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Old World Living For A Brave New World

Old World Living Is Lifestyle for A Brave New World is a simply sustainable way to think, decide, and shop in a new world. In fact, it’s so old, that it actually seems novel. Surprisingly, roughly 85% of the world already lives what we would call an old world (old school!) lifestyle. From Italy to India, you’ll see people hinge deals on sustainability

• Shopping local markets with what in season with reusable shopping bags
• Being frugal by buying only what they need (often in cash)
• And thrifty to make their money stretch
• Creates a longer view of the future as opposed to “tomorrow never comes”

This type of consumer mindset ultimately creates less waste and is the basis for Old World Living. These are also the larger values, ideals and principles that inform my decision making processes about everything from marriage and personal relationships to parenting, my media choices and subject matter; to cooking, cleaning, leisure and work.

Although it’s called Old World Living, it’s really as American as apple pie because it’s about rugged individualism and self-reliance, but with a conscience and style. I am convinced that anyone can have a socially responsible lifestyle, no matter what size budget – using second hand or deeply discounted finds – by using a good old Yankee ingenuity.

In fact, it was Ben Franklin that said, “Waste not, want not.” Annie Leonard is an American activist who supports sustainability and is a critic of excessive consumerism. She is most known for her animated film The Story of Stuff about the life-cycle of material goods and advocates “chucking the old-school throw-away mindset” that drives the old dinosaur economy based on fossil fuel.
Old World Living is about sustainability and equity too.
• Green Chemistry
• Zero Waste
• Closed Loop Production
• Renewable Energy
• Local living Economies

According to Leonard “Some people say it’s unrealistic, idealistic, that it can’t happen. But I say the ones who are unrealistic are those that want to continue on the old path. That’s dreaming. Remember that old way didn’t just happen by itself. It’s not like gravity that we just gotta live with. People created it. And we’re people too. So let’s create something new.”

And that’s where Old World Living mindset fits in. An old approach – sustainable and equitable – for a brave new world, using recycled luxury for green home staging and interior decorating.
About The Author Lisa La Valle-Finan is a “big picture thinker” and designer with a background in anthropology. She is inspired by both Martha Stewart and Margaret Mead and considers herself a maker, activist, and socially responsible entrepreneur. She’s determined to build a multi-faceted business around her passion for beauty and sustainability. Her home furnishings line is sold on Etsy and in Born Again Vintage, the store (Montclair NJ). Although the seed for Old World Living was planted centuries ago, it has germinated into a brand thanks to her old world Italian ancestors to help people become socially responsible and think critically to make informed decisions to brave the new world.

FROM THE ANNOTATED SCRIP OF THE STORY OF STUFFNARRATED BY ANNIE LEONARD AT WWW.STORYOFSTUFF.ORG

You like STUFF? Want to know where STUFF comes from? Where STUFF goes when it turns to trash? And what it does along the way? Here is a brief summary of The Story of Stuff animation illustrated with Old World Living Before and After reconstructions using Zero Waste.

Green is Beautiful
The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled, humorous look at the underside of production and consumption. It explores the connections between a vast array of environmental and social issues, and points the way toward a more sustainable and just world. Old World Living takes that premise one step further into “recycled luxury”


Extraction

We’ll start with extraction which is a fancy word for natural resource exploitation which is a fancy word for trashing the planet. What this looks like is we chop down trees, we blow up mountains to get the metals inside, we use up all the water and we wipe out the animals.


So here we are running up against our first limit. We’re running out of resources. We are using too much stuff. Now I know this can be hard to hear, but it’s the truth and we’ve gotta deal with it.

In the past three decades alone, one-third of the planet’s natural resources base have been consumed. Gone.

We are cutting and mining and hauling and trashing the place so fast that we’re undermining the planet’s very ability for people to live here.


Where I live, in the United States, we have less than 4% of our original forests left. Forty percent of waterways have become undrinkable. And our problem is not just that we’re using too much stuff, but we’re using more than our share.

We [The U.S.] have 5% of the world’s population but we’re consuming 30% of the world’s resources and creating 30% of the world’s waste. If everybody consumed at U.S. rates, we would need 3 to 5 planets.

And you know what? We’ve only got one.

So, my country’s response to this limitation is simply to go take someone else’s! This is the Third World, which—some would say—is another word for our stuff that somehow got on someone else’s land.

So what does that look like? The same thing: trashing the place.


• 75% of global fisheries now are fished at or beyond capacity
• 80% of the planet’s original forests are gone.
• In the Amazon alone, we’re losing 2000 trees a minute. That is seven football fields a minute.

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Small is the New Big and Antiques Can Get Us There

Bigger is not Better

When I think about decorating a space, I consider proportion. Will the décor and furniture “fit.” Rarely do I buy new. American furniture tends to be too big and aesthetically underwhelming (ever been to Ashley’s)? It’s big because it needs to occupy a Mac Mansion, in a big way. Funny thing though, the average American household has declined to 3.1 people in 1970 to 2.6, according the US Census Bureau.

Flea markets — or second hand markets in general – are more my size. They tend to suit my design aesthetic too, not only because Antiques Are Green but because the pieces are usually a better fit and more in scale with the size of the home and the people in it, so bigger is not better. Bigger is not

Bigger is not Sustainable

When the planet contained a billion people, the earth’s ecosystem could sustain that population. The sun rose and set and the seasons and the cycles of farming could feed and care for the people that needed all it could provide. Now, with four billion people, we’ve got some serious sustainability issues. The food we produce is not made in harmony with the earth. It’s is produced artificially and in mass quantities so that we can satiate an ever increasing middle class around the world that is both hungry, and hungry for something better.

Whether it’s furniture size or the size in the earth’s population, we are out of proportion with our real hunger — which may be hard to visualize – which I believe is personal satisfaction and being in harmony with our planet.

Less is Better

Take a look at this Infographic about the evolution of the car which illustrates my point. Yes, they have gotten bigger to us, but have they gotten better for us? Do they do anything better than drive, really?

According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) report on life satisfaction in the western industrialized nations the happiest people on earth are the Danes. They live in a tiny country where the most personal happiness and contentment is characterized by small living spaces. So how is it that Denmark tops the list with the most satisfied citizens? Perhaps it’s because of the high employment rate of 73% and a low percentage of 1.92% of employees working long hours contribute to high satisfaction levels. But I can’t help wonder, do they “get” that less is more?

Could it be that in the US of A (which failed to make the top 10) that if we decreased our yen for all things big like furniture and houses and cars, and increased our personal happiness by cutting back on a consumptive mindset we would be happier? What would it be like if we didn’t have to work so much? If we spent more time with family? Or just did what the French call being a flaneur (people watcher).

Could we steer the happiness needle to the other end of the meter, and away from the consumptive, dinosaur economy that drives it, so to speak?

Read more:

The Happiest Countries in the World – 24/7 Wall St 

Infographic

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What’s In Your Trash?

What’s In Your Trash?

One of the reasons I am inspired to share my old world lifestyle is to help people learn how to reduce their carbon footprint, simply. From hanging the laundry instead of running the dryer to shopping at a flea market where I find items that I can give a second life to, it helps ease my conscience knowing I am living a greener life. When I buy a piece of furniture or home accessory at a Flea market, it falls into one of two categories: it’s either for
1) Me and my home, or for
2) Someone else and their home
I see so many wonderful pieces with really good bones that are just lying in the furniture graveyard, victims of neglect, a little worse for the wear, but take these two sofas I rescued $125 each. Wait until you see the reveal. I”ll keep you posted with “after” pics. Not only will I save them, but I will make a profit that feels just right for my Etsy shop CREATiVE CONVERZeNS.

Haven’t we heard the warnings about pollution for too long? I know I have, ever since I was a kid, “Woodsy the Owl (the accidental acronym for Old World Living) says, Give a hoot, don’t pollute” (yeah I’m dating myself). What took us so long to gain environmental awareness? When did we reach the tipping point? Some say Americans only react when they should act. Or when it hits them in the wallet. What do you think?

I hope as a nation, we’re getting the message that too much consumption and consequently, all the waste that goes with it, can’t be a good thing (don’t even get me started on “Hoarders”). Seriously, look at this Infographic that details the story of waste. Nearly 90% of what we throw away could bypass the landfills, but hundreds of thousands of tons of toxic chemicals, plastics, and materials of all kinds make it in anyway.

Happily, the Fleas are part of my lifestyle that helps avoid the landfills. The original green business model that embodies the old world saying I live by, “waste not, want not”. It’s a mindset that’s also evident in the emergence of the “fix-it” society which is very closely related to the DIY tribe. While many of us grew up in a “disposable” society, perhaps the tide is turning.

Unlike last week’s posting, when I said I didn’t want to know “too much” about the Fleas, this week, I do want to take the mystery out of waste and share what I have learned about it with others who want to is know more about Old World Living. One of the best ways is to watch “The Story of Stuff” by Annie Leonard. Knowing what goes into our economic systems of production and the consequences is taking responisbility for our actions. It’s really the gown up thing to do, isn’t it?

In the Netherlands, “repair cafes” have given traction to initiatives like the “fixers collective” in Brooklyn. Although it’s not representative of the average American city, it is still a culture shock to think that Americans are adopting a green mindset about our stuff — whether it’s consuming less, recycling, upcycling, or trying to fix it – ultimately this approach means less waste for the landfills and greener space for all living creatures.

Knowing the consequences of your actions, or inactions; where things come from and where they go, will make a tremendous difference in the survival of people on our planet. There’s a line in Eleventh Hour, and one of the scientists reminds us that we’re not adopting green living to “save the planet,” we’re doing it to save ourselves! Earth will be here long after it is uninhabitable. It will continue to spin and rotate around the sun, but it is we, humans, who will become extinct.
Pssst: Figured out last week’s “facebook” prompt?

http://dailyinfographic.com/whats-in-your-trash-infographic
http://www.storyofstuff.org/movies-all/story-of-stuff/
http://repaircafe.nl/
http://fixerscollective.org/
http://www.etsy.com/blog/en/2012/the-emergence-of-the-fix-it-society/?ref=fc_more#comment-743462
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/world/europe/amsterdam-tries-to-change-culture-with-repair-cafes.html?_r=1
http://www.eleventhhourthemovie.com/