Author
708.482.0678 ~ Websites: Nutrition Weight Loss, and Green Clean










once a mom-always a mom.
i'm-a-mama...
i'm green, i'm clean and i live light for all the heavy burden of demonstrating that sparing resources has its rewards.
generic gratitude for your specific activism, it works, to prod and produce a strong community of consciousness.
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yNadine, you and I are of the same determined, proud and like minded gentle spirits - when we gather it's true we can prod and produce consciousness - being moms has us nurture with a different determination - we got kids to put out in the world
remind me how old yours are ??
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Just stopping by from Liz Strauss's Blog Show.
Yes, we are all leaving a huge plastic footprint on this world. One of the blogs in this Blog Show covered excessive packaging and working to stop companies from strangling our world with blister packs and display packaging. I forgot which blogger it was, but you two might have a great conversation if you can connect.
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Space Age Sage,
Appreciate you stopping by, I see you at Liz's all the time. I hope to spend some time at the Blog show tomorrow morning - what a cool thing, eh? I'll look for the blogger who wrote about excessive packaging - thanks for alerting me to it
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Hi Karen. I found you through Liz's Blog-to Show weekend. Loved your article. I'm a nature-lover for sure! Your descriptions of nature were almost as comforting as being in nature.
I especially enjoyed your last comments and how you related them to the theme of the post.
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Davina,
Isn't the blog to show weekend cool ? Thank you for stopping by, for finding some comfort ij my nature descriptions and for "getting" how those ideas mesh for me.
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Love the footprint photo! It's a great reminder that everything we do does leave a footprint...we just have to try to make it as small as possible.
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I appreciate the kindred spirit, mindful mama!
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Love the "still learning and deciding otherwise." Right there with ya...
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it's true -- we have to be honest don't you think? I'm OK with marching to a different drum. I am also OK with saying I don't know it all either
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