Saturday, September 26, 2015

Combining nature with hands-on work outdoors

The Nature-Smart Career: 11 New Jobs For a Nature-Rich Future

http://www.childrenandnature.org/2014/03/24/new-nature-smart-careers-11-for-the-future-and-for-right-now/
by Richard Louv


Richard Louv has a lot of great perspectives on connecting nature and people. I like his term "nature deficit disorder"--the disorder being with our system rather than within people.


"7. New Agrarian. Who’s that? Urban farmers who design and operate community gardens. Designers and operators of vertical farms in high-rise buildings. Organic farmers and innovative vanguard ranchers who use sophisticated organic practices to produce food. The focus is on local, family-scale sustainable food, fiber, and fuel production in, near, and beyond cities.
8. Health care provider who prescribes nature. Ecopsychologists, wilderness therapy professionals, are going mainstream. Some pediatricians are now prescribing or recommending “green exercise” in parks and other natural settings to their young patients and their families. Hospitals, mental health centers, and nursing home are creating healing gardens. The Portland, Oregon parks department partners with physicians who send families to local parks, where park rangers serve as health para-profesionals. In the U.K., a growing “green care” movement encourages therapeutic horticulture, ecotherapy, and green care farming.
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    9. Green exercise trainer. Exercising indoors and outdoors seems to produce different results. Even when the same number of calories are burned. Outside exercise appears to have better results, especially for psychological well-being. Green exercise trainers can help individuals and families individually or by organizing “green gyms” and family nature clubs. “People walkers” can help the elderly take a hike.
11. Bioregional guide. We’ll see the emergence of the citizen naturalist who, as professionals or volunteers, help people get to know where they live. One organization, Exploring a Sense of Place in the San Francisco Bay Area, guides groups that want to have a deeper understanding of the life surrounding them. Think of these guides as nature-smart Welcome Wagons who help us develop a deeper sense of personal and local identity."

Friday, September 25, 2015

Working with your hands: the secret to happiness?

Working with your hands: the secret to happiness?by Oliver Burkeman in the Guardian
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2010/may/08/working-hands-happiness-burkeman


"Our physical surroundings no longer hold our attention, and we start to succumb to what Crawford calls 'virtualism' – 'a vision of the future in which we somehow take leave of material reality and glide about in a pure information economy.' This is the vision peddled by numerous commentators on the future of the internet: an ethereal, anchorless world in which all we do is exchange ideas, where everything is funded by advertisements for everything else, and in which all that matters is the production of knowledge – not the sewers and electricity networks and kitchen tables and washing machines on which the knowledge-producers will still presumably rely."

The case for working with your hands



The author has a Ph.D. in political philosophy and runs a vintage motorcycle repair shop.

We need much more training, encouragement, breadth of options for people who want to work with their hands and want to get out of an office--which is a lot of people.

The case for working with your hands by Matthew Crawford
http://www.amazon.com/Working-Hands-Office-Fixing-Things/dp/0141047291/ref=la_B001QV943Q_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1443207185&sr=1-3