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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Conscious Capitalism



I just read The Ecology of Commerce, by Paul Hawken.  Like other environmentalists, he describes all the harm that multinational corporations and industry are doing to the world.  It’s depressing, but he’s not just a naysayer.

In a nutshell, the way to solve all the world’s environmental (and perhaps social) problems is not CSR.  It’s not joining the ‘green team’ with Con Edison or recycling your office paper or carpooling.  That helps.  But it’s not enough.

Changing the world from a linear system (in which inputs become outputs that become waste that goes into pollution that leaks everywhere) into a cyclical system, like nature, requires a change in consciousness.

Not surprisingly, you might notice that a lot of people who care about sustainability also meditate.  In meditation, you don’t stop thinking.  You don’t force yourself to think about nothing.  The word “meditation” is simply the act of placing your mind on something.  Usually, it’s a stream of consciousness, one thought after another, jumping around all over the place.  In the practice of meditation, by placing the focus repeatedly on the breath, one becomes aware of the mind’s natural habits.  As I recently learned at the Shambhala Meditation Center in NY, in Tibetan, the word for meditation is “gom” – which means “becoming familiar with.” 

If you want to change yourself to become a more compassionate human being, try meditation.  Just 10 minutes a day  (or even 10 minutes three times a week) makes a huge difference.  You might notice that you stop reacting to things and start responding more consciously to the world around you.  Maybe you notice some habits about your thinking patterns that you didn’t see before. 

If we want to change the world, we need to start by changing our consciousness.  To acknowledge the suffering around us, to acknowledge our habitual patterns of thought and action, and to not subject ourselves to the fallacy that past performance indicates future financial or environmental returns.

We need to start understanding the “restorative economy” based on “industrial ecology.”  This means thinking about business like a natural system, for example, a forest.  For designers and engineers and businesspeople and civil servants of all kinds to think about some big questions.

What would it look like for wastes to become fuel for another department, company, or industry, like the Kalundborg Eco-Industrial Park in Denmark?

How can citizens nudge government to set up restorative policies?  Such as:

  • Requiring consumables to be biodegradable (pesticide treated food doesn’t count)
  • Requiring manufacturers to take back everything they produce which is not biodegradable (like phones, cars, and refrigerators)?
  • Requiring “unsaleables” (toxins that don’t biodegrade) to be disposed of at the manufacturer’s cost

The perspective shift is required is not beyond our ability.  It merely requires the courage to see things as they are, acknowledge the truth of what is happening, and imagine how to emulate natural processes in business processes…to secure a sustainable, livable future for all.

As John Lennon sang, “imagine…You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.”

If all this resonates with you, check out the “con/fest” (an un-conference/festival) DoGoodCon in NYC from May 27-29.  It will be a great place to connect with others who are creating innovative, disruptive and sustainable change.