Tag: living green

#022; It isn't easy being Green (aka #4)

It isnt easy being Green

It isn't easy being Green

In the spirit of The Top Ten Things Every Green Blogger Must Do (it’s a parody, folks), I come to you with my very own Green Top Ten – the Top Ten Green Cliches I’ve Fallen Victim To (also a parody, folks, though these are some things that I’ve done, somewhat sadly).

  1. I have officially written a blog entry titled “It isn’t easy being Green”
  2. I have taken to capitalizing the word ‘Green’ when discussing all things philosophically environmentalist (I have also taken to using the phrase philosophically environmentalist).
  3. I have owned hemp clothing and tried to dred my hair (very straight and silky short hair – it was not a successful experiment).
  4. I claim one of the main reasons I love living in a Metro-able city is because I don’t want to own a car because of damage it would do to the world to drive it every day.
  5. I claim that I would love to go Vegan for the environmental impact (I do try to do the ‘one day a week’ thing, though, so at least that’s something?).
  6. At my first blog (‘The View from Dupont’), I had a guest blogger write lots about Al Gore during the whole ‘Inconvenient Truth’ policy tour thing. You know, right after he became a big Hollywood movie star with his Oscar (or was he a Nobel Laureate? Oh yeah, he was both, and yet…).
  7. I have more than once been very frustrated by rental living and the lack of control we have over our environmental impact.
  8. I have spent an evening out at a Vegan bar. Seriously. Soy White Russians, no joke, and they’re much better than they sound.
  9. I DO have a Twitter account (@atlimbo) and DO indeed follow @TreeHugger, @Grist, and @PlanetGreen (though, it’s funny, Treehugger’s been one of my favorite online communities since long before I ‘became Green’ thanks to their amazing shopping guidelines…).
  10. I have officially created a Top 10 List. (What are some of your favorites?)

#021; learning something new every day

I am currently stepping into an entirely new area of study for me, thanks to work. I’ve always focused on US policy and politics, with the exception of an odd obsession with Latin American economics when I was in college. That phase passed for me, though, and I went back to worrying solely about the goings on in our backyard of DC. Now, I find myself branching out once more. My interests in energy and environmentalism (which I’m working on a post about as well, my strange journey to becoming ‘green’) have lead me to deal more and more with international markets, security issues, trade research, and foreign cultures. Today, for example, I am spending the day diving head first into African politics.

I like to think this is one of the best things about Limbo – the ability to change your mind about things, explore new areas of interests or hobbies, and expand your philosophy and experiences through your time floating, but…

Where does one begin? When you find yourself intrigued by something you’ve no clue about – how do you start? I’ve always been the sort to find a book, or Wiki a subject, but with such a broad topic as this one, I find myself at a loss. I’d love your suggestions, not just for this area of study, but in general. How do you go about learning something new every day?

#012; yes, I happen to enjoy guns, church, AND tofu

“We simply assume that the way we see things is the way they really are or the way they should be. And our attitudes and behaviors grow out of these assumptions.” – Stephen R. Covey
Catherine Favazza has a great blog post up this morning (by Kirsten Wright of Wright Creativity) about the stereotypes and assumptions conservatives face when involved in social media. The post got me thinking – I find that it’s not so much my social media networking that surprises people when they find out I’m a Republican, but the fact that I consider myself one at all.

I make no secret of the fact that my history in policy has focused on green energy, women’s rights (reproductive rights especially), and GLBT equality. However, people seem to forget that there are a whole host of other issues one can disagree with the Democratic Party on. Military force, global strategy, free markets, trade, taxes, lobbyist influence, the death penalty, mandatory sentences, privatization of anything, education, states’ rights…

I’m not trying to use this post to start a debate on the issues, I just find it so frustrating when I’m accused of being a ‘faux’ Republican because I happen to be a blogger who’s into equality for all. I can, of course, argue until I’m blue in the face that my Party also agrees with equal rights (or, realistically, that neither do – particularly when the heads of the Dems – Obama, Biden, and Reid – are against gay marriages), but then you get into a discussion about evolution of policy, national platform, and personal belief. I’m not here to convince you of anything, and so I won’t try.

My belief that a woman has a right to choose doesn’t mean that I believe any less in my right to own a gun. It doesn’t mean that I am for extravagant spending policies or that I have anything but absolute respect for our armed forces. It’s become increasingly frustrating to feel that perhaps I simply don’t have a home in either Party. The Libertarians are too laissez-faire for me. Independents can’t vote in primaries and don’t have young groups of activists like the DCYRs and Young Dems of America.

And so I cling to my Republicanism, feeling much more comfortable in discussions of small government and cigarette smoke and brunches. I wear pearls and cardigans because I happen to like them no matter what my artist friends and housemates may say otherwise. I am not putting on an act by enjoying time with fellow conservatives (because though I am partially socially liberal, I do consider myself mostly a conservative) or by going to Mass on Sundays.

What stereotypes do you find most insulting? Politically or otherwise? Do people assume things about you because of your religion? (One I get a lot? “Oh, you’re Catholic, so you hate gays, right?”) What about your upbringing? I think my problem with all of this is the disgust on the faces of those who learn my truth. The fact that it’s assumed that I’m liberal or a Democrat doesn’t bother me, so much as the attitude that’s taken once it’s found out that I’m not. As if I should know better or just haven’t found the light yet. The assumption that I’m somehow faking this, that for some reason I’m taking a stand on behalf of things that I don’t believe in at all. I want to be trusted to my own beliefs – if they evolve (which they have before) I am someone who admits as much, but until then, I find the assumption a very trying one.

#011; live a little greener

Happy Earth Day!
What have you done for our planet lately?
Me? I went vegetarian! Starting today.
And possibly ending today…
But we’ll see how that goes.