Solheimar, Iceland

Solheimar, Iceland
Solheimar Ecovillage in Iceland

Earthaven Ecovillage

Earthaven Ecovillage
Earthaven Ecovillage in Black Mountain, NC

Yogaville, Satchidananda Ashram

Yogaville, Satchidananda Ashram
Yogaville in Buckingham, Virginia

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Community

What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured. -Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.

Our tiny CELL community of fifteen people is beginning to settle into the larger Solheimar community of about one hundred. We are getting to know the residents better, experimenting in different workshops in the village, and refining the goals of our individual service learning projects. We are all expected to offer something to the Eco Village of Solheimar to either increase sustainability, disseminate knowledge, improve well-being, facilitate growth, or simply benefit the community. I am getting involved in two projects. I am teaming up with Cassie to work on maintaining existing paths throughout the village as well as creating new paths to promote travel by foot rather than vehicle. I dug one natural staircase today outside our guesthouse, but it needs more work. My second project is yoga. I will be teaching yoga classes for all people here on Sunday mornings and Tuesday evenings every week for the next two months. I am excited because I have never lead a yoga class before & to bring the joy of inner union to new people.
Some other projects being looked into by this year's CELL group include, creating an outdoor music garden, building or remodeling a meditation hut, compiling educational materials about sustainability & writing a workbook for children, organizing a week-long summer camp in Solheimar for special needs children around Iceland, improving the role of compost and fixing the amount of nitrogen in the soil, and spending time with the elderly and disabled population in Solheimar.


Another thing that helped make Solheimar feel more like home was our recent departure from it. Last weekend we embarked on a four day backpacking trip through the southern interior of Iceland. We walked 56 kilometers from Landmannalaugar to Þórsmörk. We saw indescribable landscapes, crazy boiling water pools, geothermal mud pits, steaming vents and volcanoes, massive melting glaciers, deep dark ice caves, innumerable caverns and hills to hike, wading glacial rivers & drinking from the streams all weekend, black sand deserts, ash-covered mountains and eating wild blueberries... just too much to process in four days.

We went to the base of Eyjafjallajökull, the glacial volcano that erupted this past April, which was still steaming.

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Today we discussed the importance of personal change, and that you must live the way you would like others to live before you can point fingers at others and tell them how to live. It's also very important to be pro-active about the future of our species rather than living in fear and adopting a threatening doom & gloom method of facilitating change. I am willing to change for the sake of the Earth. I don't want to use a car. I want to consume less. I want to create a quieter and subtler existence and smile and love.

My experience with community here has been profound. I wonder if stronger community is a key to harmony with the Earth and it's other inhabitants. The splintering & expansive division of humanity can be repaired and reversed through strengthening community and recognizing the existence of those around us, moving from individualism and separateness to entity and oneness.

Friday, September 10, 2010

A week in Iceland

I've been in Iceland for seven days now, but it feels like seven weeks. I have seen so much and learned much already. I am learning Icelandic slowly but surely. It is much more different than German than I thought it would be. Less people in Solheimar speak English than I thought too, so we have been experimenting with other forms of communication. The CELL group is finally settling into a routine schedule. We have classes Monday-Saturday and have Sunday off. We will be going on a field trip once a week. Next weekend we are going on our 4 day hiking/camping trip before it gets too dark and cold. The weather has been so enjoyable, and a pleasant change from the humid beach in Wilmington, North Carolina. Here is a more detailed look at our daily schedule here at the Eco-Village.

Every morning at 9:00 everyone in the community gathers at the first building that was built here in the 1930s, holds hands in a circle, gives daily announcements in Icelandic, and then sings the Solheimar morning song in Icelandic. Then we hike up to the Sesseljahus eco-center (pictured below) where we have a 1.5 hour Icelandic language class, then a 1.5 hour Icelandic history and culture class, both taught by Katrin Magnusdottir, our Icelandic friend.

We then go to lunch buffet from 12 to 1 and eat with the Solheimar community. The food is delicious and fresh, and the view from the cafeteria (pictured below) is phenomenal. I have sat with different people each day, which has been a nice way to meet new people who live here, even if we cannot carry a conversation!

After lunch we begin our CELL classes where we have group discussions about sustainability, environmental issues, and what we can do to change. The titles of our books are, "Voluntary Simplicity", "Menu for the Future", "Global Warming: Changing CO2URSE" and "Choices for Sustainable Living". They are simply collections of articles and together make up the most interesting and important curriculum I have ever dealt with in my entire academic experience. The discussions that these readings prompt are critical and crucial in my understanding of the world and how humans can and should fit into the ecological continuum. We have been challenging previous understandings, forging new definitions for worn out words (like sustainability), and inspiring each other to practice what we preach. We are in a perfect place to facilitate growth and apply the theories that we all grasp. Speaking of facilitate, each session is taught by 2 different facilitators in our group so the students guide the discussions providing more freedom and flexibility. This type of learning is the best I have ever encountered.

I will have a lot of reading to be doing while I am here, so my blog posts will be few and far between but I will not abandon you! I may upload more pictures than words onto my flickr account, since they will do a better job of giving you a glimpse of Iceland than my inadequate description here. Our group took our first field trip yesterday to Reykjavik, the capital city. We had an amazing time and got several top notch presentations from important people, but I like it better here on the farm. I tried to post a video from this morning while walking around a field before lunch.. I found some friendly chickens walking near a house with a turf roof and an Icelandic flag with gorgeous mountains off in the distance, but it wouldn't let me upload it. I will continue to try though.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Settled In

Góður dagur. Good day.
I flew from Wilmington, North Carolina to Boston, Massachusetts on Wednesday, September 2nd. My friend Caleb picked me up from the airport and let me crash on a couch in his new apartment right near downtown. We took some intense walking tours of the city and I bought a few items that I forgot to pack in my rush. I like Boston from what I saw in 28 hours. I met the rest of my CELL group members in the International Wing of the Logan Airport on September 3rd. We introduced ourselves and waited for our group leaders, Katherine and Karin, to arrive. We checked our baggage, went through security, ate airport food, and all crossed our fingers hoping that hurricane Earl would not effect our travel plans. Happily, we all boarded the 747 Icelandair jet around 9:00 pm and lifted off promptly.

I barely slept on the flight - too excited. After five hours, I watched the sun rise over the left wing of the plane and saw the jagged green edge of Iceland below. We landed in Keflavik at 6:30 am, claimed our bags, walked through customs and met our Icelandic guide, Katrin Magnusdottir. We hopped on an aqua bus and got a 1.5 hour tour of the southwestern Iceland countryside. We went through Reykjavik (the capital city & most populated area), Selfoss (the closest big city to Solheimar), and Borg (Solheimar's neighboring town where the children attend school). We finally arrived at the sign reading "Solheimar: A Place in the Sun", and drove down the red volcanic rock road.

The CELL group is staying in a large guesthouse named "Brekkukot". We were immediately greeted with a breakfast spread at our giant 15 person table and then got a quick walking tour of the Eco-Village. We were all exhausted so we returned home and tried to combat jet lag. There are three double rooms, one of which I am sharing with my meditation buddy Jason, and the rest are single rooms. There are two bathrooms, a large kitchen, a common room with couches and chairs, a sun room and a balcony. The views are breathtaking, and my breath is indeed taken from me each time I exit a building. It is soon replenished by crisp, clean, cool air. The weather has been comfortable and an enjoyable change from the humid Wilmington summer. It is unpredictable and sporadic though, with high winds, frequent rain spritzes and quick moving clouds. I already recognize positive connections with everyone I am sharing this experience with and we are all still feeling blissful and thankful for this opportunity. It will be an interesting and wild experience, full of figuring out how successfully feed 15 people every night, how to integrate into a self-sustainable 100 person community, breaking the language barrier and learning Icelandic, along with many other unpredictable things. Dinner is ready now though, so I'll update you with many more specifics and some photographs as soon as I can.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Renewable Energy


Two weeks remain until i depart for Iceland. Many of my friends like Tess, Mat, Haley, Dare & Brendan are just now returning to America from various study abroad locations around the world. It saddens me to leave them after such short time together, but Their stories have gotten me more excited than I already was. I will also sorely miss my parents who recently moved closer to my university, my yogi Emily, and my boisterous beatboxing best friends & roommates Justin, Aaron and Eric.


Almost all preparations for departure are complete except for packing and reading. I have compiled two pages of interview questions I hope to ask people in the village as a part of my own ethnographic research. I plan on meeting with my Cultural Anthropology professor this week to refine the direction of my individual study as well as get in touch with one of his Icelandic friends who is an anthropologist at the University of Reykjavik. I am still waiting to find out if I was awarded the National Geographic Glimpse Photo Correspondent position that would pay me for photojournalistic coverage of my trip. My sister will be mailing me her HD Video Camera to bring with me and I am getting re-used to my old digital camera. I will be shipping some or most of my belongings to the village in Selfoss to bypass the cost and stress of checking baggage through several connecting flights. The book we were assigned to read is called "Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to save civilization" by Lester R. Brown, the president of Earth Policy Institute in Washington DC. Below you will find a response to some of the themes I have read about so far in this thought-provoking book.


Plan b calls for a substantial transition from coal, Oil & natural gas to wind, water & solar sources of energy. Renewable resources must be embraced for the sake of every species on the face of the planet. The transition is in the early stages, but will spark when more & more people realize the clean potential in front of us. Lester R. Brown says that the transition needs to be executed at wartime speed, similar to our nation’s effort to transform domestic factories during World War II. It seems that such swift action on a massive scale could only be spurred by a major national rising of awareness. Surely, then the consciousness of the masses would rise to a level of self-awareness of what we are doing to all earthlings. Was the most recent BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico not such an example of an event that shook everyone up to the same level of disgust with our current methods of energy production? Please do not overlook such blatant opportunities to demand change. What will it take for wind turbines, solar devices, organic eating and farming, de-scaling the food chain & waterless composting toilets to catch on? We are now inhaling the final exhaust fumes of the Industrial Revolution. We are now entering a new phase in human existence in this ever-changing world. A paradigm shift from competition with everything & everyone to cooperation with everything & everyone should unfold, and we are the only ones who can do it. Namaste.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

(Un)sustainability

The overall emphasis of this trip to the Icelandic Eco-Village of Solheimar is sustainability.
Coming from a notoriously unsustainable land, my transition into a 100% self-reliant (and foreign) lifestyle will be abrupt and challenging. But the opportunity to exist off the grid of mainstream society while maintaining a mutual coexistence with the Earth will ultimately provide me with the most stark and necessary realizations about my own environmental responsibility back home. It will also give me something to compare the capricious consumption and lifestyle of most Americans and/or capitalist countries to. American free enterprise breeds unsustainability and spreads it across the planet. Its economic system began successfully but no economic system can persist forever. We have reached a point of absurdity in our country's history with proof in the many side effects of a self-destructive economy, including the encroaching constriction of social institutions (Government & Power, Banks & Money, Education system & Time) laziness & ill health sweeping the country (Fake food, Fast food, GMOs, Soda, Sedentary lifestyle) and even mindless herd-like symptoms (Television, Wage labor, Alcohol & Cigarettes). The general consensus in the upper western hemisphere seems to consist of playing into a single persistent global drama, which includes dismantling and polluting the natural landscape. The point has come in America's evolution to stretch out a little bit, to break free from the tiny cage we have constructed around the potential of so many marvelous minds.

Sustainability can certainly be found in America and numerous progressive concepts and ideas seem to be permeating our
language and minds, but we still have a long transformation ahead. Although more and more Americans are aware of the steps required to create a sustainable life and society, not all of them act upon those efforts. We are privileged to have access to ample amounts of valuable information about the world we live in and we must act upon such knowledge. For instance, it has been exposed that most bottled waters are the same or worse quality than household tap water, yet billions of dollars are spent on bottled water anyway. Also, it is known that reducing meat consumption by 50% would drastically cut back energy and water usage, but millions of Americans gobble down meat once or twice a day. We know that oil causes worldwide disputes and despair but we guzzle gallons of gasoline in motor vehicles every day. By now it is common sense that money does not lead to happiness and is an unnecessary & arbitrary idea, but everyone still goes along with the greedy, slavish paper chase.
C
onvenience and consumption are two of USA's most prominent attributes.
"I'll start using solar panels once I drive to and from the city five days a week for six months in order to afford one". "I will start my own garden and shop locally after the sales at Wal-mart end". "Money is evil, but I'll sacrifice half of my existence to obtaining it". Do you see the paradox? Capitalism and Sustainability do not seem compatible.


























I envision my trip to Iceland to be a glimpse into the future of sustainability. I feel as if I may foster several worthy ideas for sustainable pathways in my home country, and I will absolutely develop them in an already functioning Eco-village. Iceland and America are two highly different places, but valuable cross-comparisons can and will be made.

The intention of my blog and research are to inform and inspire people living in parts of the world that fall behind in environmental awareness and excel in one-way environmental degradation, to awaken to the ease of a sustainable lifestyle through the participation of community.

Eco-Villagers are strong proponents of the idea that actions speak louder than words. All they must do is show the rest of world that living in tune with the Earth is possible and indeed quite purposeful and fulfilling. I encourage you to open your heart and mind and let these forward-thinking people make an impact on your life so that after waking up from an unsustainable stupor you will never act mindlessly again: because that is what is necessary for a new paradigm.
Letting Go. I honestly have no idea what to expect from my trip, and do not wish to spend too much time or energy in predetermining my experience, but I do have a few things I am anxious to observe in the microcosmic culture of the Eco-Village.

1) Money
I know from experience that moneyless societies can work. The only moneyless economy I have encountered was the gift economy at Alchemy, a beautiful 4-day peace gathering in Lafayette, Georgia in 2009. Greed creates the problems we encounter on Earth today, which is a direct side-effect of money. I am absolutely thrilled to meet people who value each other and collective labor more than bills and coins.

2) Food
Solheimar grows all their own food organically and sustainably in the village. The village hot spring supplies all their vegetables and animals with geothermally heated water, resulting in their production of 18 tons of vegetables a year. Eating locally in Iceland is easier since globally imported goods are highly taxed.

3) Water
Did I mention the village hot spring? Drinking water directly from the ground will be positively life improving. America's outdated water piping system is crumbling underground and exposes us to chlorine, uranium, lead, industrial solvents, rocket fuel, and cancer-causing chemicals.

4) People
I will travel with an anthropological mindset and refrain from practicing judgment of the people or cultural insensitivity. Solheimar began in 1930 as a place for neglected orphans and disabled children to live. About 42 of the 100 villagers have disabilities.

5) Places
From what little I have seen, Iceland appears to offer absolutely stunning landscapes. I am anxious to get some camera lenses over there and share with you what I see.