Tuesday, February 14, 2012
One Carefully Considered Act at a Time
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| "Courage "Limited Edition Bronze ed/35 Sherab Khandro |
Drunk on the luxuries of the world, the financial crisis of
this past few years has called us to take a sober look at things, to define
what we really value. There are changes to be made if we are to stabilize
economies, communities and our own minds.
There is an invitation in these circumstances. I believe if
we are listening, we are being asked to step up as individuals, to engage our
lives more consciously, each one of us matters. The things we do, the choices
we make matter. What are the
impacts of our choices on our larger global community? How do we care for our
responsibilities, each other and ourselves? Perhaps, one carefully considered act at a time.
I am inspired by the action of Patriot Disposal Inc. a local
company serving the Verde Valley and Prescott. They have stepped up. They have created a dynamic win/win
for our community and our planet. I hear there are others doing it too. A few
days ago I walked my carefully sorted trash and recyclables out to the
bins. I didn’t see the distinctly
recognizable red top of the recycling bin. Inquiring of a fellow tenant I am
told it all goes in one bin now and is hand sorted at the other end.
At first blush, I am skeptical. Is he sure? Has this company
possibly given up on recycling? In this day and age? Personally, I think recycling is brilliant. Although it
better serves our environment if we reduce and reuse, the benefits of recycling
over disposal are many; a conscious choice based on what we know to be the
effects of our behavior to date.
A committed recycler myself, I can not help but notice a
continuing waste of resources, bottles, paper, recyclable bits casually
disposed of everywhere I go. A vast number of everyday products are100%
recyclable. At one time they were
destined only for a landfill or one of those plastic islands gathering out at
sea. Now they can become a myriad of products regularly in demand. I call the
number emblazoned on the side of the can. A knowledgeable woman explains the
challenges of collecting and disposing of the trash and the recycling
separately, noting as well the lack of people participating in the recycling
program. When we know that much of what we dispose of each day is 100%
recyclable and the resources to make it happen are nearby, I marvel at how much
ends up in the trash. Apparently,
so did Patriot Disposal Company.
They have opened their own recycling center. The trash is
gathered in one pass through the neighborhood and hand sorted at the other end.
They have created jobs, the new facility employs 24 people and there is 100%
participation in the program, every bin is sorted and the recyclables are
recycled and the trash is trashed. Patriot Disposal addressed immediate
concerns for efficient business, the needs of the community and the
environment. A win/win/win if I
ever saw one.
Those that see its value and want to recycle have created
ways to make it happen. Those that don’t wish to bother don’t have to and it
still gets done. I call that a
kind of harmony.
Recycling can be a moment-by-moment practice that challenges
us to stay present. Recycling begins with small everyday items that are almost
invisible, tossed aside when finished, a crumpled paper, a plastic bottle. How
many times a day do we handle these items? Do we give any thought to where this
paper or this bottle goes when we are finished with it? When millions of these items each day
are tossed aside, what is the impact?
How do our simplest actions support the world we are committed to
creating? How do they impact the
world we are leaving to our future generations?
Small acts add up. The effect can be dramatic. I see it happen in my paintings, each
stroke of the brush a simple gesture, one after another, an image emerges, an
entire story unfolds. What are we committed to creating? What are we each
willing to do? I invite myself each morning to walk my spiritual practice
through each moment, up off the cushion, mindful, aware. Each evening I check
in, how might I have been more conscious today? I cannot change what has
already happened, its gift is in what it teaches me. The future holds no
certainty, the moment of power is right here, right now.
What will I do with this moment? What will you?
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Sherab "Shey" Khandro - Fine Contemporary Art

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