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	<title>Comments on: Responsibility of the Easy Life</title>
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	<description>Adventures of Rachel Strate (Wasatch Girl) and her chihuahua (CragBaby).</description>
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		<title>By: TheUsualSuspect</title>
		<link>http://www.cragbaby.com/2007/07/17/responsibility-of-the-easy-life/comment-page-1/#comment-79</link>
		<dc:creator>TheUsualSuspect</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Jul 2007 04:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cragbaby.com/?p=83#comment-79</guid>
		<description>Firstly, well done for the post. Well written and brave to put it on paper/electronic form.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I&#039;d like to think that most people have a similar dilemma but unfortunately am of the realization that not everyone is of a similar mindset. As Tom mentioned in the other comment, we are &quot;are still a bunch of loose tribes&quot;, and even worse than that a lot of people just don&#039;t show an interest. There&#039;s a lot of distractions out there for people! Trust me, just increasing your awareness of this is an amazing achievement - it means that you&#039;re willing to learn and improve and show others.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;As for my own thoughts, hmm. As I blogged recently, I&#039;m also in a ridiculously fortunate position that I can just up and quit my job for 6 months and not care about working. I&#039;m also looking at some things like this though, that I&#039;m learning from it, and that somewhere down the line will be times to re-pay the privileges (I&#039;m learning and seeing things that enlighten my thoughts). Definitely just getting people thinking about some of these issues is a step I always strive for (you&#039;ll see subtle comments on my own blog) and it&#039;s one of the few easy ways I can give something back at the present. I&#039;m a big believer in sharing/giving knowledge so maybe there&#039;s something in that. &lt;br/&gt;I do find it ironic that some of us do find ourselves feeling guilty about our situations (&#039;born into the life that I&#039;ve been given&#039;), but I&#039;d rather have that than just being completely ignorant about the bigger world out-there.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Finally (phew!) Tom, makes a great point about the idea of &#039;we&#039;re all in this together&#039;. I honestly hold out hope that the likes of the internet are connecting people and changing their perspectives for this. Not only that, probably the one benefit I&#039;ve seen of all this global warming discussions, is that people are rowing in to do their bit (even if in only a small way), and it&#039;s not being enforced on them by governments, etc. Look at the likes of people changing to better lightbulbs, recycling bins, etc. There&#039;s hope for us yet!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Firstly, well done for the post. Well written and brave to put it on paper/electronic form.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d like to think that most people have a similar dilemma but unfortunately am of the realization that not everyone is of a similar mindset. As Tom mentioned in the other comment, we are &#8220;are still a bunch of loose tribes&#8221;, and even worse than that a lot of people just don&#8217;t show an interest. There&#8217;s a lot of distractions out there for people! Trust me, just increasing your awareness of this is an amazing achievement &#8211; it means that you&#8217;re willing to learn and improve and show others.</p>
<p>As for my own thoughts, hmm. As I blogged recently, I&#8217;m also in a ridiculously fortunate position that I can just up and quit my job for 6 months and not care about working. I&#8217;m also looking at some things like this though, that I&#8217;m learning from it, and that somewhere down the line will be times to re-pay the privileges (I&#8217;m learning and seeing things that enlighten my thoughts). Definitely just getting people thinking about some of these issues is a step I always strive for (you&#8217;ll see subtle comments on my own blog) and it&#8217;s one of the few easy ways I can give something back at the present. I&#8217;m a big believer in sharing/giving knowledge so maybe there&#8217;s something in that. <br />I do find it ironic that some of us do find ourselves feeling guilty about our situations (&#8216;born into the life that I&#8217;ve been given&#8217;), but I&#8217;d rather have that than just being completely ignorant about the bigger world out-there.</p>
<p>Finally (phew!) Tom, makes a great point about the idea of &#8216;we&#8217;re all in this together&#8217;. I honestly hold out hope that the likes of the internet are connecting people and changing their perspectives for this. Not only that, probably the one benefit I&#8217;ve seen of all this global warming discussions, is that people are rowing in to do their bit (even if in only a small way), and it&#8217;s not being enforced on them by governments, etc. Look at the likes of people changing to better lightbulbs, recycling bins, etc. There&#8217;s hope for us yet!</p>
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		<title>By: tom</title>
		<link>http://www.cragbaby.com/2007/07/17/responsibility-of-the-easy-life/comment-page-1/#comment-77</link>
		<dc:creator>tom</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Jul 2007 15:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cragbaby.com/?p=83#comment-77</guid>
		<description>Interesting read, Rachel- I spend considerable time on the same sort of thinking my own self, and I&#039;m still not sure where the right answers fall. Small grassroots efforts are going to be very well received, but without promoting the &quot;see, you can do this too, it&#039;s easy !&#039; angle the impact would be minimal in the context of the larger picture. This would be the starfishes on the beach parable - sure there are millions of them but to the hundreds that get back in the water, it makes a huge difference - it matters.&lt;br/&gt;Then the flip side - the sheer overwhelming nature of the full situation, and where do you attack it ? Poverty, crime, disease, war - these are all sort of symptoms of the underlying social ills imho...how to affect the fundamental sea change that shifts the paradigms ? Politics ? Art ? Religion ? It would seem that some sort of stepping up and assuming a leadership role is the course of action, for those that are 1) capable of seeing the bigger picture 2) have the stomach for such a task and 3) feel the driving need to effect some sort of positive changes in the world around them.&lt;br/&gt;I have a friend that is telling me the lesson here is that everyone is where they are supposed to be, so don&#039;t get attached to the suffering of others. I Don&#039;t Buy It. I take that as a buddhist cop out - the state of the whole affects each and every individual on a fundamental level, and those of us that have should be helping the have nots and the need somethings...&lt;br/&gt;Perhaps the answer lies in education ? Maybe take a TV camera around the globe and show everyone that with few exceptions we are all the same and want the same things ? Home, family and friends, live and let live - I suspect that 98% of the entire planet wants exactly the same things...maybe start there ? Tough one when nationalism, patriotism, religious separations etc roll into the mix, but still...&lt;br/&gt;In some very fundamental way were are still a bunch of loose tribes that don&#039;t seem to care about the others - out of site, out of mind, what else is on television...I think that is a fundamental paradigm needing some change - somehow get a sense of &#039;we are ALL in this together&#039; - see if it makes it harder for people to do or allow to do the things we seem to be doing to each other all over the planet...&lt;br/&gt;ymmv...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interesting read, Rachel- I spend considerable time on the same sort of thinking my own self, and I&#8217;m still not sure where the right answers fall. Small grassroots efforts are going to be very well received, but without promoting the &#8220;see, you can do this too, it&#8217;s easy !&#8217; angle the impact would be minimal in the context of the larger picture. This would be the starfishes on the beach parable &#8211; sure there are millions of them but to the hundreds that get back in the water, it makes a huge difference &#8211; it matters.<br />Then the flip side &#8211; the sheer overwhelming nature of the full situation, and where do you attack it ? Poverty, crime, disease, war &#8211; these are all sort of symptoms of the underlying social ills imho&#8230;how to affect the fundamental sea change that shifts the paradigms ? Politics ? Art ? Religion ? It would seem that some sort of stepping up and assuming a leadership role is the course of action, for those that are 1) capable of seeing the bigger picture 2) have the stomach for such a task and 3) feel the driving need to effect some sort of positive changes in the world around them.<br />I have a friend that is telling me the lesson here is that everyone is where they are supposed to be, so don&#8217;t get attached to the suffering of others. I Don&#8217;t Buy It. I take that as a buddhist cop out &#8211; the state of the whole affects each and every individual on a fundamental level, and those of us that have should be helping the have nots and the need somethings&#8230;<br />Perhaps the answer lies in education ? Maybe take a TV camera around the globe and show everyone that with few exceptions we are all the same and want the same things ? Home, family and friends, live and let live &#8211; I suspect that 98% of the entire planet wants exactly the same things&#8230;maybe start there ? Tough one when nationalism, patriotism, religious separations etc roll into the mix, but still&#8230;<br />In some very fundamental way were are still a bunch of loose tribes that don&#8217;t seem to care about the others &#8211; out of site, out of mind, what else is on television&#8230;I think that is a fundamental paradigm needing some change &#8211; somehow get a sense of &#8216;we are ALL in this together&#8217; &#8211; see if it makes it harder for people to do or allow to do the things we seem to be doing to each other all over the planet&#8230;<br />ymmv&#8230;</p>
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