August’s Synchronized Chaos..Recognizing Our Treasures: What Is Truly Valuable?

 

Welcome to the August issue of Synchronized Chaos! Thanks to those who have followed this project for almost an entire year, and glad to see the newcomers, too.

This time around our contributors encourage us to re-think and re-appraise our values and our natural and material resources, to figure out and focus on what is most important. Some international thought-leaders, such as John Wood, author of How I Left Microsoft to Change the World, who is now building elementary schools internationally and bringing children books, see this worldwide economic crunch as a motivation to reorganize our activities and become more creative and efficient.

In a similar spirit, the managers and workers at Zocalo’s, Crosstown, and the Oakland It’s a Grind franchise coffeehouses discuss going back to the basics to make sure they’re as competent as possible at the few things which make their businesses the most money (usually the coffee.) Also, each manager articulated some fundamental human, as well as economic, values guiding his or her business: community-building, mentorship and a dedication to employees’ professional development, ecological sustainability, mutual respect among customers, employees, and management, facilitating participation in local decision-making.

Gaile Parkin’s novel Baking Cakes in Rwanda, reviewed this month, discusses similar kinds of business decisions, as well as the human factors involved with customer service and local entrepreneurship within a small community, for a bakery in Rwanda. While at first glance it seems that the issues Angel Tungaraza faces would be incredibly different from those of Northern California coffeehouse employees, the most striking aspect of the book was how ‘normal’ most people seemed in all of these various places, just trying to enjoy life, care for friends and family, express their creativity, and earn a living. Business owners in the West and elsewhere are all working to optimize profits while (sometimes at least) still honoring the human values behind their interactions.

San Francisco’s Pocket Opera Company embraces economizing and simplification as a guiding artistic principle, paring down full-scale opera productions as far as possible without sacrificing quality. For example, smaller groups of instrumentalists take the place of a full-size orchestra by staying close to the singers and taking advantage of theater acoustics, and managers multitask and take on performance and design roles whenever possible. Paring such a traditionally high-budget performance art down to the essentials while still appearing elegant to the audience becomes a challenge and a work of art in itself, as well as a method to make opera more accessible to newcomers to the art form.

Cynthia Lamanna’s short story “The Gift” evokes the days of past-century fairy tales and moral fables, and reminds readers of the gifts of faith and family. I observed that at least part of the forgotten gift could be the friendship between the sisters, overlooked as they both married and became busy with their own lives and families. Didacus Ramos, in his second installment of Stories Growing Up Portuguese, presents romance as a precious, forbidden ecstasy which his ‘impossibly posed’ characters can never enjoy as societal mores prevent her from leaving a loveless marriage. In “My Grandfather’s Carving,” the greatest treasure is painfully obvious and perpetually out of reach.

August’s nonfiction contributions explore how to maximize real-world ‘treasures’ which may seem out of reach – expensive resources scarce in our current world environmental and ecological condition. Lawyers and authors Orsi and Doskow posit property and resource sharing as a possible practical way to maintain some aspects of the physical lifestyle some of us were accustomed to before the economic slowdown and to allow more people to enjoy a higher standard of living. They advocate creative preservation and maximum utility for increasingly scarce resources, while ecology author and activist John Berger applies these principles at a macro-level in his new book Forests Forever, looking into the differential sustainability of various American and international forest conservation and lumber harvesting practices.

Some contributors choose to recognize treasure by simply celebrating life. Alexandra Marlin’s photographs convey a gentle human warmth, showing people laughing, embracing, running into each other with happy surprise, and involve a burgundy, purple and tan color scheme for coffeehouse scenes and headshots. Each photo communicates emotion, a short vignette and glimpse into the lives of the subjects. Reminiscent of this aesthetic sensibility is Patsy Ledbetter’s short tale of several friends’ vacation in New York City, a piece without ‘drama’ or gripping suspense or conflict, a simple reflection of the fun and excitement of traveling with one’s best friends.

Saying ‘life is beautiful’ is of course simplistic – yet, if we look, there is beauty to be found and remembered, and treasure to be preserved and celebrated.

Forests Forever: Sustainable Logging Approaches for Various Ecosystems

 

 

Through his new book Forests Forever, environmental activist and educator John Berger brings his contribution to discussions concerning world forest management. Broadly analyzing ecology, law, policy, and history as they relate to global forest ecosystems, Berger draws upon scientific information and cultural values to advocate certain kinds of sustainable logging practices.

Berger opposes clearcutting in the vast majority of cases because of the serious changes the practice brings about for an entire local ecosystem, and encourages selective logging, especially when designed to be as low-impact as possible by removing diseased or invasive trees, or trees next to the most vigorously growing ones to allow light to reach those with the greatest future growth potential. Throughout the book he analyzes various forest management and logging techniques in detail in terms of their environmental and economic impact, and goes through various (mostly American) leaders’ approaches to conservation issues.

This book, while serious in tone, is not entirely ‘doom and gloom’ – Berger praises certain decisions made by some logging firms, the Collins Company, for example, to harvest timber in a more sustainable way. Also, he looks into the Forest Stewardship Council’s approach to land management and discusses how some firms now choose to get wood from FSC-certified logging areas…along with mentioning wood substitutes, such as hemp and kenaf grass, which can also be made into soft paper. Finally, Forest Ethics’ Do Not Mail campaign allows people to request that junk mail not be sent to their homes, which actually saves the companies sending it money and time if recipients have no intention of ever responding to certain offers, as well as conserving paper.

Finally, Berger discusses ecosystem restoration efforts, and describes some efforts currently under way by groups such as the Oregon-based Lomakatsi Project. He outlines how and why he believes steps towards renewal, such as native tree planting, are still worthwhile.

John Berger’s book may be ordered online through his organization’s website, http://www.forestsforever.org/

You may also read about certain firms and organizations which Berger mentions in Forests Forever directly through their websites

Collins Companies: http://www.collinswood.com/index.html

Lomakatsi Restoration Project (locally based Oregon (United States) reforestation and ecosystem restoration group, with a statement of ecological findings and principles derived from their experiences): http://www.lomakatsi.org/Home/tabid/36/Default.aspx

Also, you may purchase and read reviews of Forests Forever on Amazon.com – http://www.amazon.com/Forests-Forever-Ecology-Restoration-Preservation/dp/193006652X/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_1 May be more navigable than the Forests Forever main site.

Berger and Synchronized Chaos Magazine invite comments on and discussion of this book from everyone, including ecologists, biologists, and scientists, as well as timber industry people.