Monday, October 15, 2012

Saving Planet Earth -- A Complaint?


Much has been said and written about saving the planet from destruction by its human inhabitants.  We are asked to have a small 'footprint' on the planet, to "reduce, reuse, recycle," and to take other actions to help save the planet. The call to change often implies that we should feel guilty for damage to the planet from our ever more expansive lifestyles.  We are informed that without sacrifices, we will experience irreversible planet damage, and life on planet Earth could be doomed, if it is not already be too late.

All this may be completely true, and in consequence we are expected to take on a spartan and ascetic existence. But wait a minute.  
Slums in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
photo by World Resources on Flickr

Saving Planet Earth -- What is wrong with you people?


When it comes to saying that the Earth is in peril, too many people are deniers and non-caring to be dismissed. The diversity of human attitudes presents a quandary.

People are polarized in their viewpoints.  The deniers, the uncaring, together with the guilt-ridden believers are an unholy combination.  We can ask whether there is any commonality among the groups so as to make progress towards an effective response to the changing condition of the Earth.

For one thing, most people feel compelled to protect themselves with some sort of contingency planning for unknown future events. What is to be the contingency plan for possible destruction of the Earth? Sometimes life insurance is seen as meeting contingency needs, which in this case might be thought of as a life insurance policy on the life of the planet.  However, if planet life fails, collection on the policy will be difficult.

Do we build survival shelters so we can continue to live through an apocalyptic era, surviving on a spent planet, with the few remaining people using diminished earth resources?  These are questions too big for one short discussion.  Some visionary answers can be found in movies of apocalypse and post-apocalypse life -- if you can accept them.

Saving Planet Earth -- You too can be guilt-free


[When it comes to saying that the Earth is in peril, too many people are deniers and non-caring to be dismissed. The diversity of human attitudes presents a quandary.]

Photo: Dennis Stefani, (c) Mrs. Me, Inc., 2008,
made available under a CC
BY-NC-ND license
The people who deny that the planet is experiencing risky human behaviors and those who do not care about the risk are people who do not feel guilty about population growth.  Good for them because their lack of guilt helps to keep them healthy. (Guilt is considered bad for health.) They respond to increasing population in a fashion analogous to saying "there is always more room at the inn."  Read this as the world instead of the inn, and more room is room for more people.  In other words, there is always room on the planet for more people. so the deniers and non-caring enjoy life without guilt even as they create more babies. They think there is always more room on Earth no matter how crowded it gets.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Comforting the baby held in arms when placed in bed

I learned something about comforting the baby this week that I had missed for the past forty years.  When baby is placed into its bed, the baby arms and legs often extend outwards perhaps as a primal reaction in the event of falling.  The calming part is that once baby is on the bed, gently moving baby's limbs toward torso and gently holding them there for a few seconds seems to have a wonderfully calming effect.  The reward is that baby is more at ease with the change from being in arms to being in bed.  This must be described somewhere else, but in a quick check of several internet sites, nothing was found on the subject.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Cats..Cats..Cats..(43 cats)

Miles and Ella, our 12yo pretty kitties have gone into retirement.  They join 41 other cats who together share a large home and large yard, and have pretty much free run of the place.  The place seems idyllic from a cat's eye viewpoint.  Due to the regal bearing of Miles and Ella, they have been dubbed the king and queen at their new home.  

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Communicating with an infant: challenge and joy

I am reacquainting with parent life after close to forty years since the last baby. One forgets some of the details about what babies are like after so many years since the previous. I marvel at the ongoing interactions with the current baby, although more than likely the interactions are not much different from those with the previous babies.

Communication has begun to develop over the past few weeks since her birth. Helping with the communication is baby's sweetness, patience, and good nature that is waiting to shine through as we try to figure out why baby is fussing, and that finally shows as the baby settles down to being content.

To decide what baby needs is of course not easy. We have a usual checklist that includes food, temperature adjustment, diaper change, burping, swaddling or cuddle, stuffy nose and more. We breathe a sigh of relief when baby is satisfied.

Now when baby looks at us, and smiles (especially if it is not gas), we feel especially good too.