This week was the culmination of a contest we held here at Royal Roads asking our staff to answer a question for us: "What kind of future do you want?"
The entries we received touched us and moved us, enlivening our office as we read them aloud to each other and lifting our sense of promise for the visions their words held up to us all.
The two top entries are posted below. The winning submission is from Bill Durodie from the School of Peace and Conflict Management. Our runner up is Rebecca Bosma
from the Centre for Applied Leadership and Management.
Congratulations, Bill and Rebecca! With futures this bright, we are honoured to share your sightlines of the days that lie before us all on this home we call Earth.
THE FUTURE WE NEED FOR OUR
PLANET
Putting people back into
the ecological equation
by Bill Durodie
The photographs of the earth taken from space by the
moon missions of the late 60s became iconic images for the environmental
movement. They captured the beauty of a predominantly blue planet, surrounded
by a preciously thin and translucent layer of atmosphere. They inspired and
galvanised a generation into demanding a more sustainable future.
It was ironic that this appreciation of our
inner-connectedness had come through the greatest human effort to separate
ourselves from our home and harness its resources. Worse, this new
understanding was a by-product of the Cold War pursuit of power and presumed
prestige.
And while at the time the images were held to
demonstrate the uniqueness and fragility of our condition, further exploration
since, primarily through the use of the Hubble space telescope, suggests this
to be far from being true as new ‘earths’ are discovered almost every week.
We should never be afraid of such apparent
contradictions if we are to embrace a clear vision for the future of our
planet.
The historic moments that saw some people liberating
themselves from the shackles of superstition, speculation, dogma and diktat –
the Renaissance and the Enlightenment – were also periods that led to the
colonization and domination of others.
But we should no more disown our own history than we
can overturn the forces of nature. Rather we need to learn how to embrace and
harness these for the benefit of both the planet and its people, all of whose
histories intertwine to shape the future.
Unfortunately, in recent years, an all-too lazy
caricature of human beings as being bad for the planet has been allowed to
emerge and flourish across many quarters of society. Many effectively promote
dystopian representations of the present and negative projections of the future
that only serve to encourage a one-sided and dismal view of ourselves and our
impact on the environment.
Maybe these pessimistic presumptions serve as a
necessary corrective to an age that had supposedly unquestioningly embraced an
unbridled pursuit of progress. But it may be time to re-establish ourselves in
the wholeness of nature and not to allow ourselves to become dispirited as to
our potential to conceptualise and to do good.
In his classic work ‘On Liberty’, the politician and
philosopher John Stuart Mill – a practitioner-scholar ahead of his time – noted
that;
‘a State which dwarfs its men … will find that with
small men no great thing can really be accomplished’
The same could be said of any outlook that encourages
us to be so humble that we fail thereby to challenge that which truly needs to
be transformed. The only beneficiaries of a diminished sense of our humanity
that ensues from this are those who gain from our failing to demand more and
expect better.
A low view of ourselves does not help make things
better for the planet. It merely demoralises and undermines the human potential
and it caricatures the true complexity of our relationship with nature and with
each other.
Small may be beautiful, but sometimes bigger can be
better and more efficient. As we face big problems – such as climate change –
so too will we need big ambitions, a big effort and maybe even big solutions to
address it.
The future we need for our planet is one that restores
the role of humanity in its future – not one that marginalises it.
A KIND FUTURE
Maybe it really does begin with the chicken and the egg
by Rebecca Bosma
First off, thank
you for asking! What kind of future do I want? I want a kind future. I want to
live in a future that has all humans being kind to each other, to all animals
and to our planet.
I want government
that is influenced by a balance of values and common sense. I want to see them
acting so ethical that the population wants to pay taxes. I want to see
communities working together focused on common goals realized with more
government support and less interference. I want to see closer knit
communities, supporting each other’s needs. I would like to see food being
appreciated and food security becoming a way of life.
I would like to
see (in the near future) laws that not only allow, but encourage people
to keep at least one hen for each member of
the household. I believe this one thing could make a real difference
to our planet. I would also like to see more households with one parent at home
supporting healthy childhoods. If there is only one parent, they should be
subsidized to allow all children one parent at home. If one person in each
household could be devoted to raising and growing food full time, children
could be nurtured with more quality time and better food (which changes
everything).
There would be a
program in place making it as easy as putting in a request to raise
backyard chickens. Arrangements would be made for delivery of
your chickens, a chicken tractor (small mobile pen and coop)
and a handy how to guide. It would be important to have programs and
resources to ensure a happy and healthy lifestyle is maintained for your
chickens. What fun for the children, to collect the eggs and get to know their
chickens and the value they have.
The backyard
chicken program would allow families to benefit from fresh eggs, excellent
entertainment, amazing compost for their gardens and possibly some meat to
complete a cycle of sustainability. Local butchers would be better supported
with common sense regulations so that families could afford to raise real
organic, hormone free meat for their tables.
I can so easily
visualize a government funded sustainability program like this for our future.
It would make practical skills available through learning opportunities to help
those who want to make the shifts towards sustainability. Some of the
activities supported would be; food growing, seed saving, raising meat and
dairy animals, making soap, various food preservation, etc. The program would
have to ensure support is easily available for follow up assistance that anyone
might need to move forward at all times to a more sustainable future. It needs
to happen, but lots of people just don't know where to start. I believe that
when people are able to do this kind of work, directly supporting their
existence on this planet, that there will be more chance of our survival.
I’d call this
program something like “Step up and get your hands dirty for a better future”
or “If we can’t do this, will our children even be able to?”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What kind of future do you want? We'd love to read your comments.
Tess Wixted
Learning Associate
Visit us at cstudies.royalroads.ca.
Image credits:
Earth from Space via Wikimedia Commons
Seattle Chicken Coop with Enclosed run via Wikimedia Commons