Creating New Spaces for Connecting in New Ways
I contributed the following post to Second Nature's blog recently. It was part of a series by Second Nature staff on why we work in the field of sustainability. Thanks to Georges Dyer for the gentle prodding!
“The
difficulty lies, not in the new ideas,” John Maynard Keynes has observed, “but
in escaping from the old ones.” Nowhere
is the truth of this observation clearer than in our continued adherence to an
economy based on fossil fuels. As more
than one study has determined, we have the means at our disposal to move into a
clean energy world in which the power of the wind, sun, water, tides, and other
renewable sources is tapped and runaway climate change is averted. The latest of these studies comes from the
United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which earlier this
month released a report surveying the already existing technologies that, in
combination, could make this happen. The
critical missing components are the necessary policies that would drive change
in this direction and the political will to implement them.
clean energy world in which the power of the wind, sun, water, tides, and other
renewable sources is tapped and runaway climate change is averted. The latest of these studies comes from the
United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which earlier this
month released a report surveying the already existing technologies that, in
combination, could make this happen. The
critical missing components are the necessary policies that would drive change
in this direction and the political will to implement them.I get up every day and do the work that I do because
I want to help create the public pressure and culture of collaboration that
will make these changes occur. I get up
every day and do the work that I do because I believe each one of us has the
responsibility to be a subject in history and not just an object of history. I get up every day and do the work that I do
because there is no silver bullet, no magic wand, that can make the immense
problems confronting us go away. The
only thing that will work is to escape from the old myths of independence and
self-reliance and embrace the truths of interdependence and mutuality.
Understanding these truths and harnessing the power
of the network is at the heart of what makes Second Nature so effective. The American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment (ACUPCC) and Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE) are both products of this approach to
change. They are collaborative efforts to create the conditions for the
emergence of a new paradigm, one that involves a shift from the mechanistic,
atomistic solutions of the industrial age to the organic, interconnected web of
the digital age. They are part of the
largest social movement in all human history, what Paul Hawken calls “the
blessed unrest.”
The overturning of the old paradigm will only happen
if we intentionally and strategically create what Gibrán Rivera refers to as
“the spaces for connection.” Collaboration,
inclusivity, and mutual respect make it possible for us to move upstream, where
the real solutions are. As Rivera puts
it, “By re-inventing the ways in which we come together we begin to live in the
world we are trying to build.” Second
Nature, together with the generous support of the Park Foundation, have
provided me with the invaluable space not only for connection but also
experimentation, the opportunity to reinvent myself as a social entrepreneur
and explore new models of partnership and change such as the Tompkins County Climate Protection Initiative (TCCPI). And for
that I will always be grateful.







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