EPISODE · Dec 22, 2019 · 12 MIN
265: I was wrong
Here are the notes I read from for this episode:Ways I was wrongI usually start my story about acting more sustainably with my personal challenge to buy no packaged food for a week. In my second TEDx talk I describe how that challenge emerged from stopping eating meat, then hydrogenated oil, corn syrup, and foods where fiber had been removed, which was my proxy for overly processed food.I talk about my love for the beauty of nature, which I describe when people ask me what I ask guests, "What I think about when I think about the environment."But I hadn't shared some longstanding thoughts that didn't fit the narrative.Not that I hid them, I had just grown out of them.I rewatched a movie called The Doctor, starring William Hurt, about a doctor who remained so aloof from his patients that, however brilliant, charming, and funny, his bedside manner made being his patient miserableThe movie recounts how his sickness leads to seeing the lack of caring and vulnerability in the hospital systemAs my tears streamed down my face watching the movie, I saw vulnerabilities I protected.Efficiency, just living in citiesI thought technology would arise that would solve our environmental problemsFor example, fusion seemed an obvious solution.Young enough widening or building more roads seemed a solution to traffic jams, at least while I sat in them.As I learned what city planners learned, I discovered that roads often create congestion, after a brief period of relieving traffic.Carbon sequestrationBirth rate reduction and China only exampleThat I wouldn't like unpackaged food or not flyingOne person couldn't make a differencePeople wouldn't like it Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
Here are the notes I read from for this episode:Ways I was wrongI usually start my story about acting more sustainably with my personal challenge to buy no packaged food for a week. In my second TEDx talk I describe how that challenge emerged from stopping eating meat, then hydrogenated oil, corn syrup, and foods where fiber had been removed, which was my proxy for overly processed food.I talk about my love for the beauty of nature, which I describe when people ask me what I ask guests, "What I think about when I think about the environment."But I hadn't shared some longstanding thoughts that didn't fit the narrative.Not that I hid them, I had just grown out of them.I rewatched a movie called The Doctor, starring William Hurt, about a doctor who remained so aloof from his patients that, however brilliant, charming, and funny, his bedside manner made being his patient miserableThe movie recounts how his sickness leads to seeing the lack of caring and vulnerability in the hospital systemAs my tears streamed down my face watching the movie, I saw vulnerabilities I protected.Efficiency, just living in citiesI thought technology would arise that would solve our environmental problemsFor example, fusion seemed an obvious solution.Young enough widening or building more roads seemed a solution to traffic jams, at least while I sat in them.As I learned what city planners learned, I discovered that roads often create congestion, after a brief period of relieving traffic.Carbon sequestrationBirth rate reduction and China only exampleThat I wouldn't like unpackaged food or not flyingOne person couldn't make a differencePeople wouldn't like it Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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265: I was wrong
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