welcome to DEEP GREEN blog!

Greetings! This blog is dedicated to helping you reduce your eco-footprint for personal and planetary benefit.

Although a low-footprint lifestyle is fun and rewarding, it is not always easy, even if you are doing it for your own benefit (for example, to attain financial freedom; to free up your time; to radically simplify your life so you can focus on what really matters to you.) The dominant mainstream culture has waste and hyper-consumerism baked into every layer of life. A person setting out to live light on the earth encounters many obstacles both physical and cultural. (Car-dependent housing developments; unavoidable single-use plastics; buildings designed to require climate control 24-7 … to name just a few.)

That’s where this blog comes in. I’m here to offer you tips, resources, and moral support. The posts aren’t in any particular order; I write about things as they pop into my mind. This blog does have a search tool, which I hope will help you find topics you’re most interested in. If you ever can’t find a topic, please feel free to give me a shout and I will try to dig it up for you.

You could also start by reading my book DEEP GREEN, a concise orderly guide to crafting your own ultra-low-footprint lifestyle. You can read it for free here on this blog; and you can order your own print copy as well. The book was published way back in 2017, and a lot has happened since then! But the basic premise still applies.

Also, I have added a 2023 preface (which is currently available only here online since I didn’t get it done before deciding to make a mini print run of 50 copies for the FRESH Book Festival).

A final note: I don’t post here every day. I might even go weeks or months without posting. Important as writing is to my mission, it’s only one of my channels for actualizing the “Grassroots Green Mobilization.” Whether or not you see new posts on this blog, I am always active and always here for you. You can engage with me on Facebook (DEEP GREEN book by jenny nazak). I’m also on Twitter, YouTube, and Tiktok; look for me under my name on any of those platforms.

Enjoy this blog, and thanks for joining me in the grassroots green mobilization to create a kinder, saner, greener, equitable world!

Severe winter weather expected

To my friends in the states expected to be affected by the extreme cold and winter storms – stay safe, and here is a good article which offers state-by-state info on community resources and tips for staying warm and safe.

One of the best things people can do is stay home if it all possible. Stay off the roads.

You know, a lot of the tips for cold weather are not so different from the tips for hurricanes. Power outages are an increasingly common reality, and the more we all prepare & practice, the better.

This article offers tips and resources for staying safe & warm in the forecast severe winter storm / super cold temps that are forecast to affect 30 states. (My photo of cozy candlelight last night in our garage glamp-partment.) The article includes state by state info for the affected states.

Good links on shelter resources etc.; I’m going to be exploring these links for more ideas to support our unhoused community. Note, we live in central coastal Florida and are not expected to be affected by the severe winter storm. However, even in the warm states, people can be affected by cold temperatures, so it’s very useful to read up on tips for how people up north learn how to keep warm.

https://www.vpm.org/news/2026-01-22/central-virginia-winter-storm-resources-rva-cville-dominion-vdh-shelters

And here’s this same blog post on my DEEP GREEN Facebook page in case you want to share it there. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16BCmmtLQt/?mibextid=WC7FNe

Ice storm, community resources

PS. You know what they say, sharing is caring! By sharing this blog post and other posts on my blog, you can help people be safer and less vulnerable by building community amid increasingly chaotic conditions. Not just literal meteorological weather conditions, but all sorts of weather conditions.

PPS. In the non-consumer advocate group on Facebook just now, someone just asked if anyone is turning up their heat in anticipation of the severe cold. (Apparently the concept is to pre-store a bit of heat. Something I never thought of.)

Multiple people pointed out it’s more effective to just close off most rooms, and stay in one room together, or as few rooms as possible. In other words, body heat. Other members of the group pointed out that cranking up the heat put extra stress on the grid right when we don’t need to be doing that.

My response to the post:

Hard freeze is rare where we live, but when it happens I just open the taps and shut off the water main, after making sure we have several days’ worth of water stored in jugs in the house.

As I’ve seen lots of other people share here & elsewhere, the easiest & least expensive & safest way to keep warm is just to be in one room, with all the blankets and pets and people etc. And close off as many of the other rooms as possible. That’s what we do.

Also: Regarding water for the toilet, in case there’s to be a super hard freeze and / or extended freeze, I find it best to have ready an emergency “hurricane toilet” (bucket w plastic toilet seat etc.) rather than rely on using precious scarce water to flush. To cut down on odors without adding too much bulk, using kitty litter as cover material can be an option. I’ve used fine oak-leaf litter or fine brown grass clippings as cover matter in such situations but it’s not always available. Also, try to reserve the bucket just for pooping. Minimize peeing in the bucket, to save space in the bucket. Use the toilet for pee only, like a urinal. It’ll get a bit smelly but keeping the lid down between uses to cut down on odors will help. Also, very important, don’t put toilet paper in the toilet. Put it in the bucket or small, covered trashcan. During emergency times, only pee and no solids should go in the toilet. Then later once the water is back on and you’re ready to flush, there’s less likelihood of the toilet clogging from a bunch of accumulated toilet paper. (Ask me how I know this LOL.)

Also – Regarding wrapping pipes to help guard against freezing: There are a lot of things you can use for pipe wrap, including old wool sweaters, flexible foam packaging that some foods come in, that stash of foam pool noodles in the garage etc. You don’t need to buy specialty wrapping. When I lived in Austin, we got a lot more deep freezers than we do here in Florida. I have wrapped my exterior pipes loosely with big plastic garbage bags which I then stuffed with fallen leaves. Very light and fluffy, bulky, traps air.

Sid Smith on How To Enjoy the End of the World

Highly recommended: Listen to this talk by Sid Smith: “How To Enjoy the End of the World”

I’ve posted this talk for you guys before, but I don’t think I have ever posted that version that’s divided up conveniently into seven segments with each segment labeled by topic.

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNcGo6a-yKuIubvDb6mIyd0KHQ-7UasJH&si=9HbciHRG3jaaRGJ9

btw Many of us — including many of us here in this group, doomer circles, thrift groups, etc. — have been practising energy descent for years or even decades now, and it’s anticlimactically easy. Sacrifices and tradeoffs yes. Hard & complicated, no.

That’s actually one of the really frustrating parts for me, it’s counterintuitively hard to get people interested in doing what seems too simple and easy. I think it’s not that it seems like too much trouble; I think it’s that it doesn’t offer any sexy bells and whistles. It’s like, just get to it. And people are like meh, give me a solar-powered electric toothbrush, or an entire lawnmower made out of seaweed-based rugged plastic.

Meanwhile a lot of us are over here just quietly allowing the oak leaves to pile up, and letting the wildflowers grow. Come on over here, it’s fun and relaxing! We will help you deal with code enforcement. I’ve posted lots of tips here and this blog. And shared many tips on my deep green Facebook page, from renowned viral-level experts. Prairie-Up, Milk the Weed, Kate Frey, Kate Orff to name a few.

Ditto for household energy use. A lot of us are over here just turning off the lights and going to sleep when it gets dark. And to help those whose work schedules don’t permit, many of us who have the wherewithal to push back are out here pushing back against the capitalist norms to try to shape a different reality that’s more future-friendly.

Also: I’ve mentioned this before, but “climate doomerism is really a ‘white’ phenomenon.” An anglo/euro western capitalist society phenomenon. We don’t prioritize building community; we have a hyperindividualistic culture where we have normalized that buying more stuff and expensive services is the required solution to everything. And our culture totally blows off the power and nurturance of the collective. And so naturally we get isolated and stew in our doomy preppery anxiety. I listen to a TikTok video about this from Wagatheru some years back. If I can find the link I will share it here. Knowing me, I already shared it somewhere else on this blog, so maybe I could just search through my own blog ha ha!

Friendly reminder that running out of TP is no big deal

During the pandemic, people were going wild scrambling for toilet paper. Some people were even buying up huge amounts and hoarding it to sell at a profit.

Meanwhile, many different cultures carried on without depending on toilet paper, the way they had been doing since ancient times, using what I and many others consider to be a superior hygiene method.

We know it as the bidet. In fact, during the pandemic, many households installed bidets. The version of bidet as we know it is relatively high tech.

The simpler version of post-toilet cleansing device is known in many countries and cultures as a lota, or tabo.

The traditional little pitcher known as a lota or tabo is a much less expensive way to get clean, as well as not requiring electricity or bells and whistles to operate.

If you do a search here on this blog for toilet paper or bidet or lota, you’ll find some good articles I’ve shared on this topic.

And now I’m adding this article that I found just the other day.

“Out of toilet paper? There’s always the lota.” https://chicago.suntimes.com/columnists/2020/3/19/21186936/toilet-paper-lota-coronavirus-patriot-act-hasan-minhaj-hari-kondabolu-indians-asians-middle-eastern (By Rummana Hussain; Chicago Sun-Times, March 19, 2020.)

“Nothing about the coronavirus pandemic is funny. But some of us have found a sliver of levity watching panicked Americans hoarding toilet paper, awkwardly balancing 30-pack, 2-ply rolls in their arms as if they’re readying for a showdown.

“‘Americans freaking out about toilet paper & Indians are knowingly smiling & nodding,’ comic Hari Kondabolu tweeted a few days ago. Without getting too detailed, many of us with Asian, Middle Eastern and/or Muslim backgrounds use toilet paper only as reinforcement.”

Visit the link to read the entire article, which in fact provides useful tips. And have fun joining the ranks of those of us who don’t panic at the thought of not being able to buy toilet paper.

We don’t have to be in a pandemic to enjoy a more thorough hygiene method! And one that doesn’t require tons and tons of trees to be cut down.

By the way, many people still use toilet paper in addition to a water cleansing method; they just don’t depend on it utterly.

On a wider note, there are a lot of examples of things in life like this. Things we “modern” Western consumer-culture inmates have come to depend on, while other cultures have been dealing quite beautifully since ancient times without the so-called modern necessity.

Have fun experimenting, and reducing reasons to panic.

A remote control for a ceiling fan, really?

Yes, really. This is a thing I did not know existed until the other day, and I would’ve been happy to go my whole life without realizing such a thing existed.

And now I’m just torn up about it. I know that might seem silly. We have so many bigger fish to fry. But somehow all these little fish are connected to the big fish.

I heard someone commenting on having to go to the store to get a something something for the remote control for their ceiling fan, and I was thinking, I’m sorry, what? Isn’t there just a pull-cord?

There are lots of other things I need to be thinking about but somehow the ceiling fan thing just seems to pop up.

Like when someone online was sharing a post about extremely pedestrian-friendly street design in NYC.

When I read that great-news-sharing post, that ceiling fan remote control popped into my mind. And I commented on the post:

People are stubborn about their cars in most parts of the USA. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. I heard that there are now ceiling fans with remote-control devices. Like really? What about just walking across the room and pulling on the cord? Geez, no wonder people in most USA cities aren’t willing to walk to a bus stop, if they’re not even willing to get up to turn a fan on and off.

(But in British colonial India, the fatcat Brits and other Euro colonizers employed “punka-wallas”, house servants tasked with manually operating the ceiling fan by working a pulley system for hours on end. I bet there were shifts around the clock. So really I shouldn’t be surprised.)

I would’ve thought we would’ve learned our lesson from TV remote controls. Probably spend more time and energy walking around looking for batteries for them, and/or troubleshooting why they’re not working properly, than we were spending back in the days when we were just getting up and changing the TV channel.

There are probably lots of other examples you can think of like this.

Digital detox

This past week, the topic of digital addiction came up for me. I mean, it does for all of us nowadays, right? Or at least for most of us. But it came up bigger than usual for me this week.

A person who I work with face to face on a regular basis seemed to be treating me with disrespect or contempt. Violating a boundary I thought I had been very clear about.

But after a while of seeking a thread of reason amid my intense wash of emotion, it occurred to me: This might not necessarily be about contempt; it might be about addiction to social media and online content.

And THAT is something I can strongly relate to, as someone who very much depends on social media and other online media for her work. It’s no exaggeration to say that my smartphone is my main work-tool.

But even though I legitimately need to use my phone at various times throughout the day, there are times I can feel myself crossing into compulsion. A little too much research-reading, for example, when more of what’s called for is rolling-up-my-sleeves -type actions.

And also, my sheer daily number of hours of screen-time have much room for tightening-up. I’ve been working on this with some success but then find myself falling back into scrolling, rabbit-holes, needless lingering.

In one of those cool synchronicities of life, a very dear colleague had sent me an ecological video, and underneath it on the same YouTube channel was a video about digital addiction!

It’s about an hour and 30 minutes, and although I rarely watch videos, preferring to get information by reading, I watched the whole thing,* and hope you will too. At least please watch the first 9 minutes, it’s a pretty good overview.

*Full disclosure: a few minutes in, I set the speed at 1.5x, and ended up setting it at 2x. But seriously I would have bitten the bullet and sat through the whole video even if high-speed play were not an option.

Highly recommended for everyone’s further exploration:

• “Dopamine & Addiction in the Digital Agehttps://youtu.be/iksSRPpLOzQ?si=DPoAjZ08ymeHKSMa ; Anna Lemke, interviewed by Nate Hagens (The Great Simplification podcast YouTube channel).

• “Is digital detoxing an act of rebellion? How limiting your screen time can redefine you and help us arrive at the tomorrow we deserve.https://reimaginednews.beehiiv.com/p/is-digital-detoxing-an-act-of-rebellion ; Nicole Cardoza, ReImagined news (formerly Antiracism Daily), January 15, 2026.

• Here at Starshine House / Trailhead 501, I ask residents to maintain “dark and quiet” space on our “inner sanctuary” patio area from midnight to 6am. This means no electronic audio, and no artificial lighting. I don’t try to control people watching videos, podcasts, etc., in their rooms (with headphones) during those hours. And I don’t ask people to use headphones outside of those hours even in common areas. But at least in the “sanctuary” area I can provide a space that encourages us all to unplug for a few hours. I’m considering restricting the use of screens, period, even without audio, on that patio during the dark quiet time window.

• Oh, and on a direct ecological note, do check out the video my colleague Chris of BioIntegrity initially sent me. “Why We Need Forests: Their Vital Role in Climate Dynamics, Rain, and the Biotic Pump.” https://youtu.be/GWdXCqVOFkY?si=VvNQsEpLM3NWnZ8k Nastasia Makarieva, interviewed by Nate Hagens (the great simplification podcast youtube channel). (Not up for a 2-hour video even on 2x speed? Check out this 2-minute video intro to the “biotic pump” concept. https://youtu.be/3JyaSL2Mioc?feature=shared ) “Biotic Pump and Flying Rivers.”

Wheels yay!

Great news: I’ve got a bicycle! My past few months navigating life without a bicycle have been helpful in my job, as “boots on the ground” research is part of my job. But it’s nice having wheels again. Now if we could only have a bike shop within walking distance again, as there used to be when I first moved to this neighborhood. Maybe I can encourage somebody to step up and run a business — or at least an unofficial neighborhood bicycle-repair depot. I’ve been trying for a while!

Deeply grateful to my neighbor who found a beach cruiser in great condition listed for $30 on craigslist! And who gave me a ride since the place was 9 miles away. It was hard for me to accept that help but as I pointed out in my previous post, we all need to be willing to accept help as well as being willing to give it.

And the guy who sold me the bike seems like a really nice, stand-up fellow. Told us he has been refurbishing & selling used bicycles for a long time. When I asked why he was selling a good bike so cheap, he told me that the demand for E bikes has caused the regular bicycle market to crater. I never have liked E bikes and I’m very happy to have this simple sweet one-speed bicycle.

I will also be looking into getting our single-speed fixie skinny-tire bicycle repaired (which is likely to be pretty extensive work), but at least now it’s not an urgent task.

Being willing to ask for help, and to accept offers of help

This is definitely a case of “writing a post that I myself need to read.” Because I’m terrible at asking for help. And when I manage to ask, and the help comes, I feel guilty and unworthy.

But, trying to do everything on our own is unsustainable. It leads to all sorts of resource waste and unnecessary extra work and expense.

Yesterday I got a huge amount of help.

Housemate #1 turns out to be very experienced at installing toilet tank flush assemblies. YouTube had taken me farther than I ever dreamed possible, but it wasn’t far enough. I had to be willing to accept his kind and generous offer of help.

And, a neighbor drove me to a house that was nine miles away, to purchase a used bicycle. My neighbor had furthermore taken the initiative to find the bicycle listed for sale on Craigslist, after hearing me mention I needed a bicycle. (One of ours got stolen and the other needs major repairs.)

Help doesn’t always come from the same people I’ve extended help to. It really is a whole extended web of care as opposed to perfectly equal exchange. We have to be at peace with maybe not being able to repay help, just as we are perfectly fine with not being repaid for extending help (at least, I’m fine with that).

By definition, the stuff that other people help us with feels incredibly valuable, because it’s things that we ourselves don’t have. Items we don’t own; skills we don’t possess.

Like, I don’t have a car. So when I can’t manage a task by foot or bicycle or bus, and can’t spare the money for a cab, I feel like I’m taking a million dollars from the neighbor with a car.

Same goes for the person with skills and experience that are way out of my league or zone. Toilet repair, bicycle repair. Might as well be handing me a million dollars.

So of course I feel guilty because to me, there’s nothing I have to offer that is of equal worth.

Of course it’sgoing to feel like that though. Whatever skills or assets we ourselves possess, don’t seem as valuable as the ones we are needing from someone else.

But, sometimes the thing we have to give is simply time, or general effort or labor. That too can be incredibly valuable, to the person who doesn’t have it and needs to draw on it. Who knows, maybe to someone, it might feel lifesaving, or like a million dollars.

In permaculture we talk about “sharing surplus”. Time, talent, money, energy, labor, tools, extra clothes, extra plants … all are examples of surplus. Even just having a bit of attention to spare when someone else’s attention is exhausted, can be huge.

So, if you’re bad at asking for and accepting help, please keep working on that! And I’ll do the same. I want to live in a world where no one has to try to get by without help. And where we all get the joy of being able to feel useful.

PS. It’s great news that I’ve got a bicycle! My past few months navigating life without a bicycle have been helpful in my job, as “boots on the ground” research is part of my job. But it’s nice having wheels again. Now if we could only have a bike shop within walking distance again, as there used to be when I first moved to this neighborhood. Maybe I can encourage somebody to step up and run a business — or at least an unofficial neighborhood bicycle-repair depot. I’ve been trying for a while!