Topics

Experiments in Life

  • Experiments

    First clear the road, then park the trailer

    After three years of saving, planning and self-educating, this young couple is ready to leave the lights of Winnipeg. Come October 2010, they’ll live off their newly purchased, 90-acre plot of land outside the small town of Vita, Manitoba.

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  • Experiments

    Social justice superheroes

    I am Sister Simplify, senior/founding member of the Social Justice League of Alberta (SJLA), incorporated September 2009. We are a team of social justice superheroes who masquerade as teenagers and boring adults most of the time. Our mandate is to fearlessly do good deeds, to educate our peers about social justice issues, and to encourage each other in our efforts to change the world.

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  • Editorial

    Slightly re-sensitized: A month of under-stimulation

    A month of computer deprivation

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  • Experiments

    Grey ice

    Experimenting with a bath-water hockey rink

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  • Experiments

    Downward mobility

    Istead of working in an office, I took a job cleaning an office. There’s less social status and financial security when you’re the person who sweeps the floors.

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  • Experiments

    Bucking the trend in ill-fitting corduroy

    The first place I’m taking my glam-queen-turned-crackaddict look is the local thrift store. It’s day one of my month-long rebellion against a culture of disposable fashion.

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  • Experiments

    Processed

    No sugar. No meat. No processed foods. That was the vow that I and my roommate, Bethany, made to each other that day in October. Disgusted by the amount of processed food we ate in a given week, we decided to detox.

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  • Experiments

    Searching for a good trade on the coast of Carolina

    I wonder if my barter provided a more human exchange than if I had simply handed over cash. No, it’s not necessarily the money per se that dehumanizes. I could have still mentioned the weather, or made some silly comment as I handed her a dollar bill. What I like about our exchange, though, is that nothing beeped.

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  • Experiments

    Twenty simple years an interview with Jim Merkel

    Jim Merkel was an arms salesman until 1989, when the Exxon Valdez disaster changed his life (see Geez Spring, 2006). He realized that the oil spilled on those Alaskan shores was, in essence, oil spilled by his life. “I drive. I fly,” he wrote. “Fossil fuels are part of every item I consume.” So he quit his job, radically downshifted his lifestyle – cutting his income to $5,000 a year – and reduced his ecological footprint, the amount of productive land and water needed to support the resources a person uses, and absorb the waste discarded.

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  • Experiments

    To do

    I am burdened by positive motivations. I am convinced I am on this planet to spread peace, deepen truth and create joy. Unfortunately details get in the way.

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