Thursday 28 September 2017

How Modern Life Became Disconnected from Nature

It’s hard to overstate how much good nature does for our well-being: Study after study documents the psychological and physical benefits of connecting with nature. People who are more connected with nature are happier, feel more vital, and have more meaning in their lives.
Even in small doses, nature is a potent elixir: When their hospital room had flowers and foliage, post-surgery patients needed less painkillers and reported less fatigue. And merely looking at pictures of nature does speed up mental restoration and improves cognitive functioning.
These studies, along with hundreds of others, all point to the same conclusion: We stand to benefit tremendously from nurturing a strong connection with nature. Yet our connection to nature seems more tenuous than ever today—a time when our children can name more Pokémon characters than wildlife species.
It is widely accepted that we are more disconnected from nature today than we were a century ago, but is that actually true? A recent study we conducted suggests that it is—and that may be bad news not only for our well-being but also for the environment.

Our growing disconnection from nature

To find out how the human relation to nature has changed over time, we asked ourselves: How can we define and measure all the various ways in which people connect with nature? How can we count all the times people stop to watch a sunset or listen to birds chirping, or how long they spend walking tree-lined streets? We could certainly ask these questions to living people, but we couldn’t ask people who lived a hundred years ago.
Instead, we turned to the cultural products they created. Works of popular culture, we reasoned, should reflect the extent to which nature occupies our collective consciousness. If novelists, songwriters, or filmmakers have fewer encounters with nature these days than before, or if these encounters make less of an impression on them, or if they don’t expect their audiences to respond to it, nature should feature less frequently in their works.
We created a list of 186 nature-related words belonging to four categories: general words related to nature (e.g., autumncloudlakemoonlight), names of flowers (e.g., bluebelledelweissfoxgloverose), names of trees (e.g., cedarlaburnumwhitebeamwillow), and names of birds (e.g., finchhummingbirdmeadowlarkspoonbill).
Next, we checked how frequently these 186 words appeared in works of popular culture over time, including English fiction books written between 1901 and 2000, songs listed as the top 100 between 1950 and 2011, and storylines of movies made between 1930 and 2014.
Across millions of fiction books, thousands of songs, and hundreds of thousands of movie and documentary storylines, our analyses revealed a clear and consistent trend: Nature features significantly less in popular culture today than it did in the first half of the 20th century, with a steady decline after the 1950s. For every three nature-related words in the popular songs of the 1950s, for example, there is only slightly more than one 50 years later.
Nature words in song lyricsPercentage of nature-related words in song lyrics
A look at some of the hit titles from 1957 makes clear how things have changed over time: They include “Butterfly,” “Moonlight Gambler,” “White Silver Sands,” “Rainbow,” “Honeycomb,” “In the Middle of an Island,” “Over the Mountain, Across the Sea,” “Blueberry Hill,” and “Dark Moon.” In these songs, nature often provides the backdrop to and imagery of love, as in “Star Dust” by Billy Ward and His Dominoes, which starts with:
And now the purple dusk of twilight time 

Steals across the meadows of my heart

High up in the sky the little stars climb

Always reminding me that we’re apart

You wander down the lane and far away

Leaving me a song that will not die

Love is now the stardust of yesterday.
Fifty years later in 2007, there are only four nature-related hit titles: “Snow (Hey Oh),” “Cyclone,” “Summer Love,” and “Make It Rain.” 

This pattern of decline didn’t hold for another group of words we tested—nouns related to human-made environments, such as bedbowlbrick, and hall—suggesting that nature is a unique case.

The source of our nature deficit

How can we explain this shrinking of nature in our collective imagination and cultural conversation? A closer look at the data yields an interesting clue: References to nature declined after, but not before, the 1950s.
The trend of urbanization—which swallows up natural areas and cuts people off from natural surroundings—is typically used to explain the weakening human connection to nature, but our findings are not consistent with that account. Urbanization rates did not change from the first half of the 20th century to the second in the U.S. and U.K., where most works we studied originated.
Instead, our findings point to a different explanation for our disconnection from nature: technological change, and in particular the burgeoning of indoor and virtual recreation options. The 1950s saw the rapid rise of television as the most popular medium of entertainment. Video games first appeared in the 1970s and have since been a popular pastime, while the Internet has been claiming more and more leisure time since the late 1990s. It stands to reason that these technologies partially substituted for nature as a source of recreation and entertainment. Classic paintings such as Winslow Homer’s Snap the Whip (1872) or Seurat’s Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1886) point to a time when children played in wide open green fields and adults spent their Sunday afternoons in nature.
Snap the WhipWinslow Homer’s Snap the Whip
To the extent that the disappearance of nature vocabulary from the cultural conversation reflects an actual distancing from nature, our findings are cause for concern. Aside from its well-being benefits, a connection to nature strongly predicts pro-environmental attitudes and behaviors. Such a love for nature is often born from exposure to nature as a child. This is what made author Richard Louv write, “As the care of nature increasingly becomes an intellectual concept severed from the joyful experience of the outdoors, you have to wonder: Where will future environmentalists come from?”

It’s worth remembering that cultural products such as songs and films not only reflect the prevailing culture—they also shape it. Modern artists have the opportunity to send the message that nature is worth paying attention to and to help awaken curiosity, appreciation, and respect for nature, as some did back in the ‘60s and ‘70s. Artistic creations that help us connect with nature are crucial at a time like this, when nature seems to need our attention and care more than ever.

Saturday 16 September 2017

8 Reasons Why Denver is Set to Become a Major Sharing City

Denver Skyline (Larry Johnson via Flickr)

 All over the globe - from Ghent, Belgium to Gothenburg, Sweden - people have been launching amazing sharing projects. These include bike kitchens, coworking spaces, community gardens, and so much more. On this side of the pond, we recently profiled the range of sharing initiatives in Ithaca, New York. Now, another city in the U.S. that's transforming into a great Sharing City is Denver. Here are eight reasons why:

1. SAME Cafe 

Photo by Courtney Pankrat
Since 2006, SAME Cafe, Denver's only nonprofit restaurant, has been serving lunch Monday through Saturday to anyone looking for a meal. The restaurant follows a pay-what-you-can model. If you can't afford to pay, you are encouraged to volunteer in the kitchen for half an hour in exchange for a meal. Owners Libby and Brad Birky started the restaurant with the philosophy that "everyone, regardless of economic status, deserves the chance to eat healthy food while being treated with dignity."
2. Solderworks & other coworking spaces

Image provided by SolderWorks
Opening in Sept. 2017, SolderWorks takes a slightly different approach on popular coworking spaces. Located just North of Denver in Westminster, this coworking space offers tools and equipment such as a 3D printer, power supplies, solder equipment, a tool workbench, and open worktables. SolderWorks offers a space for professional makers to create.
The city of Denver also has many traditional coworking spaces such as GalvanizeThriveIndustry Denver, and the newly opened Union Stanley in Aurora (a Denver suburb).
3. Denver Tool Library
Rather than buy each tool when working on a project, the Denver Tool Library offers the opportunity to borrow any tool you need for just $80/ year. Denver residents who join the library have access to over 2,500 tools from Denver's Tool Library. Tools available include carpentry and woodworking tools, electrical and lighting tools, metalworking tools, and even gardening tools. Not only that, but the library hosts an in-house bike shop where members can come fix their bikes.
4. Bike sharing

Image from Denver BCycle Facebook page
Many big cities now have a bike sharing program. Denver is no exception with B-Cycle. Using an app, users can find the closest bikes. With more than 700 bikes and 89 bike sharing locations, the program is good for both commuters and tourists who want to explore the city. B-Cycle is a nonprofit business operating with the help of many local sponsors. All that is needed to get a bike for day is a credit card.
5. Denver Public Library
As is the case with many libraries around the country, the Denver Public Library has a strong focus on loaning out items other than books. Community members can check out items such as GoPros, toys, museum passes, Chromebooks, and Colorado State Park passes.
The Denver Public Library currently has two ideaLabs (with two more opening in Fall 2017). An ideaLab is a space anyone can use as a makerspace. The labs include recording studios, 3D printers, scanners, computers, digital cameras, green screens, and much more. These spaces are meant to spark imagination and help Colorado residents create. The labs are also staffed with library employees and volunteers.
6. Denver Urban Garden

Image from Denver Urban Garden Facebook page
Since 1985, the Denver Urban Garden (DUG) has been cultivating community gardens all over the Denver area. The program has grown to include over 165 gardens that grow food for the community. One of the gardens even grows food that is then donated to SAME Cafe for their restaurant. DUG also hosts school-based community gardens and many programs that help people with their home gardens such as a composting lessons and lessons on how to grow a successful garden.
7.  The Park People

Image from The Park People Facebook page
Another program in the city of Denver is The Park People. The nonprofit works to help grow trees in the city. With so much new development in Denver, the need for new trees is growing. The Park People’s Denver Dig Trees program has provided over 50,000 free (or low cost) trees to Denver residents for over 30 years.
8.  Little Free Libraries

Photo by Courtney Pankrat
Little Free Libraries are an international phenomenon. In April 2017, Little Free Library founder Todd Bol came to the city to help deliver the City of Distinction award to Denver since the city has one of the most active Little Free Library communities with over 500 registered libraries in the Metro Denver Area.
Header photo of Denver's skyline by Larry Johnson via Flickr