The
Transition Culture seeks to find a way where our response to
peak oil and climate change looks more like a party than a protest
march. Hence, the Transition Initiatives model being used by
communities around the globe. And, as Tom Atlee notes ...what we do
with it is up to us! Transition Los Angeles shares their take in an
article titled
What is Transition? Transition United States also offers an article titled
Why Transition? The
Wikipedia entry for
Transition
Towns provides very basic information about the Transition
Initiatives movement, including:
...by shifting our mind-set
we can actually recognise the coming post-cheap oil era as an
opportunity rather than a threat, and design the future low carbon
age to be thriving, resilient and abundant ... The key
phrase there is
shifting our mind-set, easy to say, not so
easy to do especially since it is about lifting our veils of denial
with regards to climate change, post-oil realities and other worse
case scenarios. But once we do that, most folks find it is a heck
of a lot of fun to take a proactive steps with others toward the
solutions. It's about accepting that we as a society have been
programmed into a way of life that is out of balance. It's about
knowing that
sustainability must, by definition, include the
environmental, social AND economic sectors. It's about knowing
that sustainability isn't just about basic survival, it's about
building a civilization that will thrive and prosper for
generations to come. Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of happiness for
ALL! It is about preparedness with an all-hazard approach,
adaptation and strengthening local resiliency with a
bottom-up/top-down systems strategy. It is about re-skilling in all
arenas, including communication and collaboration. It is about
collectively developing energy descent and other preparedness plans
in our local area. It is about developing self-sufficiency while
building interdependent systems on the local level. Some folks have
found the frequently distributed
Hopi Elders
Speak message to be a nice place to start and a helpful
reminder on this adventure. However, the hardest part still
remains...we need to shift the way we think, make decisions,
interact with each other and all life on this planet. It's up to
each one of us as individuals to accept responsibility and to take
the steps needed to step aside from the programmed assumptions and
established patterns. To strive to see things fresh, to learn new
skills (including healthy communication) and to create a more
balanced way of life on this planet while reaching out to our
neighbors, rekindling the fires of local community and helping the
blaze sweep across our bioregions and the planet as a whole.
Everyone is needed on this adventure and all we can do is our best
and take things one step at a time. The Permatopia folks have
reported:
The most Important Issue: how to get our society to
understand the need to make these shifts for us to survive and
thrive. As well as:
The permaculture movement has the
right idea about transformation to mitigate the energy and
ecological crises and to shift toward sustainable societies. But so
far most permaculture efforts have been directed toward modest
number of local food initiatives: community gardens, victory
gardens, farmers markets and Community Supported Agriculture.
These are all excellent accomplishments, but the scale of what
we are all facing requires several orders of magnitude more
systemic community organizing, teaching of critical skills and
networks to implement these good ideas. It should therefore
come as no surprise to learn that there is a strong link between
Permaculture and the Transition Initiatives; the Wikipedia reports:
The Transition concept emerged from work permaculture designer
Rob Hopkins had done with the students of Kinsale Further Education
College in writing an "Energy Descent Action Plan". This looked at
across-the-board creative adaptations in the realms of energy
production, health, education, economy and agriculture as a "road
map" to a sustainable future for the town. The Transition
Initiatives model is continually evolving but here are some links
to Information and Guidance: *
What is a Transition Town (or
village, neighborhood, watershed, forest or island)? *
Transition Culture *
The
Transition Primer, pdf file. *
Who we are and What we do, a pdf file. *
7 Buts *
12
steps *
Criteria
for becoming an official Transition Initiative *
The Transition
Handbook: From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience by
Rob Hopkins. *
Transition
US is a newly established non-profit organization, that is
working in close partnership with the
Transition
Network and the
Post Carbon Institute to
catalyze, inspire, encourage,
network, support and train communities throughout the U.S. as they
consider, adopt, adapt and implement the Transition model. *
Transition US therefore offers us
Getting
Started information. * Transition US also facilitates
official
Training
for Transition (T4T) programs around the country; including
at the Wabi Community; hosted by
Healing Heart Herbals on October
3 & 4th in Meigs County, SE Ohio.
Transition
US reports:
These courses are designed to give a detailed
introduction to the most important skills necessary to successfully
set up, develop and run a Transition project in your locality. It
is designed for people who are already in a group working to
achieve this, or are thinking of creating such a group.
Prerequisites for these trainings usually include: ***
The Transition
Handbook: From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience by Rob
Hopkins. ***
The
Transition Primer. The Transition Network says: If
you've read
The Primer and are "mulling over" whether you might set
up an initiative in your locale, then you may want to consider
getting yourself onto one of the GoogleMaps ... These maps can be
accessed by clicking on these hotlinks
Google
map official Transition Initiatives and
href="http://www.transitiontowns.org/TransitionNetwork/Mulling">Mullers.
The Transition Ohio group:
The Mullers is a place for us to share thoughts and
questions about the materials while also consulting and
collaborating with each other regarding our respective efforts. The
hope is that we will also develop an alliance of interdependency
with clear communications and a unifed voice toward a common goal.
*** other recommended materials: *
The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change,
and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First
Century by James Howard Kunstler. There is also a
wikipedia
description about the book. *
Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of
Declines by
Richard
Heinberg. Videos: ***
Crude
Impact Wikipedia offers a brief
description and
here is a
4
minute sneak peak of Crude Impact . There are also four video
clip excerpts available in the
Transition Ohio Video
Library. ***
A Crude Awakening:
The Oil Crash. There are six excerpts available in the
TO video
library and a
Wikipedia
description. ***
The Power of
Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil (It is available
in 6 parts in the
Transition Ohio video
library) ***
Arithmatic, Population and Energy: Sustainability
101 by Dr. Albert Bartlett. (It is available in 8 parts
in the
Transition
Ohio video library)
The Manpollo
Project may also be of interest given that Transition
Initiatives are inclined to take a dual driver approach that
includes peak oil AND climate change. The creator of the Manpollo
Project is a science teacher who presents information regarding
climate change and risk management in a fun and easily understood
fashion. The Manpollo Project homepage offers links to the videos
and other information. There are also quite a few in the
TO video library. The
Manpollo home page reports: Our
mission is to provide a risk-management perspective to the often
political debate of global warming. We aim to quantify the possible
consequences of various international, national, statewide, and
personal actions (or inaction), based upon economic and climate
models provided by top scientists in their respective fields.
Furthermore, we wish to shift the question often asked in popular
culture from "Are we certain we're responsible for global warming?"
to
"Given the risks and uncertainties of global warming, what is
the best action to take?"