Ncumisa

I am who I am, because I believe in the protection of Godly created things

2nd March: Reduce your bin size by half

“Then he said, ‘This is what I’ll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store my surplus”. Luke 12:18 The Challenge today: On bin day, look at the size of your rubbish and commit to reducing it by half.We focus a lot on “recycle” but today the challenge is “reduce” Reduce!! F. Schumacher said years ago, “Small is beautiful,” and many other wise people have come to know that less stuff invariably leaves room for more soul. In fact, possessions and soul seem to operate in inverse proportion to one another. Only through simplicity can we find deep contentment instead of perpetually striving and living unsatisfied. Simple living is the foundational social justice teaching of Jesus, Francis, Gandhi, and all hermits, mystics, prophets, and seers since time immemorial. Here are some practical ideas Bring reusable bags and containers when shopping, traveling, or packing lunches or leftovers. Choose products that are returnable, reusable, or refillable over single-use items. Avoid individually wrapped items, snack packs, and single-serve containers. Buy large containers of items or in  bulk  whenever practical. Be aware of double-packaging – some “bulk packages” are just individually wrapped items packaged yet again and sold as a bulk item. Purchase items such as dish soap and laundry detergents in concentrate forms. Compost food scraps and garden waste. Food and yard waste accounts for about 11 percent of the garbage thrown away. Many types of food scraps, along with leaves and yard trimmings, can be combined in your backyard compost bin. Reduce the amount of unwanted mail you receive. Make sure you contact the people sending you stuff and get off their distribution list. Shop at second-hand stores.  You can find great used and unused clothes at low cost to you and the environment.  Buy quality clothing that won’t wear out and can be handed down, Buy items made of recycled content, and use and reuse them as much as you can. For instance, use both sides of every page of a notebook before moving on to the next clean notebook.  Use unneeded, printed on printer paper for a scratch pad. Also, remember that buying in bulk rather than individual packages will save you lots of money and reduce waste! Packaging makes up 30% of the weight and 50% of trash by volume. Buy juice, snacks, and other lunch items in bulk and use those reusable containers each day. 10 Ways to reduce waste 

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1st March: Join the monthly #fastfortheclimate

“So we fasted and implored our God for this, and he listened to our entreaty” Ezra 8:23 #fastfortheclimate – Join people around the world fasting for the planet on the 1st of every month.  Fastfortheclimate                                                     What is the Fast for the Climate? When Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda had just devastated the Philippines in November 2013, then climate commissioner Yeb Saño was at the UN climate talks in Warsaw. His own family was caught up in the disaster that killed thousands and destroyed homes and livelihoods across the country. In a moving speech, Yeb said he would not eat until the Warsaw conference ended or delivered actions that would ‘stop the madness’ of the climate crisis. So long as the people he represented could not eat, nor would he. Hundreds of others from around the world chose to fast with him in solidarity. The Fast For The Climate has grown into global movement with participation of youth groups, environmental groups and faith-based groups, who all want urgent action on climate change by governments. On the first day of every month, thousands of people around the world fast from Food in solidarity with those impacted by climate change. Commit to joining this movement! “Fasting made climate change real for me, opened my eyes and brought me closer to my neighbours. This is one of the reasons why fasting once a month is interesting: it raises one’s awareness on a regular basis and not only when extreme weather events happen. As long as you share your commitment around you, you help raising awareness about climate change. And that is, after all, what makes your fast matter.” — Martin Kopp.  

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29th February: Gratitude : Write down the 20 things that you are most grateful for

“Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” 1 Thes 5:18 While gratitude leads to increased happiness and  life satisfaction, materialism – which places a higher value on material possessions than on meaningful relationships – has the opposite effect. Psychologist Emily Polak says: “the pursuit of wealth and possessions as an end in itself is associated with lower levels of well being, lower levels of satisfaction and happiness, more symptoms of depression and more physical problems such as headaches and other disorders. “Affluenza” is a term used to describe the  emotional distress that arises from a preoccupation with possession and appearances.  This is a sort of virus that infects our thinking and is transmitted by TV, and advertisements. The toxic belief at the core of “affluenza” is that happiness is based on how we look and what we have. If we compare our appearance or wealth to that of the models and millionaires we see on TV is it easy to feel that we are worth nothing. Gratitude frees us from this toxic condition. Gratitude is about feeling satisfied and  delighting in what you are already experiencing, not wishing for what you do not have. The advertising industry tries to convince us that will only be happy when we have that flat screen TV, or conquered aging. The job of advertisers is to create dissatisfaction. If you are happy with what you own, or how you look, you will not buy! Gratitude shifts us from focusing on what we do not have, to giving thanks for what we do. Gratitude values relationships, health, leisure time with family. (adapted from  Active Hope : Joanna Macey) “The root of joy is gratefulness, it is not joy that makes us grateful, but gratitude that makes us joyful”   The contemplative monk  

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28th February : Does your church recycle?

“You shall not pollute the land in which you live” Numbers 35:33 When you are at church today, have a look at what happens to the waste. What happens to the office waste, food waste. Does your church recycle? If not, could you help set up a recycling system? How else could your church be re-using things? Educate yourself and your congregation by watching the Story of Stuff (http://storyofstuff.org/movies/story-of-stuff/ ), and sharing it with members of your congregation. The good news is this – it can create money and jobs! Nationally in South Africa recycling has created over 29000 jobs, and created R15.3 BILLION in the last year – So if we just throw our waste away we are throwing away job opportunities for many people Can your church take this issue of recycling seriously? This is a service you can offer to the community and to the planet. Find out which companies will come and pick up recycling. If you recycle in bulk you can also possible earn some money by doing so. If you don’t have space, maybe you can provide a recycling service for those small but  toxic items – batteries (have acid), CFL globes (have mercury). Let congregation and community members bring them to church and you can drop them off at a recycling place once a month or so.. Consider your own actions as well this Lent!   Gracious God, Creator of All, we raise our hearts in grateful praise for all the beauty that surrounds us. May we learn to respect all as a sacred gift and do what we can to repair the damage we have caused through our consumerism, greed and carelessness. Grant us an ecological conversion so that we can leave our next generation with a future full of hope where there is enough for all. We ask this in the name of Jesus. Amen                    Prayer by Sr. Marlene Kelly, GSIC,

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GOING GREEN IN THE EASTERN CAPE

Green Anglicans has been quite busy in the Eastern Cape, making presentations to youth conferences in most of the Eastern Cape Dioceses. Now it is time to look at how to strategize together. So a cluster gathering was organized for key Diocesan Environmental Coordinators and key youth reps. Mthatha, Mbashe, Port Elizabeth and Khahlamba members attended. It was wonderful to meet up an share ideas and resources! This is a cluster with very resourcefulpeople!. The workshop was joined by two reps from Mothers Union. They discussed important issues and strategies 1. HOW TO MOBILISE AND MAINTAIN INTEREST Often people start with lots of enthusiasm but then the energy is lost. How can we maintain the movement? The following strategies were felt to be important. Formation of Diocesan Environmental Desk consisting of Diocesan Coordinator, chaplain and archdeaconry reps. Reports and feedback by reps convene enviro awareness campaign practical action is required so that youth can develop interest, testify and be able to demonstrate back to their parishes. sell the enviro idea and make the young people own it use social media to grow the Green Anglican movement engage on activities that are relevant to the youth and the environment site visits 2. WASTE AND RECYCLING: Our contexts are so different, what can we do practically around this issue? Clean up campaigns in rural, suburban and town churches Waste and recycling project that will create jobs/income for unemployed youth Educate everyone (mothers and grandmothers) about disposal of nappies. 3. HOW TO MOBILIZE CLERGY Clergy are so busy with many hats – how do we get them involved? Environmental Issues to be included in the modules of Theology – specially around God’s Creation. (Theological College – COTT and St Bedes) Get the Diocesan Bishop involved– so then it will be his for his clergy to be committed Fellowship of Vocation sessions to be based on environmental awareness. Have the environmental awareness and God’s creation as a theme for a clergy retreat An environmental desk should be established in each parish and come up with local action plans. The priests spouse fellowship can be mobilized to support these environmental issues Ensure that all guilds are represented at the Diocesan Environmental Desk Each guild should come up with its own action plan also REDUCE WOOD BURNING/TREE PLANTING This is a huge issue , how do we work in this area? Start with environmental education on a local basis to find out the situation : cause and effect. Why are people cutting trees Promote wonder bags (home made ones can be made using polystyrene cups) Make dibolobolo using old newspapers. They are soaked, made into balls and then doused with paraffin (home made charcoal) Promote and train on solar cookers made from old satellite dishes Promote rocket stoves. Cut alien trees not indigenous ones. Tree planting: emphasize that we must plant indigenous trees. Education is needed regarding trees that have a harmful effect e.g poisonous.. WATER We are in a drought situation – how can the church respond?  Awareness and education  Cut alien invasives  Do water audits at church and home  Rain water harvesting and gray water systems  Water quality testing  Mulching of food gardens  Fill a two litre bottle and put it in the cistern of the toilet  Protect springs from animals by building a wall around. Action plans were developed to be discussed with the Bishop and leadership of their respective Dioceses. Action plans were developed to be discussed with the Bishop and leadership of their respective Dioceses.

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27th February: No electronics day

 Exodus 34: 21 “Six days you shall labor, but on the seventh day you shall rest; even during the plowing season and harvest you must rest. Today is “Internet Sabbath” day. . Switch off that cell phone and that computer.  Sounds very difficult I know! Here’s how one family did it! On a quiet Saturday afternoon at the Powers home in Orleans, author William Powers, his wife Martha Sherrill and 15-year-old son William are quietly observing the Sabbath. It’s not a religious Sabbath; they call it their Internet Sabbath. From Friday night through Sunday evening, there are no video games, no computers and no smartphones. Powers says it was very difficult at first. “It almost had an existential feeling of, ‘I don’t know who I am with the Internet gone.’ But after a few months it hardened into a habit and we all began to realize we were gaining a lot from it.” In our “always on” lives, there are many like Powers who worry we are too immersed in the digital world and not present enough in the real world. Observers such as digital guru Baratunde Thurston say we can’t seem to resist the lure of our smartphones, even when we are in the company of others. They are like a little Christmas present, Thurston says, “a gift where someone is telling you that you are the most important person.” So we check our screens frequently (some say compulsively) — even when we are sitting across from someone else. And that has consequences, according to one recent study, which found the mere presence of cellphones in face-to-face conversations inhibits the development of closeness and trust, and reduces the amount of empathy we feel from our partners. The study reinforces the thinking of some prominent skeptics, chief among them MIT professor and psychologist Sherry Turkle. She applauds the many benefits of digital technology, but she says we still have a lot to learn about how to use it without undermining our values. “We are not meant to get rid of this,” Turkle says. “We are meant to use it for our human purposes, but we first have to figure out what our human purposes are and I am pretty sure they are not sitting at the dinner table not talking to our 8-year-olds.” We’ve all heard plenty of complaints about how these technologies interfere with family life, but Turkle says in her 15 years interviewing hundreds of adults and teens, it’s surprising how often it is young people who complain about their parents’ obsession with these devices. “They complain about parents picking them up at school and not making eye contact with them until they finish the last email,” she says. And she says parents attending sporting events often miss their child’s important play because they have been checking their email. Turkle adds that many young people feel they have to compete for their parents’ attention. “Adolescent men complain about how they used to love watching Sunday sports with their dads, and now dads are on their iPhones or laptops and they are completely sucked into the Internet space.” The kids are plenty distracted as well. According to a Kaiser Family Foundation study (PDF), young people ages 8 to 18 now spend nearly every waking moment when they are not in school using media — more than 7.5 hours a day. Ciera Wade says she can’t remember the last time she had a phone conversation with her parents. “It has entirely been text messages,” Wade says. “In a text message, no one can hear your voice, so if I say ‘I am great,’ you believe it, but I might be crying as I am typing ‘I am great.’ So texting allows me to mask.” Wade also admits that she gets nervous when she has to make the leap from texting to an actual phone conversation. MIT’s Turkle has found that many young people, so reliant on texts and tweets, are intimidated by in-person conversation. She worries that as we ramp up our digital communication, we are “dumbing down” our conversations. Digital communication, Turkle says, “is not so good for the sort of nuanced understanding and relationship-building you get when you are present with your friends — for sharing intimacies, for sharing difficult news, for saying you are sorry, for really getting to know someone. It gives us that sense of connection without the demands of intimacy and the responsibilities of intimacy.” So try it out – have an “Internet Sabbath” today!  

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