Sustainability in a Nutshell
by Starhawk - July 17, 2003


To create a sustainable culture and society, we need to change our understanding of how the world works. The mechanistic model of the world that underlies many of our most unsustainable practices sees the world as a fixed, static thing made up of isolated parts that interact in simple, cause and effect relationships. To create not just sustainability but ongoing abundance, we need to understand that the world is a web of dynamic relationships, that everything exists in communities and nothing stands alone. We can't benefit one part of a community at the expense of another and expect that community to last. We can't orient our economy, our agriculture, our forestry and our science to produce profits for the few, and expect our system to survive. But if we consider how to create beneficial relationships among all aspects of a community, the health and abundance of the entire system will increase.

A forest is not just a factory for producing doug firs -- it's a community of plants, animals, birds, insects, soil micro-organisms, mycorrhizal fungi, and human beings. A business is a community that includes the whole biological community that creates the resources used, those who do the work and make decisions and ultimately use what is created.

I practice permaculture, the art of designing beneficial relationships to produce systems modeled on natural systems, in my home and gardens, and find it a useful lens for looking at any system. I also practice magic, "the art of changing consciousness at will." One tool I find useful for thinking about sustainability is the magic circle of the four elements, air, fire, water and earth, with spirit in the center. When making a decision, we can ask:

* How will this affect the air, the climate? The birds and insects? Will it bring inspiration and refreshment?

* How much energy will this use, and where will it come from? Will it use more energy than we take in? How much human energy will it require? Will it energize or drain us?

* How will this affect the water? The fish, sea life, and water creatures? Will it use more water than we have? How do we feel about it?

* How will this affect the earth? The health of the soil? The microorganisms and soil bacteria? The plants and animals? The forests?

* How does this affect our human community? Will it benefit the poorest and least advantaged among us? Does this reflect and further our deepest values? Will it feed our spirit?

Sustainable abundance is a goal we can move towards. No one in this society can lead a totally sustainable life today, but if we ask the right questions, we will begin to move in the right direction.

 


(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)