Monday, January 24, 2011

Quote for the Day...

“And we have reason to hope... The forces of destruction seem great, but against them we have our power to choose, our human will and imagination, our courage, our passion, our willingness to act and to love. And we are not, in truth, strangers to this world. We are a part of the circle. When we plant, when we weave, when we write, when we give birth, when we organize, when we heal, when we run through the park while the redwoods sweat mist, when we do what we're aftraid to do, we are not separate. We are of the world and of each other, and the power within us is a great, if not an invincible power. Though we can be hurt, we can heal; though each one of us can be destroyed, within us is the power of renewal. And there is still time to choose that power."
(In Starhawk's (1997) Dreaming in the Dark, p.14).

Monday, January 17, 2011

What's New in 2011

Happy New Year Adopt-A-Blockers!

Here’s what’s happening this 2011!


Spring Clean-Up FUNDRAISER

Don’t forget to fill out your application to our annual Spring Community Litter Clean-Up! Application deadline is January 30th All non-profit groups (clubs, teams, schools, organizations, etc.) are welcome to apply! Groups selected will be awarded $250 for their participation. Event to take place in April & May. See attached forms for more details & application form.


2011 Youth Video-Webcast CONTEST

Adopt-A-Block challenges all Mission youth to participate in a video-webcast contest beginning January 01, 2011. The contest is an opportunity for youth to reach out to their peers and to influence them in taking care of the environment by offering a message of hope and environmental stewardship. Youth are asked to submit a video a minimum of 20 seconds and no more than three minutes in length, depicting a message about how we can all contribute to creating a litter free environment and why this is important.


Following the contest submission deadline, March 15, entrants will post their submissions on YOUTUBE for a community judging period of a month (until April 15). During this time youth will be encouraged to market their video to gain voting support. Top scoring videos by community votes will then be judged by a judges committee who will select the winning entries based on originality, creativity, content, clarity, quality and adherence to contest rules. The top three videos will be posted on Adopt-A-Block's website.


The Youth Video Challenge has gained the support of several Mission businesses who have donated prizes in-kind for several great prize packages which will be awarded in April.


First place prize is $500 cash.


Second to fifth place prizes will also be awarded including gift cards for laser tag, a rafting adventure on the Fraser River, local restaurants and coffee shops, and large retail store gift cards. See Contest Poster for full prize package details.


All necessary forms and release can be retrieved from the Adopt-A-Block website. (under the 'resource' tab)


Please spread the word to youth about this opportunity!


Expressing Your Concerns about Litter in the Environment

Sometimes when we try to express concerns about litter in the environment, the conversation can become a negatively emotionally charged. Sometimes those with whom we are talking with get defensive or self-righteous about the issue or find someone or something to blame for it. Perhaps we don’t know all the facts and so we keep quiet about what matter to us, meanwhile bottling inside our frustration. There may be several reasons as to why expressing our concerns about creating a healthier environment in which to live, play and work – just simply don’t pan out. Joanna Macy (1998) in her book, Coming Back to Life: Practices to Reconnect our Lives, our World, offers guidelines for communicating our concerns about the environment (whatever the issue) (p. 176-177). She suggests:

1.Beware of labeling or pigeonholing the other person, assuming they are automatically going to agree or disagree with you because they are a certain age, dressed in a certain way, come from a particular region or class, or hold a particular job.

2.Acknowledge the limits of your knowledge. People will see you as more trustworthy if you admit you don’t know everything and will feel more willing to share their perspectives, which are also based on partial information. We all must make decisions in political life without knowing the whole story; if we put our knowledge and ideas together we create a more complete picture.

3.Find common ground before examining differences. If you begin by ascertaining areas of agreement (e.g. “Nuclear war is possible” or “We need clean air and water for our children”), both parties can trust each other more and proceed to see where their views diverge. Then offering the information that has led to your view can fill a gap in the other’s knowledge, and lead to reappraisal of old assumptions…

4.Share feelings as well as facts. Facts are debatable; feelings are not. Feelings are ‘givens’; we can report them with varying degrees of accuracy and honesty, but they are not debatable. Sharing your feelings invites other people to share theirs as well, moving the conversation away from argument and towards mutual listening.

5.Share your personal experience. The facts and figures we cite take on more reality for people when we describe what led us to the views we hold. Personal experience, like feelings, is not open to debate.

6.Trust the other person’s ability to learn and change over time. Even if the person seems entrenched in a contrary position, change may be stirring within. And you may never know if change has occurred as a result of you discussion or what other input the person may receive from other to add to yours….

7.See yourself and the other within the larger context: your shared humanity, the stresses of the Industrial Growth Society, the long uneven journey to sustainable civilization. This breeds patience and goodwill.

8.Remember to hold the other person with compassion, even when you seem to find no common ground. You can ‘agree to disagree’ with goodwill and mutual respect. We can never know what suffering and hardship might underlie another’s seemingly intractable position.