wishbones: ĭn'spə-rā'shən |
my daily inspiration feed. wishbonestwo.blogspot.com |
The frames do it for me.
necessary encouragement from across the atlantic…
This is a question I’ve struggled with a lot recently, especially after reading David Orr’s Down to the Wire: Confronting the Climate Crisis. In planning, we learn to value the natural world in addition to the built environment. In Christianity, we learn that God makes man the steward of the Earth with the responsibility to create a culture (“cultivate”) with this charge in mind.
We seem to define sustainability relative to what we know is unsustainable, which is murky at best. When the problem (climate change) and its effects are uncertain, how can we point to anything and call it sustainable?
Climate change, especially in the West, has become a polarizing issue, but my question is not a political one. Ultimately, it comes to down to what we value as individuals, families, communities, nations, and humans. So I pose this question to you: How do you define sustainability in your day-to-day life? Does it solely suggest the environment? Is it social? Is it political? All of the above? Do you even think about it? If so, how does it manifest itself in your everyday life? If not, why not?
i have an addiction to old maps
(via bloombaby)
i have this g stamp! i bought last v-day to make notecards for h when we were still long-distance. ( :
Genius.
dreamsicleday: (via bloombaby)
Pink Smeg fridge? Automatic Reblog!
not sure what my thing is w/ mirrored/silver furniture!
(via thingssheloves)
this looks eerily like venus.