Thursday, 30 July 2015

Money is weird when you start looking at it closely



Having recently started work at the Addington Timebank I've been having lots of conversations about trading and money amongst other things, and I've concluded that money is not the straightforward means of exchange that we take it to be.    

Looking at what has been going on in Greece, I can see there are huge problems when a financial system collapses.  But, like Charles Eisenstein, in Sacred Economics,  I wonder, why do things grind to a halt when there is a financial crash and banks close?  

Banks don’t do any real work - they simply shuffle money around and, make money out of nothing (more about this another time!).    At the same time, farmers and gardeners are still growing food. We still have people who can cook, care, cure, build, clean, organise, entertain and all the other things that people need.  Surely it is a little odd that we need the blessing of a bank to make this continue.  

To take the odd nature of it even further most "money" as it is used today is a bunch of 0s and 1s recorded on computers, and doesn’t actually exist in any other form. When you take time to stand back and look at all this, it is clear that our real assets are our own skills, connections and communities, along with the ecological systems that provide us with the things we need to survive and thrive. 

This is one of the premises of the Timebanking idea that was first developed by Edgar Cahn.  Joining a timebank such as the Addington Timebank in Christchurch is one way  to learn about the many skills and abilities that people around us  have.  It introduces us to the idea of a local currency (time credits) and helps use imagine how we might survive in a world without money.

Timebanks also provides us with a way to imagine a world without banks and financiers, who simply make money out of money and who at present are creaming it because we've forgotten how to imagine a world that does not rely on them. 

Saturday, 18 July 2015

Climate change & feeling crazy: some personal reflections



A few years ago, I wanted to believe that my life and the lives of people around me would go on the way they have up until now. And I'm still tempted to do that. It looks easier!  In the short term it IS easier.
The trouble is that I realised my mind had to work hard to manage this disconnect.  There I was talking about the science of climate change, of mass extinctions, of unsustainable lifestyles on the one hand, but continuing to get into planes, to drive, to eat and to live what I recognised logically was a completely unsustainable life without really thinking about what I was doing.

I tried out a lot of justifications and I'm still tempted to use them sometimes.  These include things like:

I can't really make a difference as one person, so why try?
I'm doing so much in other parts of my life that I deserve to have some fun sometimes, or
I'm travelling for work, so this doesn't really count as my personal consumption. 


The part of me that keeps looking for ways out has also tried these approaches:   


Well,  nobody else is doing anything, so I may as well enjoy myself while I can,
They'll all think I"m crazy,
Maybe this is not real and I might be completely wrong because nobody else seems worried, or

I don't want to be THAT person (the one that rants on incessantly and makes life uncomfortable for everyone).

On top of this, I sit in on a lot of conversations about people's fantastic trips to amazing places where my mind tells me that I'm just plain boring.


But then I think about the children I know whose lives might be very difficult, or worse, perhaps even very short.  I think about the people I love and I don't want to see them suffering.  And that makes me want to do everything I can to make whatever difference I can, to the best of my ability. 

When I do look at it squarely, I see that if we could pull out of the mire of our foolish busyness, and work together build a future (any future!), it would be possible to effect the change we need, and to have good, happy lives as well.  And yet, I see a lot of good people turning their heads away from the truth of what this really needs because the path to disaster takes less attention, thought and effort.

Sunday, 19 April 2015

Earning, financial security and climate change




A few years ago I looked up from my well paid research job and thought “if I really believe that the world is facing serious limits, is this the work I should be doing?”  The answer to my question was essentially, ‘No.” And as I thought about it more, I realised there were a number of reasons why I should take the plunge and leave my well paid, regular job and start working in the alternative economy. 

First, high incomes lead to high consumption. People with high incomes can travel and consume whatever they like.  They tend to have large houses and all the things that go with it.  With spare money, one ends up investing – even if only be doing it via the bank.  The best I could do would be to give money away and so, in the end, I decided the best course of action was to do the giving by giving my time and skills.

Second, I realised that we have a kind of weird belief in our economic system which really only exists in our collective mind and a few computers that are controlled by us.  On top of that, like any Ponzi scheme, the system requires endless growth and is simply not sustainable.  If the money system collapses, it will cause all sorts of problems if we don’t have other ways of exchanging our skills and goods.

If you think about it, this is pretty weird because, as Charles Eisenstein points out in Sacred Economics, we will still have all the skills and means of production that we do now.  We will only have lost our means of exchange.   Strong community underlies the operation of things like time banks, generosity and reciprocity, which provide different but effective ways to effect that exchange that we need to survive and even flourish.

Third, we are reaching environmental limits and our climate is changing as the planet heats up.  There will be shortages of all sorts of things. It seems very likely that people will be unable to live the kinds of lives they have been used to.  I’m a social scientist and it is clear to me that we can go one of two ways when this happens.  We can pull together and do what is best for all of us, or we can fall apart and become violent and competitive, so a few of us get more.  We have seen both of these things happen in countries where environmental limits have come into play.   I’d rather the former happened at my place and I want to do everything in my power to make that more likely.  Building community, and helping people get to know each other, and conversant with alternative means of trade and exchange, is my way of doing that.

Getting unstuck or coming unstuck?



The Earth is reaching its limits with regard to human consumption on the earth.  I know this is not news because scientists have been talking about this for at least half of the last century.  However it still seems important!  None of us can predict exactly what will happen over the next 50-100 years.  But we do know that serious issues are arising now.  Our climate IS changing, our energy consumption is not sustainable, fresh water is becoming scarce in many places, sea levels are rising, to name a few.


Stand by a busy road one day and watch the endless line of stuck cars.  See if you think there is anyway that this could be remotely sustainable after you have been there for 10 minutes, and think about how much this consumption makes us happy while you  are there!  I'm gobsmacked sometimes when I look at our nonsensical way of life that makes many very unhappy at the same time as it destroys our own unique, miraculous planet and life support system.  The only way this can change and that people can get out of the many binds that they are in is to work out how to act collectively to change the broader system.   While individuals can change, we do need to find ways to make these changes easier and more likely - more ecologically probable as WR Catton put it some years ago, and to do that we need to consider things like the mutual cooercion mutually agreed upon that Garret Hardin talked about in the 60s


Governments and transnational organisations such as the World Bank and the UN need to take action now to encourage people to change before the bite comes. An international carbon tax is the idea that currently makes the most sense.  We have already seen that governments will need considerable pressuring to do this – and this means all of us need to be working to get action across the population    convincing voters not to vote for governments that refuse to take action,  attending rallies, letter writing, submissions, and educating people about the connections between energy, climate change, our capacity to adapt and our current way of life.  

Overall, we need to build our capacity to act collectively, locally, nationally, and internationally.  We need to minimise the disaster that looms, and we need to increase the likelihood of pulling together to weather disasters and the changes that face us. We can do these things and the need to all be happening at once.  Almost anything you do from writing letters to ministers, to organising or attending rallies, to building community at your place or simply getting to know your neighbours a little better and talking to them about how you’ve stopped using your car or thought about your power consumption, can help!

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Stopping the busyness



I'm often in conversation with people about how busy we all are.  And for many of us it seems to be a good thing and I suppose as I've reflected on my propensity to be busy and fill up my time, I've found myself asking what benefit does all this busyness has?  Does it benefit us as individuals racing through the world?  Does it benefit those we love?  Does it even benefit our workplaces?  It seems to me that the answer to any of these questions is pretty much "no".

A few years ago I was travelling; moving from place to place and through places, either walking cycling or driving.  The times I most treasured were when we stopped, because, at those times I’d suddenly see magical things going on around me.  In the mountains, small animals went about their lives, in cities people were hurrying, relaxing, talking, watching and in amongst all that were beautiful or interesting flowers, shops, buildings, parks and wildlife that were easy to miss when I was just passing through.  As I noticed this more, I found more excuses to stop quietly and enjoy the richness that teamed around me.  

I was reminded of this yesterday when I read a blog post by Charles Eisenstein  about an encounter he had child in a playpen. He reflected that interacting with that baby may have been the most important thing that he did that day in amongst all his other work.  In doing that, he highlighted the abundance and potential that every moment holds.  I found myself thinking how easy it is to forget this in out rush to do things that seem important or, worse, things that are not.

 It might be good to stop and think about this.  I'm not implying that making these changes is easy.  For me to slow down, for example, I had to work through a number of issues that arose: taking a large cut in pay, worrying about the future, and feeling unimportant because I was no longer rushing from one meeting to the next are a few of the issues that arose. I had to step out of the mainstream and to find enjoyment in different things.  The beauty of it is that I have and that I'm happier living this way.  Occasionally I choose to be busy but I know that it will end and because it is a contrast I can  enjoy it consciously. 

Trying to pack a lot into our lives or trying to be highly productive is not necessarily going to make us, or our loved ones happy (the opposite often happens, in fact), and neither is it good for the planet.  Being mindlessly busy is a trap that does not make us happy or productive and which keeps us all from seeing the things that we should or could be doing instead.