A Strategy for Long Term Well-Being
The conditions for making sustainability the goal of our
societies can be effectively furnished through existing networks of citizens'
organizations.
The first step is to introduce the outline of sustainability
around which this page is built. This is easily done with sustainability
cards and other materials.
This outline provides a reference. By distributing it and encouraging
discussion around the topics they introduce, we can nurture understanding,
stimulate vision, and generate other conditions needed to resolve the crisis
of our times.
The Process:
Here is an explanation of how this process works followed by the
results produced.
A Medium With a Message
The strategy outlined here is based on two observations about understanding.
One is the role of words, by which we identify parts of our world so we
can think and talk about them; the other is how a frame of reference enables
us to organize our experience and bits of information into recognizable
patterns.
The following analogies explain:
The Role of Words
To the European explorers the Americas were unknown. An expedition could
spend an entire season exploring the coast. If, late in the season, they
discovered a large river pouring into the ocean, they could take a reading
on the stars, record where the mouth of that river was and for their records,
give it a name.
The next year they could return directly to that place and spend the
entire season exploring the river.
With points along the river similarly located and named, any navigator
with the charts could set out and travel directly to a chosen place.
So it is with words. When objects, phenomena and ideas are identified,
we mark them with words. When someone else wants to learn about the same
things, they start by learning the words that identify the subject matter
and go on from there.
Sustainability is one of these words. Its definition marks the territory,
so anyone who learns the term can recognize the basic consideration. Having
the territory symbolized by a single word makes it easier to draw attention
to the particular matters we want to discuss.
Frame of Reference
The other idea central to this project has to do with how recognizing
a pattern can lead to understanding events and circumstances. A frame of
reference is a pattern which indicates the relationship between the elements
involved. If the experiences and information we come across in our lives
fit within the frame of reference, the overview is reinforced. We start
to understand the basic situation and recognize how a wide range of other
details fit into the picture.
The value of a frame of reference struck the originator of the Sustainability
Project in the incident described here:
"I'd never heard of a roller derby until someone gave me a free
ticket. As I watched I was unable to make sense of what I saw. Two teams
roller-skated around a heavily banked track as fast as they could. Every
now and then they would all stop skating and a score would be recorded.
I couldn't figure out how the points were being made.
During intermission I asked a cameraman what was happening. He explained
the rules of the game. When the action started again, the formation made
sense; I could identify the strategies, see when a point was coming and
for whom it would be recorded.
The rules of the game provided a frame of reference which I could use
the assess what I was seeing."
The sustainability challenge is a good deal more complex than a roller
derby, but it is not beyond the comprehension of people with moderate interest.
The Guideposts provide a frame of reference.
Results:
For some years we've circulated the outline of sustainability and asked
people to consider how society would be different if sustainability was
our goal. We invite reflection and discussion; we put the concept of sustainability
on the table with guidelines to identify the topic. In turn, the process:
A) Nurtures Understanding
With a frame of reference for considering news items, personal experience
and concerns, people can more easily see the pattern of human ecology. As
the pattern becomes familiar it is easier to recognize and appreciate which
choices contribute to sustainable living and which create problems.
B) Stimulates Vision
It is much more productive to work towards something positive than
to expend effort avoiding negative things. As pattern recognition develops,
so does the ability to project the pattern into plans for action. Each person
who starts projecting sustainability into his or her hopes for the future,
inclines the whole of society a little more in that direction.
C) Outlines Areas for Debate and Investigation
The Guideposts are subject to scrutiny. People are encouraged to
look at them critically and to call attention to errors or omissions. The
Guideposts provide a framework for locating the fine lines and determining
where they fall between activities that deepen the environmental crisis
and those that allow the Earth to heal. When activities are found to be
part of the problem, the same criteria can be used to look for safer ways
to accomplish similar ends.
D) Clarifies Values
As more and more people and organizations acknowledge the need for
sustainability it will be increasingly recognized as a value: sustainable
activities are good, non-sustainable activities are to be avoided.
Recognizing how far out on the limb we have all climbed, it would be
a waste to dwell on any guilt this value generates. Nevertheless, when something
is recognized as good, it influences almost everyone.
E) Builds the Political Will to Tackle the Crisis
There is enormous strength in our institutions. One need only look
at war to see how massively a nation can act once a priority is set. Addressing
non-sustainable habits requires a much friendlier application of strength
but success will require as much determination. The environmental crisis
is enormous in scope. To address it with anything less than social commitment
is a gamble with the lives of all our children.
F) Manifests Courage
When the population has observed world events for a few years in
the context of sustainability, the direction we should take will become
obvious. Morale will improve. Knowing that others share our concern can
make the difference between frustration and action. Mutual support generates
strength. People are willing to take greater risks when they know the human
family is behind them and that their efforts are not in vain.
One more point:
Broadly distributing a reference for sustainability overcomes the constraints
of what Noam Chomsky calls 'concision'. In a National Film Board of Canada
video on Mr. Chomsky titled "Manufacturing Consent", he explains:
He is welcome to present his views on certain unsympathetic talk shows because,
in the format of concision, he is given only three or four minutes. If what
one presents corresponds with the conventional wisdom, viewers already know
enough about the topic that a new element can be added in a short period
of time. If, however, one wants to present a new perspective, background
information is necessary for the divergent view to be understood. Without
time for background information, people like Mr. Chomsky can only make statements
that look foolish out of context.
When the reference for sustainability has been distributed, people know
what is being referred to and concise questions can be asked:
Is this the direction in which we want society to evolve? or
Isn't this what we want to accomplish?

Questions and comments are welcome.
Contact Information
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The Economic Problem.
Why We Will Succeed.
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Last Update: May 11, 2002
Filename: http://www.SustainWellBeing.net/Strategy.shtml