A commercial crackles over the radio...it is presenting the idea that a man proposes over the phone and then his cell phone cuts out so he does not get his intends response, thus destroying the engagement. The commercial makes clear that life will only be good if one has the right cell phone service. In fact a myriad of ads tell Americans on a daily basis that our lives will only be good and "right" if we have convenience, if it is easy. The message line over and over again is our lives are supposed to be easy.
Right now the globe requires of all people living in first world countries that we live less energy intensive lives which means less convenient lives. Several years ago my family peace group decided as a group that we needed to stop using plastic bags in stores because they are made of petroleum. This meant needing to own and bring to the store our own bags. Now that sounds SO simple right? Wrong. I discovered keeping them in the car was easy, but time and time again I would get in the store to realize I left them in the car. If I was not all the way in the checkout line I would make myself go back out and get them which eventually ingrained habit.
But I was amazed how hard I found the habit to make. I realized I had been RAISED to never have to prepare for going to the store - to just have what I needed there. It is the same with using real products over paper plates, cups, plastic silverware and paper napkins or paper towels. All these things waste resources and can easily be replaced with real items....All it requires is preplanning and the willingness to clean the items afterwards.
My favorite example of this engrained American way of thinking is a friend of mine decided she was going to start a campaign to get people to bring their own mugs to coffee shops. She went to her favorite coffee shop to ask them something about how much the cups cost them and while she was there ordered a coffee. She then looked down and realized she was drinking out of a paper cup that the coffee she had just ordered was put in!
In a support group I later joined to look at Climate Change issues a friend joked: "Hi my name is Rick and I'm a carbon addict" at first we laughed at this 12-step parody. But very quickly we began to realize it is NO joke! We are addicted and it actually requires focused attention and support to change the life time American habit of believing we are entitled to convenience. In that group I struggled to reduce my driving by riding a bike more. (I have mainly failed.) It is so hard for me to decide that it is ok to spend more time getting around because it is so much quicker and thus convenient to dash somewhere in my car. Opps I forgot an ingredient for dinner and now it is half cooked and almost dinner time; just jump in the car and go get that ingredient. A 10 block drive each direction for a can of one item. We do this sort of thing all the time, doe it really make sense? Do I want the planet melted for a quick can of beans, or for the right to throw away my napkin?
Several years after my peace group decided to switch to carrying our own bags, (I now have a nylon one folded up the size of a wallet in my purse at all times) my city first had a referendum to abolish plastic bags. The petroleum industry actually spent X number of dollars to defeat the referendum claiming it disadvantaged the poor. A few years later the city council, not to be as easily bought, passed a law outlawing plastic bags after July lst.
The second week of July I encountered an old woman running through the parking lot back to the check out line with her plastic bags in hand: “Not yet a habit” she cheerfully called out. I asked the cashier how this was going. He said: “Some people are fine and some are really mad”. At Christmas I got to witness a grown man having a tantrum in the store because the cashier could not give him a bag. American addiction to convenience is not always pretty! What will we have to feel if life is not always easy?
Most recently my sweetheart has challenged me to look at being completely vegetarian. I was completely vegetarian for 10 years and partially vegetarian for some two decades more. I added fish back in as a matter of convenience. I was driving three times a week along a hwy where I had to purchase my dinner and it was littered with only fast food restaurants. After a year of bean burritos three times a week I could not look at one without feeling slightly sick, so I added fish back in. For years and years I ate meat only outside of my home in restaurants because it was hard (read inconvenient) to find restaurants with vegetarian options. (In foreign cities it often requires careful internet research ahead of time.) However eating no meat is the carbon equivalent to going from a gas guzzler to a Prius. I must once again look at this peculiar American obsession and feeling of entitlement to convenience. Eating no meat is the greatest reduction in carbon most Americans could make. Since I have been in the business for the last few years of encouraging Americans to reduce their carbon foot print, it certainly makes my witness more integral. So for New Years I will eat a ceremonious last fish and then stop eating all meat.
"How inconvenient." Good thing Al Gore named it an inconvenient truth that our planet is melting. Which thing is ultimately more inconvenient?
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