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!

PERMACULTURE CONDENSED: basics minicourse with jenny nazak

LIVE series starts Monday December 9, 11AM
on my Facebook page DEEP GREEN book by Jenny Nazak

FREE AND OPEN TO ALL; all levels welcome

Along with the “official” topics, we will be addressing various pitfalls and misunderstandings regarding permaculture so that you and your community can get the most out of this class.

email me jnazak@yahoo.com
for outline & supplemental materials list

SPECIAL BONUS! To complement the Facebook Live, I’ll host a realtime informal q&a chat via zoom at 7 PM the next night (Tuesday December 10). Bring your snack, coffee or tea etc., and let’s connect!

For those who might want to go on to take an extended class, I will also be offering my top recommendations of who i consider to be the best courses & instructors of the full Permaculture Design Certificate course

My PERMACULTURE CONDENSED class is free and open to all.
However, if you would like to support this work financially, you are welcome to buy me a snack or coffee at any point before, during, or after the course.
CashApp $jennynazak ; Paypal jnazak@yahoo.com
(When I end up with extra money beyond my needs, I share it with local businesses and community members doing good work.)

What to do if your effort isn’t working

Short answer: Try another approach.

Longer answer: Keep the same worthy goal, but try a different approach.

For example, let’s say you’re trying to convince your local government officials of the importance of vegetation in mitigating floods and heat. Let’s see you’ve been doing this for years, and it doesn’t seem to be working.

This is a real life example ha ha. I say ha ha because I’m the one who has repeatedly tried this and it seems to not work.

But this is the point where people want to give up and say, “I tried to get local government to take some simple steps to help stop flooding in my local area, but it didn’t work.”

When instead, we should be saying, I tried emailing Public Works about this, and no one answered.

Or people nodded and said good idea, but kept doing the same things they had been doing.

So then, I tried participating in my local tree advisory board. A lot of people nodded and said good idea, but our actions still didn’t change.

So then, I tried writing a fiction story that is set in my city. (This one is a work in progress! I’ll let you know what the results are.)

The fact is that even when things don’t seem to be working, ideas are percolating into the public consciousness. Not long after I started speaking up about the connection between de-vegetation and flooding, more of my fellow citizens started talking about this in citizen comment period at the various board and commission meetings as well.

Our work is to keep finding the next step when we’re not getting the result we want. It’s not to abandon the very worthy and essential goal. Abandoning my efforts to do my part as an educator-activist to reduce flooding in my city and bioregion is not an option. There’s too much suffering happening.

Do you have an example from your own life? How’s it going? What has worked, and what hasn’t? Have you ever been tempted to give up? If so, how did you keep yourself engaged?

What to do if you can’t find like-minded people

1) You might need to get out in your community more. 2) And-or you might need to broaden your definition of like-minded.

I’m not being flippant here.

Some of the biggest blowups and betrayals are among communities of supposedly “like-minded” people. The whole concept of “like-minded” is very prone to turn into chasing something that doesn’t exist.

Meet your neighbors. I don’t have a dog, but a lot of people find like-minded people just by being out walking their dogs. I certainly find a lot of like-minded people by being out in my garden. When they see me out, they start talking. I could not have looked at them and been able to tell, “Oh, that’s a person who shares my views about gardening and community!”

Neighbors can be online neighbors as well.

Also, being an introvert is no excuse. I am an extreme introvert despite being a public speaker and teacher. Introvert can be quite good at finding people, because we’re not as able to do it by the more obvious channels.

The other point, regarding broadening your definition of like-minded. Everyone wants clean water, and everyone wants a good life for themselves and their family. If that’s too broad a definition for you, experiment with narrowing the definition.

And if you’re not finding your (close-enough) like-minded people, experiment with broadening the definition until you do. Not finding them is not an option. We can’t live without community.

What works for me is to define what constitutes like-minded (for me). A lot of times it’s situational as opposed to a constant.

Sometimes like-minded might just be everyone who’s concerned about a certain issue in the neighborhood. Could be overpolicing, could be local government spraying herbicides, or over-trimming trees, etc. And maybe we sit together and drink coffee, or maybe we get on our Facebook group, and talk about what to do next.

Choose your flavor of cognitive dissonance

If you believe, as I and many others do, that we are in a state of biospheric collapse and planetary emergency, you are going to feel some cognitive dissonance watching the mainstream world go on around you.

People driving to Home Depot, shopping on Amazon, complaining about the price of gas, continuing to buy new furniture, buying so many new clothes even though our closets are jammed, accepting single-use plastic without question, flying, engaging in purely leisure travel, continuing to invest in 401ks/ Wall Street — the list is endless; these are just a few examples.

But if you truly believe we are in a state of emergency, yet you don’t act as if we are in a state of emergency, you’re going to be experiencing a whole nother level of dissonance.

Acting according to your beliefs even if it’s going against the mainstream can be really uncomfortable and you can be ostracized and all sorts of things. Even the milder versions of ostracism like the fake churchy side-eye smile get really exhausting and sad and lonely after a while.

So you have to stay focused on your core awareness if you want to stay the course. I feel it’s a good deal. There’s less cognitive dissonance if you go ahead and act on your beliefs, than if you let the world around you catch you up in the BAU flow of things. A certain peace of mind ensues; it’s priceless and will carry you through the tough times.

There are other prizes as well. Starting with your wallet. And newfound skills. And genuine community. Freedom from being panicky when consumer supply chains break down, electric power goes out, etc. Focus on what you’re gaining, not what you’re giving up.

Oh, and as more of start living deeply in accordance with our knowingness about the planetary state of emergency, We will be creating an ever larger and more visible stream. Which will make it easier for others to act in accordance with the state of planetary emergency.

To block/drop, or no?

I am an educator so it’s part of my work to keep plugging away. I have had people block me on Facebook, and there are a person here and there who I ended up having to block. But for the most part I’m just continuing my work which means being connected with lots of different people. Continuing to try to educate people on the connections between capitalist/colonizer society, the climate crisis, and why everybody is feeling so economically crunched.

Fortunately most all of my close real-life friends, and my immediate family, are mostly on same page politically.

How can anyone feel confident right now?

(A question someone posted in one of my groups.)

I am not going to say I’m confident. But as a Boomer I’m working to keep a level head because the young people & more vulnerable people need me to. It may sound strange but it feels like I’ve been training for this my whole life, as a child I always read stories about people living under oppressive regime.

And before this, my whole life, as a person raised by her parents to love & protect ecosystems, I feel like I have always been in training for the climate crisis.

And really, it’s all connected. For example, every drop of gasoline we can conserve is one drop less that goes to feeding oppression. Same goes for other consumption, because energy goes into everything. Many experts have written about the connection between energy demand and wars, fascism etc.

I am sort of a prepper, but in a community way. And I share tips and info with people to help everyone get prepped for whatever.

Basic working conditions; solidarity

In a “help wanted / seeking jobs” group that I follow in my local area, people commonly laugh-react posts from job-seekers who need accommodations. Whether from a disability, or childcare issues, or what have you.

Today I saw the post below:

Looking for part time work between hours of 630am and 2pm any day of the week. Limitations: can’t lift heavy things or do physical work requiring strength or endurance, need the ability to sit or stand when I need, not interested in being a caregiver for elderly, children, or animals. I am allergic to most animals. Also need a quiet workspace. I need frequent breaks from conversational/social interactions due to my Autism or a quiet and low social job overall. Part-time office work maybe between 8am and 2pm? Currently no positions available unless someone knows of something?

My response:

Honestly these conditions do not sound unrealistic at all. It sounds like the majority of office jobs I’ve ever worked. What the people laugh-reacting this post might want to consider is that these conditions might not be unreasonable, period. Even if a person doesn’t have disabilities.

Could it be that (for example) even retail workers deserve a chance to sit down when they need it? In some countries, cashiers actually get to sit on a stool their whole shift if they want. It’s no impediment to working the register and interacting with customers.

We are moneymaking units for the owners! Workers make the profits for the owners. Something to ponder!

Next time anyone is tempted to put down a person with disabilities for being up-front about their needs & constraints, consider that their requests might be helping us all. Maybe all of us need to stand up for more reasonable working conditions that don’t result in blowing out our backs and hips and knees, unnecessarily interrupting our mental processes, and so on.