Sustainable Gifting, Sustainable Celebration

For many of us, the winter holidays include some form of gift-giving occasion. Whether you’re among those who take joy in the gift-giving or get stressed out by it, you’re sure to be looking for some tips for greening your holiday celebration.

A wealth of blog posts, newspaper articles, and radio/TV segments on this topic come out every year, and you have surely heard the main standard tips or thought of them yourself. There’s a lot of good advice out there, and I’m not going to try to give you a post that just reinvents the wheel of already-existing great advice that’s out there already!

Rather, I will offer you some very general mind-set advice that’ll help you make your own choices. And, I’ll provide you with links to some of the best sources of additional tips that I can find. (And, OK, I am throwing in a few specific tips of my own too!)

Celebrations: Most gatherings will automatically be vastly more “green” this year, with fewer people traveling. From one tree-hugger to another, I urge you to embrace the pandemic as a very valid reason to forgo travel this year. Focus on the positive: no crowded airports and cramped seats, no travel expense, no harried logistics with bags, taxis, buses, Uber, public tantrums (yours, your kids’, or someone else’s!) or whatever you usually have to deal with to put your long-distance trips together.

Other pluses: No struggles with dietary differences (if your family has those — mine doesn’t but many do) or other daily lifestyle differences; no crowded bathrooms because the house that usually holds 4 people now holds 10 or whatever; no being the fatigued host or stressing out over being a “good guest”; no stressing out about your hosts or guests throwing food scraps in the trash because they are not interested in composting; not having to be “on” all the time. Yes, all of the above can and does happen, even in loving happy families!

Instead, we get to focus on the pure joy of just being present with our families. Thanks to Zoom, Facetime, and even phone text (with or without photos, as desired), or just plain phone, we get to have our cake and eat it too. All the benefits of travel, with the exact level of closeness we wish, and without any of the drawbacks (including carbon footprint, which for us greenies is always a concern we have to juggle). In the permaculture mind-set of turning problems into assets, I strongly urge you to embrace the CDC’s no-winter-holiday-travel advisory. With a bit of planning, you could even play cards or a board game by Zoom. And you could use your computer/phone screens to create the visual effect that you are all sitting at one long table! (That “long table” is a tip I picked up in a news article I read recently, and mentioned in a previous post. A brother and sister in different states did that for Thanksgiving dinner.) Yes, the hugs and general physical closeness is missing, but you can more than make up for that by deepening your communication; forging a more authentic connection with your loved ones.

Speaking of dinner: Holiday celebrations offer a perfect opportunity to support our local farmers. Whether you’re vegan or omnivore, paleo, macrobiotic, “See-Food” diet (my personal favorite), or something else, go local for your food this holiday season (and beyond).

If you live near the folks you want to celebrate with, get creative; maybe stage a “vertical concert” or other performance that folks can watch from their porches or balconies. (This idea was inspired by the Daytona Boardwalk Hilton’s plans for a “vertical concert” on New Year’s Eve. Sounds lavish and fun yet safe!) Come to think of it, people in Italy and other places have been playing concerts for each other throughout the pandemic. I saw one video of apartment-dwellers doing a music jam from their separate balconies. Also I read about a teenage girl who did a ballet performance in the courtyard of her grandparents’ nursing homes. These pandemic innovations can easily be adapted for holiday celebrations.

Or hey, just do the old-fashioned version of this: Go Christmas caroling! (Just don’t go in a group of more than two or three. And be sure and keep appropriate distance, from each other and from your audience, as singing and playing horns and such spreads more germs through the air.)

As for those of you who don’t take joy in being with your families (there are many dysfunctional families out there, bordering on criminal or sometimes actually being criminal, and I would not wish on anyone the obligation to spend even one moment with some of the ones I’ve heard about) — I invite you to consider “Covid 2020” your “Get Out of Jail Free” card. And use this year’s “Pandemic Pass” as a springboard to repeat in future years, whether or not the pandemic continues next year (or another pandemic or other external crisis hits, which is something I personally feel is likely and am planning on, and recalibrating my “normal” accordingly, though obviously I do not wish such suffering on humanity).

Of course, shipping (for those of you who plan to ship gifts) has a significant footprint also. But not as much as your physical body traveling in a car or plane or even train. And, there are great gifts you can give while minimizing shipping footprint (or even eliminating it entirely). This is what brings me to the next section …

Gifts: While some folks I know are intuitive spot-on givers of just the right gifts (talking to you, Rob and Ken!), many of us mortals stress out over it even in the best of times and even if footprint were not a concern. Recognizing that many people share your anxiety (if you have anxiety around this, which I most certainly have in the past, before learning a few mind-set tips which I will attempt to share), is in itself helpful to putting your mind at ease a bit.

That aside, here are some other “green” gift-giving tips I thought of for this post.

• For starters: Ask them what they are interested in receiving. Ask what they are not interested in receiving. Then heed their wishes. You can save yourself a lot of money, fossil fuel, and angst by adhering to this tip. As well as practicing the Golden Rule of “Do Unto Others.” If what they want is extremely not-green, then buy them a classy durable vintage version of it if possible. If it’s not possible (for example, if they hate used stuff, or if everything on their list is new, non-essential electronics), then you could 1) go in on the gift with other family members, sharing the cost and footprint; or 2) leave that gift to someone else to give them, and instead you use one of the gift ideas listed below, as long as it doesn’t violate any of their “Please Don’t” list.

• A big part of our holiday gift-giving footprint comes from driving around in cars, scouring the shops for “the right gift.” Reduce this aspect of your footprint (and make your shopping much quieter, sweeter, and leisurely-paced) by either online-ordering, shopping by phone call, walking to your local shop. Or walking to the home of your neighbor who sells her handmade jewelry, artisanal soap, stuffed animals, handmade books, or other gift-able goodies! Another great source of local gifts is the “For Sale” section of your community in the NextDoor app; many micro cottage businesses market their wares via this channel. Eco and resilience bonus for helping to build social cohesion in your neighborhood!

• Edible treats! Always a crowd-pleaser, and maybe this year more than ever, with many households experiencing a financial crunch and feeling less able to treat themselves. The “resurgence of homemade” (and the “resurgence of supporting local business”) make it an easy choice to make, or find, crowd-pleasing gifts like jam, cookies, sauces, even handcrafted meal kits. (One of my favorite gifts, received as a thank-you from an organization I volunteer for, was a five-bean chili kit, consisting simply of a ribbon-tied jar of beans and a bag of spices! I often make my own stews and soups, and have no trouble assembling my own blends, and yet this mason jar tied with a scrap of ribbon really warmed my heart. You might be surprised at how much a food gift is appreciated, especially by a busy person.) Living in Florida, I have often visited my local citrus gift shop to assemble a gift box of citrus fruit, citrus candies, hot sauce, alligator-shaped chocolates, shark gummies, and other treats to ship to my family. The shop takes care of packing, shipping, and everything. If you yourself have fruit trees (or nut trees etc.), think of those as a source of gifts. You could even make dried fruit, or veggie chips, if you are dehydration-savvy.

• Speaking of “dehydration-savvy,” you could use the winter gift-giving holidays as the impetus to develop a new homesteading or crafting skill, which will stand you in good stead for every gift-giving season to come. Regarding skills: If you don’t have an old-school neighbor, a permie guild, or anyone else local who can social-distance-teach you, YouTube is your friend! Everything from dehydrating to tatting to leatherworking and bookbinding, it’s all out there!

• Other “green” gifts I’ve given that were appreciated are used/vintage books that reflect the recipient’s interest. Though any used item might not be a popular choice right now, I could still manage to do this by, say, putting the book in a Ziploc bag and leaving it in a sunny window for a few days for UV exposure. Also, I imagine that used-book stores have devised their pandemic protocols; I will try to check on this but if you know anything, give me a shout.

• In the same spirit: vintage map of a place the person loves, or that you share a love for. (Update: A day after I typed this, Ted’s Vintage Maps popped up in my FB feed. You can input your town or ZIP code; they claim to offer prints of 3,000 different old maps.)

• Soaps, lotions. Soaps and lotions are always good; people are constantly using them up. And there are so many local artisanal makers these days; soap or lotion/cream is a cherished gift rather than just a drugstore item. You could buy the person something that’s representative of your home state/bioregion; or use the miracle of the internet to find a local maker in the recipient’s own region! Either way, you will be supporting a local business. (And if you order them something from their home region, you get eco bonus points for reducing shipping distance, and introducing them to a local maker in their own backyard — and to the “Support Local” mindset in general if they do not already have that.)

• That tip about buying local gifts that are local to the recipient’s location? Good news: It works for all categories of gifts, not just soaps & lotions! One Mother’s Day, I phoned the plant nursery down the street from my mother, gave them my card number over the phone, and had them put together a mini herb garden in a big attractive pot and deliver it to her. (My mother was a frequent customer of the nursery but still loved getting the gift.)

• Online lessons! From yourself or from someone else. Musical instruments; singing; language; art; crafts. This idea was inspired by a Daytona Beach area voice teacher who’s doing booming business during the pandemic.

• Are you the family archivist? Get those family photos scanned and put onto a memory stick (or up on the cloud) for everyone. Or research your genealogy/ancestry and give everyone a copy. Or write a family history of the life & times of your family (even just from your own shared childhood memories forward, if you don’t have info about departed generations). You could also make a mix tape (uhh, mix stream? mix memory stick? showing my age here!) of family favorite songs.

In my experience, most of us “greens” don’t have trouble thinking up eco-friendly gifts. Rather than struggle with finding green gifts, what most of us eco geeks struggle with far more is how to speak up, without hurting anyone’s feelings, about our wishes to not receive environmentally damaging items, or not receive tangible gifts, or even not receive any gifts at all. Regarding the “receiving” aspect, I’m sharing some tips that have worked for me.

Get honest with yourself: Do you want gifts? Do you prefer not to receive gifts? Do you have a preference for tangible rather than intangible or vice versa? You can’t control what others do. Those of us who are avid stuff-minimizers well know: Sometimes our choice, the more clearly we try to verbalize it, only seems to feel, to the insistent gift-givers in our lives, like throwing down the gauntlet! My best advice: Get clear and centered so you can voice your wishes calmly and clearly. If you get something you don’t want, donate it. If the something is a very non-eco-friendly gift, it’s not going to get any more eco-friendly by ending up in landfill unused. By you donating or re-gifting it, someone who’d just be buying the same item anyway will now get it as a gift or a thrift-store bargain.

Ditto for a gift that goes against your core beliefs. You can choose the safest possible donation/re-gifting option. Like, if someone gifted me a handgun (very unlikely, but if they did), I’d donate it to a shooting range or other safest possible option. If I had kids and got a bunch of junky plastic toys, I might donate them to a preschool or church or daycare, provided that the place is one that uses those kinds of things already.

My family is actually super thoughtful and considerate about each other’s choices, but many folks are not so lucky as I am; we all hear constant horror tales particularly from parents of young kids who get inundated with plastic toys and junk, food that’s not on the family diet, etc. Anyway! Getting deeply honest and clear with yourself is your first step toward voicing your choices calmly and clearly, thus being more likely to meet with alignment from friends and family members, and, if applicable, co-workers. (Regarding co-workers, I suspect the stratospheric rise in work-from-home will at least eliminate those sometimes-fun, sometimes-dreadful gift exchanges that are staples of workplace life.)

Like most of my posts, this one is subject to evolve. I’ll add to it as more ideas occur to me.

Further Exploration:

Vertellis Card Game: Never played it; never actually seen it. But even just from the ads for it that came through my Facebook feed, I know I want to get a set. It’s a way to spark meaningful conversation among family members, and seems like a great fit for any visit, be it remote or in person. (If remote, I suggest getting a set for your own household and for each household of your immediate family.)

17 Tips for a More Sustainable Christmas This Year (housebeautiful.com)

• Zero-Waste, Zero-Judgement group: If you have not already done so, I strongly recommend you join this Facebook community. To join, type “Zero Waste, Zero Judgement” into the FB Search field and click on Join. Once you have joined, scroll down to see various posts, or type a keyword such as “gifts” or “holidays” in the search field. I know that some of you are Facebook-averse. But really, I cannot recommend a better source of specific, DEEP-green tips, not just for the holidays but for every daily choice you, your household, and your community grapple with. The group has literally tens of thousands of members from all over the world. People in other countries have solutions I would not have thought of even with my permaculture background. Though I have often contributed tips in response to other people’s questions, I learn and receive at least as much as I give (though in keeping with the group’s guidelines, I strive to give more than I receive). Simply speaking, ZWZJ is a treasure trove!

A final word, or should I say ramble, from me: Raising humanity’s eco-consciousness and reducing our footprint is an urgent, non-optional task. I thank all of you who realize this and are living accordingly. It’s not as though our environmentalism is some self-indulgent hobby, or a stick we are using to beat ourselves up or do a power trip over others. (Though many “civilians” might see it that way — which is where getting our minds in order; getting ourselves more calm and focused and intentional, comes in.)

Cheap fossil fuels and other abundant resources have removed essential feedback loops from modern human life. Basically we have insulated ourselves from Mother Nature’s reality check. Those of us who are aware of this basically have the task of plugging into feedback loops and acknowledging real planetary limits that the mainstream consumerist society we live in doesn’t want to see (and has a strong vested interest in not seeing). This can feel lonely and weird and alienating at times, and extreme gift-giving holidays can magnify those feelings.

During historic widespread emergencies that mainstream society acknowledged and bought into (World War I, World War II, the Great Depression) people continued their celebrations but stayed within the parameters of acknowledged resource limitations. (Then again, I’m looking back on these through a historic telescope. Now it occurs to me there were surely people who defiantly whooped it up for the holidays with no regard to rationing, state of emergency, etc. Though if they did, they probably would have had to do it secretly, as the austerity measures had been declared by the government, with stiff penalties for violators. Or, in the case of the Depression, the still-wealthy might have kept their celebrations quiet out of some sense of social shame, or at least out of some concern for their own security if their consumption got too conspicuous.) (History buffs or oldtimers: If you have any info on this, please drop me a line!)

The pandemic is a similar widespread emergency. Although in wide swathes of the USA we have large chunks of the populace not “believing” in it — and they are acting accordingly — still, over the past year most people have pivoted to celebrate holidays and other special occasions within the parameters of a widely acknowledged emergency. We’ve developed new ways of celebrating and gifting, and have come out the stronger for it. More resilient, even anti-fragile.

And now here we are, eco folk seeking to be green for the holidays. In this endeavor, we have no official support, nor institutional backing. The ongoing task of standing up for the planet that is our only home, living by our values and within the parameters of the global environmental emergency (that we know is real even though consumer culture has airbrushed out the feedback loops or concealed them with glitter) grows more urgent with each passing day. And it doesn’t take a break for the holidays. Therefore, I wish you happy holidays, made all the more joyous by living true to your values. And remember: You aren’t alone. There are lots of us doing this.

P.S. Update 12/14/2020: Another piece of “stay-at-home” encouragement for us greenies: Carbon dioxide emissions dropped by a record amount in 2020, and transportation accounted for the greatest share of the decrease.

That’s the biggest yearly drop on record, the group said.

Transportation accounted for the largest share of the global decrease, researchers said. Emissions from surface transport, such as car journeys, fell by approximately half at the peak of the COVID-19 lockdowns.

Post-Pandemic Dating

This piece in the New Yorker “How Dating During a Pandemic Is Like Being in a Jane Austen Novel” (by Amy Collier) is tongue-in-cheek but makes some really good points.

I know one lady who met the man of her dreams online during the pandemic, they corresponded/video chatted for months. Now they’re moving in together.

I’m a happy middle-aged single person who seems to have lost the urge to date. But if I still had that inclination, I would probably find the imposed “social distance” somewhat beneficial. It would keep me from rushing into things, as I tended to do when I was younger.

More thoughts later. For those of you who are not already in a committed relationship, and are interested in dating, how has “pandemic dating” been for you? Have you found any positive aspects?

The Year the Future Was Cancelled (NOT)

“2020: The Year the Future Was Cancelled,” read the Economist headline. It showed up in my Facebook feed the other day. Along with a link to an article from a magazine called 1843 bearing the tagline, “What happens when you can no longer look forward to anything? We’re all finding out, and it’s not pretty.”

“Wow, what a load of nonsense,” I said to myself without even reading the article. (Even if I’d wanted to, it’s behind a paywall.”

I shared a screenshot and wrote the following:

This post screen-shotted below shows very limited, glass-half-full thinking (and dare I say CONSUMERIST-rooted). Actually there is plenty to look forward to, always. “Cancelled the future”? Pshaw!! The future is NOT cancelled; we have tons of work to do, and plenty of healthy beautiful ways to enjoy life still. Most of all we still have each other.

Other comments in response to the post I read, voicing similar sentiments:

“Amazing new opportunities to streamline what we do, in the new Zoom era. We always can (and must) look forward to making opportunity for work and acquisition of knowledge in the worst of times…”

“Lousy article. What about the joy of reading books? Watching films? Learning a language? Playing chess? Cooking? Eating home made food with family? Conversation?”

“It’s easy to stay present when there are no challenges. This is the kind of year mindfulness practice is for. All you ever have is now.”

Amen!

Just … Start!

Whoops! I really thought I had made a post for you awhile back, about how to overcome lethargy, procrastination, and other forms of what I think of as garden-variety existential malaise. A malaise that befalls most of us from time to time. At least in the modern, industrialized, anomie-laden world; not sure about elsewhere.

It can feel like trying to move through the gravity of Jupiter with a bowling ball in each hand. It can feel like crawling through jello. You can’t even motivate yourself to pick up an envelope and put a stamp on it, let alone walk to the post office. So of course, your activism and small-business launches and calling your long-lost cousins and starting an exercise program and other great plans you have become rather-um-difficult.

I may have buried the topic in another post, instead of going with my original plan to create a post with the above title. Or, maybe I was overcome by the very inertia of which I intended to write! Ah well! Ç’est la vie. No crying over spilt milk.

Yesterday, I was going to add to that post (which it turns out does not exist) a link to this new, utterly superb post by one of my perennial go-to writers on the human condition, David at Raptitude. (See the link and quote at the bottom of this post.)

David pretty much says everything I was gonna tell you (and maybe did tell you, somewhere, buried in some past post that is resistant to being unearthed with the Search function). He says what I was going to say, and more.

My advice in a nutshell, when you are hit by the bogdown fog, the inertial lead blanket, the ungrateful dread, or whatever you call it, is, “Just … Start.” Start something; start anything. Even if it’s just washing a dish, sharpening a pencil, or cutting a tag off a new pair of socks you’ve had sitting around for months but haven’t worn because you have not yet worked up the momentum to pick up your scissors and cut the tag off.

(Is anyone else this existentially sluggish at times besides me?)

(Oh, and if by chance you do remember my posting about this topic, and have any idea when it was or when I titled it, do me a favor and drop me a line, OK? 😉 )

Anyway! Without further ado, I give you …

Further Exploration:

How To Handle The Beast (David at Raptitude.com): “You might know the Beast too. It has many forms. … Whatever the form, the Beast has certain characteristics. It saps your sense of agency and forward motion. It robs you of what might feel like your birthright: the basic ability to function to society’s standards. You lose the sense that you can steer the boat. The Beast may stay away for weeks or months or years. Then one Thursday afternoon, when one too many things goes wrong, it darkens your doorway again and you know that life might be different for a while. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, that’s a good thing. Many of you do though. For what it’s worth, I’ll share what I’ve learned about tangling with the Beast. …”

State of the Planet Address

“Human activities are at the root of our descent toward chaos. But that means human action can help solve it.

“Making peace with nature is the defining task of the 21st century. It must be the top, top priority for everyone, everywhere.”

U.N. Secretary-General of the United Nations, speaking last night at Columbia University.

A colleague inboxed me this talk in the wee hours, and I happened to be awake, so I stayed up til 5 watching it. Fifty minutes very well spent, and that is saying a lot from a person who doesn’t like watching much video. (Includes worthwhile introductory remarks before; and worthwhile Q&A from students after.)

Please, please take time to watch this today, or as soon as you possibly can. Thank you. And share with everyone you can. Thank you again. Remember we are all in this together.

A friend who I phone-texted this to just now just commented, “We just seem hell bent on overindulging and fouling our own nest. There’s a desperation in the over consumption that is sad beyond words. How disconnected are we from each other and the daily tasks that could be done with attention and focus, making us less desperate and unhappy. I guess it comes down to a redefinition of happiness. Its not found in status and things but rather found in mindfulness. My two cents worth.”

And I wrote back, “YES. Your two cents is gold. And this is why I get up in the morning, this is my life mission. Every gig I do feeds into this.”

Making peace with nature, working with nature, radically reducing the footprint of human activities. This essential speech outlines our grave situation, but also offers great hope; outlines initiatives in progress; gives actionable suggestions for individuals as well as institutions.

Further Reading:

CDC: Don’t Travel for Winter Holidays Either (USA Today article in Daytona Beach News-Journal): CDC caution against Thanksgiving travel (which many people disregarded) is repeated for Christmas/winter holidays. The public-health recommendation can help take the emotional angst out of choosing to stay put. (Sometimes making the choice for purely environmental reasons can feel harsh, especially for those of us who would otherwise be very seriously tempted to travel to the ends of the earth to be with our families, carbon footprint be darned.)

The Climate Debt the U.S. Owes the World (Bill McKibben; The New Yorker): “… we can’t meet our moral and practical burdens simply by reducing our own emissions; we’ve already put so much carbon into the air (and hence reduced the space that should rightly go to others) that we need to make amends.”

Thoughts On Tourism: Air Travel

A mere 1% of the population causes half of global aviation emissions, The Guardian reported recently.

My friend/colleague Chris Searles has a nonprofit called BioIntegrity that’s putting the word out about nature-based climate solutions. Chris polled a climate-action Facebook group the other day, “Should this 1% pay — out of their own pockets — to offset their aviation admissions?”

My response:

Yes! They should. At one point in my working life, I was part of this 1%, flying up to 11 times a year for a total of over 40k miles a year.

After I stopped the work-related flights, I purchased carbon offsets for them, and for every other flight I could remember taking in my adult life. I chose Gold Standard credits at the recommendation of a colleague I trust as a “low-footprint expert.”

The price was peanuts, maybe a couple hundred dollars or so if memory serves.

I have quit flying. And, I feel I should not fly again except possibly in extreme emergency (if such a scenario even exists), and if I do, I should purchase triple carbon offsets.

Just because I have made this choice doesn’t give me any right to tell anyone else they should. (More about that later.) But I do hope a lot of people, particularly those of you who agree with this blog’s message, will quit flying entirely, or radically curtail your flights, and when you do fly, purchase carbon offsets. They’re cheap. If you can afford to fly, you can afford to buy carbon offsets. (I made a post about carbon offsets awhile back; will dig it up for you. –> OK, here you go! Mitigating Your Footprint with Carbon Offsets.)

Further Exploration:

The Systemic Climate Action Facebook Group

BioIntegrity Facebook page

BioIntegrity website

• (Update Jan 5, 2022): I just found out there’s a “Flight-Free Community,” with branches in the USA, UK, and Australia. I just visited the Flight Free USA website and took the flight-free pledge for life; was going in that direction anyway but this helped me make it official. I love the personal stories from people on the Flight Free USA page. My favorite observation is from a guy named Joshua Spodek in New York City: “People think of planes bringing them to distant loved ones, forgetting that flying in general makes them far away in the first place, relying on planes to fix the problem that planes created.” And the story from a guy in Cali who looks my age or older and has pedaled 100,000 miles on his electric bicycle!!! Wow!! (I heard about the FF community when a friend in the Socially Conscious FIRE Facebook group shared about it. I’m so happy to be constantly finding more deep-green-supportive communities to add to my resource files, for you and for me too!)

Thoughts On Tourism (Reading List)

Over the years, without my really paying much active attention, my attitudes about tourism have shifted. I mean, I’ve never been super keen on conventional tourism, as in going on “getaway vacations,” cruises, or package tours (though I have done some of that). And I imagine many of you probably have similar feelings.

I’ve tended to prefer long stays and immersion. Like when I spent five weeks roaming around England, Scotland, and Wales back in the 80s. (My first time going overseas by myself.) Or when I took a month-long rail trip around Japan (I was living and working in Tokyo at the time). On those trips, the streets and everyday shops were always more of an attraction to me than the comme il faut visits to ruins or museums (though I could see the value in visiting ruins and museums, and did a good bit of that too). Really though, I would almost always rather just sit around chatting with some local in a pub or café. Or walk into a grocery store or convenience mart and see what’s on the shelves.

So it’s not as if I was ever a very tourist-y tourist. But, in recent years, I’ve started to feel more cautious about even the “educational” type of travel. Some of it is concern for carbon footprint. (But to address that concern, a traveler can purchase carbon offsets, something I have written about on this blog.)

But even beyond the environmental concerns of long-distance (especially international) travel, I have noticed within myself a more humanitarian, social, economic concern that until recently I might have had a hard time articulating. In the past few months I’ve stumbled on some readings that not only expressed a lot of what I’d been feeling, but also brought me to a deeper level of awareness around travel. A few months ago I started building an electronic “scrap file” of links on this topic. I added and added to it, but then turned to other topics and forgot where I stashed the “tourism” scrap file(s?). But as I find it/them, I will be sharing the links with you here. Watch this space! (Update: Yay! I just found one of my link-stashes! See below.)

Further Exploration:

“Are We Doing Vacations Wrong?” (Yes Magazine): “From the economic instability that tourist cultures bring to their overuse of natural resources that exacerbate climate disasters, to glaring labor exploitation and gendered oppression that keep poor women of color living under the boot of White supremacist patriarchy, participating in the mass tourism industry is more likely to spread social inequality than staying home would.”

“Lovely Hula Hands” (Haunani Kay-Trask, Revolutionary Frontlines blog): “I would imagine that most Americans could not place Hawai’i or any other Pacific island on a map of the Pacific. But despite all this appalling ignorance, five million Americans will vacation in my homeland this year and the next, and so on into the foreseeable capitalist future. Such are the intended privileges of the so-called American standard of living: ignorance of, and yet power over, one’s relations to Native peoples.”

“Pandemic Returns Hawaii To Locals” (AP article in Daytona Beach News-Journal): “Locals, many of whom depend on tourism jobs, have long felt ambivalence about living in an island paradise that relies heavily on visitor spending, but many saw an upshot to a health crisis that threatened their livelihoods – reclaiming favorite areas long overrun by crowds. … ‘What the pandemic did was give us all a moment to pause, a number of months, to rethink everything,’ said state Sen. J. Kalani English. ‘What it proves for us is that old model of tourism, which is, you know, mass bring 11 million visitors a year, didn’t work and people were tired of it.'”

U.N.: Skiing May Not Spread Coronavirus But Slopes Still Risky (AP article in Daytona Beach News-Journal; article focused on European countries known for ski tourism): “… the danger of coronavirus spread from skiing is from many of the other activities linked to the sport. The real issues are going to come at airports, tour buses taking people to and from ski resorts, ski lifts … and places where people come together,” Ryan said. “We would advise that all countries look at the their ski season and other reasons for mass gathering,” he said, warning that indoor socializing after skiing might be particularly risky.” (I’m including this article because it made me wonder if a few Euro ski-resort town locals are — like some Hawaiian locals mentioned in the above-linked article — breathing secret sighs of relief because maybe the lack of tourist crowds will give them leeway and time to enjoy the natural attractions of their own places.)