Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Problem is the Solution

Well, pardon my brief hiatus:  I had some relocating, and therefor the important work of re-integrating my own natural cycles and rhythms to the larger ones of my new community, to do.  Welcome to Huntington Beach!

...And now, back to Permaculture.  Where we focus on living in rhythm with our own natural cycles and the larger natural cycles, which a permie person would call Systems (think habitats), of which we are a part. Zones are what a permie would call your own personal cycles and rhythms.  Think of your daily rounds, you probably have an exact daily routine that includes maybe two or three basic areas of your home.   These basic routine areas are part of your rhythm.  They are your first zone.

Today's post will cover a few different permaculture principles, which is good because as in any system, whether it's the Bolsa-Chica wetlands and the watershed that reaches it, or your own human body, remember that every part effects the whole.  So think of permaculture that way, too: a macro world view that encompasses every micro.  I like the metaphor of a great spiral.  You are the heart of the spiral at the very center, you are your very own first most important Zone!  We call the person Zone Zero.  Look up, look down, see all the circles that overlap and overlap and overlap and weave out from you in every direction.  Look at all the many, many other circles, all those other Zone Zeros, that intersect and weave in to yours.  Each Zone Zero has three or four Zones that spiral out from them!!  And that's just at their HOME!  Think of all the spirals you are connected to. That's the way we are going to learn to look at this.  A Permaculture Worldview.

A Few Basic Principles*
  1. The problem is the solution.  In permaculture, we focus on Resources.  A resource is any energy storage which assists energy output--a plant, food waste, the shade of a tree are just some examples.  Solution means we learn how to use the least amount of energy to assist the greatest yield of energy.  All excess energy is returned to the whole.  In looking at a Zone--and one's home is their main Zone (technically speaking, a permaculturist would go so far as to break your home in to a number of Zones according to where you use the most and the least amount of resources, or energy).  So the problem, or the micro-Zone where energy is most wasted, holds the answer.  There is no doom and gloom defeatism here.  Look at the waste, how can it be corrected to assist surplus and contribute yield of surplus in the most maximized way.  We don't need to create new resources, we just need to redistribute, or re-balance, the yields of energy that natural resources already provide.  Resources want to create!  The answer's right there in front of us!
  2. Pollution is an unused resource. If a system--your home for example--has more energy produced from one resource than in can use, the system becomes imbalanced.  Think of squash season, how those little vine buggers will take over and suffocate the whole garden.   Now think of what happens when every one on the street receives a basket of squash on the doorstep tonight.  Energy has gone from wasteful to doubling in its provisions.  
  3. Cooperation, not competition, is the basis of future survival for existing life systems.  This is a simple one.  Walk in to a room.  Smile.  See how many people follow this example.  Later walk in to a room and scowl. See what you attract. Your worldview is where this all starts.  Do you want a happy, companionable Zone, or a defensive, glowering one?  How you look at yourself, at your life, how you treat your most personal Zones, is the ultimate choice.  It's the one thing that remains entirely up you.
*principles taken from Earth Activist Training Manual; adapted from Bill Mollison

1 comment:

  1. I receive about a dozen multi colored gifts from my fifteen chickens each day. That's muchos huevos! Everyone loves a dozen fresh eggs! Not to mention the rich mulch from chicken poo. A microcosm of joy springing forth from a bunch of silly chickens.

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