"A man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone.”

Henry D. Thoreau

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Rethinking Lifestyles

We prepare a weekly column that appears on page 7 in The Carillon and on mysteinbach.ca every week. It also appears as a blog: Rethinking Lifesyle.blogspot.com. Subscribe to it in your reader and join the discussion through the comment section. We also welcome 500 word essays from readers of the column and will publish essays germane to who we are. Send your essays to eric@southeasttransition.com.
Tuesday
Feb102015

Fresh Baked Bread - mmm even the thought of it makes ones mouth water

One of the objectives of the South Eastman Transition Initiative (the organisation commonly known as SETI, that writes this ‘Rethinking Lifestyles’ column) is to encourage people to become more self-sufficient. Everywhere good quality agricultural land is being sub-divided for more and more housing and in a world with a fixed surface area and a rapidly growing population it doesn’t take an Einstein to see that trouble lies ahead. As the effects of global warming become progressively more severe, the lifestyle we now enjoy will become much more difficult. Global warming and climate change are like the hands of a clock: you can’t see them moving but if you go away and look again later you see they have moved. It is in 10 or 20 years that major climate changes will be upon us and that means our children and grandchildren’s lives. The constant cry of the politicians to ‘grow the economy’ is plainly unsustainable. What we need is a ‘steady state’ economy that provides a satisfactory lifestyle for all. But, back to bread. In the old days every small town had its local bakery producing bread from locally grown and locally milled wheat. This made an excellent healthy flavourful loaf that was a delight to eat. Then industrial bread making took over and ever since we have largely been subjected to a tasteless cotton wool product. If the bread had any real flavour people wouldn’t want to layer it with slices of meat, cheese, pickles, mayo and more, such that the bread itself cannot be tasted. Supermarket bread contains all sorts of additives to increase loaf volume (to make it appear to be good value for money) and preservatives to make it last longer.

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Wednesday
Feb042015

Frugal Value: Designing Business for a Crowded Planet (Part 3)

But how to create value… To create value, companies in the Anthropocene provide efficient products and services, brought to customers through business models that drive product sufficiency. The challenge is to find ways to create value with fewer, better objects. A shift towards access-based models – leasing, renting, servicing – is an option.

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Tuesday
Jan132015

Green Energy on a Roll

The think tank, Clean Energy Canada, recently reported that Canada’s green energy sector now employs more people than the oil sands enterprise. It claims that 23,700 persons are now employed in the green energy industry compared to 22,340 whose work relates to the oil sands.

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Wednesday
Jan072015

Forward look to 2015

The beginning of the year often stirs thoughts about what is ahead, and I have been wondering what can we expect in 2015 for our local environment?

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Wednesday
Jan072015

What’s on your Christmas wish list?

I didn’t send a wish list to Santa this year, but if I did, here are just some of the things I would put on it.

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