Showing posts with label alternative ecconomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alternative ecconomy. Show all posts

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Allegory of the Long Spoons




There is a story that has permeated various religions about two rooms. The first room is in hell, where the people have row after row of tables with laden with a feast of delicacies. Yet the people sitting around these tables are emaciated, moaning in hunger. In their hands, each held a long spoon, but their arms were splinted to wooden flats, so they could not bend their elbows to bring the spoons to their mouths.

In heaven, there is an identical room, with people in the same predicament of spoons. However, in heaven, the people sitting around these tables are comfortably sated. There, the people had discovered that it was only possible to feed each other, by reaching across the table with their long spoons to bring the food to each others' mouths, being fed depended on everyone being kind to one another.

Recently, Mark Bittman had an article in The New York Times called, Why I'm Not A Vegan. It's more a promo for his book, VB6 (Vegan Before 6), a lifestyle choice he made for health reasons. The idea behind VB6 is to basically eat vegan until dinnertime, although he admits to frequent cheating. It's very similar to meatless Mondays, forms of scheduled moderation for diet and health.

I've written previously on this blog about the concept of ahmisa, but today I'm thinking about community, and how eating is a communal act.

Even when a person dines alone, rarely did they grow or hunt their food themselves, or at least, not all of it. They are the end of a (typically) long producer/consumer chain. In most cases, this chain is invisible. It brings to mind an article I read several years ago about how the definition of "cooking" has changed in America to include opening and heating up a can of soup.

With its invisible status, this producer/consumer chain is not considered part of most people's communities. But what if our thinking were to change? What if we started seeing eating as a form of engaging with community - not just through dinner conversation, but through product consumption? It might mean that we want more of connection to said products - by knowing the farmers, by shopping locally, by gardening ourselves, and that a faceless corporation is not a good dinner companion.

And what if we went beyond that? Aldo Leopold suggested the idea of in A Sand County Almanac, "The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or collectively: the land." What if we considered the pollinators such as bees, or the microbes in the soil, part of our community? They certainly contribute to our food production. What does it do to our thinking then?

What sort of spoon could you extend?

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Initial Public Offering



Please click on the image to see the larger version.


Friends:


The undersigned, Chief Executive Officer, Chairwoman of the Board, director and shareholder of Carbon Corpus LLC (the “Company”), which takes corporeal form in the body of Michelle Wilson, in consideration of global warming, underwrites this initial public offering of the securities of the Company (“IPO”) and embarking on the IPO process, hereby agrees that, subject only to consummation of the IPO, the undersigned shall comply with each of the following covenants and agreements.

1.The Company exclusively surrenders all animal-based carbon credits to purchaser, and shall eat an exclusively vegan diet for the amount of time purchased.
2.The minimum period of purchased time is one week.
3.A week is defined as a seven-day allotment.
4.During the IPO period, the value of one week of corporeal carbon offset is $50.


By purchasing a share in Carbon Corpus, the purchaser (the “Patron”), will henceforth become a shareholder upon receipt of payment. The Patron will receive a certificate as authentication of this agreement.

This letter agreement shall be governed by and construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of California, without giving effect to conflicts of law principles that would result in the application of the substantive laws of another jurisdiction.


Michelle Wilson
Carbon Corpus CEO

If interested in becoming a shareholder, please contact the artist at michelle(at)michellewilsonprojects(dot)com.