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Honor Chan's avatar

Thank you for this piece. Reminds me of the book Sacred Economics by Charles Eisenstein. What we see on the macro level is a reflection of each of our individual insatiability. When we lose the ability to find pleasure and excitement in "ordinary" things, we're driven to heighten the stimuli and making/consuming more supports this drive. Yes, decoupling GDP from quality of life is a concrete measure. But to get there, it takes a fundamental shift in our motivation from "I need more excitement" to an accessible but rarely tapped state of gratitude of "I'm excited to be alive." Indigenous tribes connect deeply with day-to-day experiences and in so doing, they are connected to Life. Until and unless the underlying drive behind consumption transmutes, we will find ourselves hungry even when we are beyond fed.

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Tanner Janesky's avatar

Can we decouple energy and resource use (and by extension, pollution) from life happiness? Not just relatively, but absolutely? This is the central question of our civilization, but not often talked about. I appreciate all the points you bring up Jamie. Just last week I published an article putting resource use and environmental disruption into a simple equation. My intent is to assist in understanding the three broad factors we have the potential to change in order to use less and degrade less while still thriving, individually and collectively. Of course these three factors are themselves made up of many other factors. The TL;DR is:

environmental disruption = [resource intensity of producing goods] x [consumption of goods per person] x [population]

I like how you phrase the 3 levels of "Conscious Decoupling." Innovation needs to be focused on increasing the efficiency of existing processes or replacing old processes and products with ones that are less resource intensive, rather that making more cool new gadgets we don't necessarily need. I would add to your second point that we need to decouple total resource use and all forms of environmental pollution from GDP, not just CO2.

Your third point on decoupling quality of life from GDP is arguably the most challenging, since it's hard to measure. If it's hard to measure and find patterns, it's hard to change. This is the area I feel your unique way of thinking could help us the most. Your teachings provide ways of doing this. The trick is translating that Homegrown Human blueprint for widespread adoption. It's a fine line to convince a person to live more and consume less without meeting ideological resistance, but you have a unique ability to do so. Thank you for your work Jamie.

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