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What is your own inner Fool saying?

Posted on Apr 1st, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 01, 2008:

Dancing_jester_puppet_lisa_s
It's saying "Come dance with me!"  And I accepted, enjoyed the dance and learned that there's wisdom in folly.

...if you aren't willing to look foolish you're foolish! ~ Mark Batterson
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Where do you want to go?

Posted on Apr 2nd, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 02, 2008:

All_directions
Wherever my flow takes me
Where I could grow and glow
And merge with ONE
That's where I believe I am going.
But am I not there already?
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Tagged with: QaR, future, destiny, calling, journey

7 Ways to Know "Who Am I?"

Posted on Apr 2nd, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Adapted from Life After Death, by Deepak Chopra (Harmony Books, 2006).
Courtesy care2.com


Here are seven ways to help you define who you are.

1. What is your story?
Your story is more than just a list of the events in your life. It is about your self-image, how you see yourself, what shaped your mind, which memories imprinted themselves on you. Taken altogether, your story tells you where you are in the cycle of life.

2. What are your expectations?
Expectations are seeds. Once planted, they manifest into those things we gain from life, or lose. When you become aware of your own expectations, you discover the unspoken limits you have set on yourself. There is a huge difference between those who expect great things and those who don't.

3. What is your purpose?
This is the meaning you are trying to find. Purpose runs deeper than the superficial things we hope to get, which mostly center on money, possessions, status, and comfort. If you know your purpose, you know the deeper project to which your life is dedicated.

4. What is your destination?
This is about fulfillment. Human goals are endless; they unfold, not like a road that has an end but like a river that flows to join the sea, merging with ever larger possibilities. If you know your destination, you can envision your highest fulfillment.

5. What is your path?
Having identified your purpose and your destination, there must be a way to get there. "Path" has been adopted as a spiritual term, but in fact everyone, spiritual or not, follows certain ways to get where they want to go.

6. Who are your adversaries?

Forward motion is never without obstacles. On your path you will find yourself blocked. At times the adversary is external, but if you examine yourself deeply, you will find it is always internal as well.

7. Who are your allies?
We all bring others with us on our journey. Just as your adversaries did, you may identify these allies as external, but they only reflect your own inner strength, just as an opponent reflects your inner vulnerability.
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How do you decide that something is true?

Posted on Apr 3rd, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 03, 2008:

I don't decide truth (well, except maybe in true or false quizzes), it comes as a spark from deep within and then I realise and accept that it is.
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My son's Shramner

Posted on Apr 5th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Panya_bas_with_brother_monks2
It's day 4 of my son's Shramner, a Buddhist ritual in which he will be living as a student monk in a monastery for a week.  He has been given the name Punya Bhasa (meaning vessel of wisdom).  This is a family tradition of the Newar Buddhists in Kathmandu for boys as they approach the age of puberty.  We visited him today and he's jovial.  All the monks of Bishwo Shanti Vihar (World Peace Temple) have been most appreciative of how he is doing.  There will be a concluding ceremony on Wednesday next.  Though my husband is Buddhist by birth, he's not the ritualistic Buddhist, but by choice we follow a few rituals that we feel has value, such as this one.
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What recession?

Posted on Apr 8th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Read this great blog at consciousartistry.ning.com and sharing it here.  It's full of practical advice in sustainable living.  I resonate with most of it.

by Philip Harris on April 6, 2008
http://consciousartistry.ning.com/profiles/blog/show?id=2043979%3ABlogPost%3A2042

Stock market goes up; stock market down. Gas prices go up; employment down. Oil corporations get richer; average folk getting poorer. Food prices are up; energy costs are up, mortgage foreclosures are up, consumer confidence is way down. Does all of this sound familiar? While economic “experts” debate about the possibility of recession, millions are living a recession. The question is, why? There is ample energy in the world; food is plentiful; there is more than enough money; so much needs to be done there is no reason for people to be unemployed or underemployed. So what gives?

The government, economists and big business is imbuing the public with a sense of defeat. While the few are making their billions, they continue to insist that there is not enough to “go around.” Argue for your limitations and they are yours. We are at a point where the consumer can strike back with the power of their hard earned dollars and show all of the economic gurus that they are wrong. There are no “laws of economics.” You believe there are because that is what you are taught, but the truth of the matter is that what you believe, you manifest. We are all subject to the same events, yet some are having no problems while others are struggling to make ends meet in “these tough economic times.” People must come to understand that times are tough because that is what you believe.

Since so many people believe oil prices will go up; that money is scarce; that food may be hard to come by; that banks will foreclose; that jobs will be lost and that we may have to fight our way out this so called mess, that is the way it will be. Form follows thought. So what is the average person to do? How can you keep your eye on the prize while the winds of change seem unstoppable? The following are just a few ways to beat the system that seems intent on breaking your economic back.

1. The first thing to do is to not buy into all of the economic “doom and gloom.” If you think that things are getting rough, they will get rough.

2. The next thing you want to do is to truly evaluate all of the garbage that you have been wasting money on. It is obvious that we have been in a buy, use and throw away state of mind. This way of living is not sustainable and no longer acceptable. You are bombarded daily with commercials that want you to spend your money on things that you really do not need. Stop watching commercials.

3. Buy basic! I am not talking sacrifice; I am talking about living a healthy and less expensive lifestyle. Look at your cupboards and all of the junk food that is only killing you and your children. You do not need expensive, sugar filled cereals. You do not need all of the junk treats that are clogging your arteries and making you and your children fat. You do not need all of the sweets. Buy basic, healthy food and you will find it more nutritious and more filling. I will not list brands but your basic whole grain cereals, without the color and sugar added; real bread that is more filling; less prepared foods-they are expensive and not good for you. Make your own. A can of tomato sauce that you spice yourself for pasta is half the cost of prepared sauces. Frozen foods must go. Make your own and it will be cheaper. Get the family involved in food preparation and maybe actually talk to your children.

4. Get off of the meat kick. Meats are expensive and should not be the mainstay of your diet. Cut back and be healthier and if you must, buy no hormone meats. They may cost a little more but they will make you feel better. Use recipes that include some meat but which add vegetables and it will go a lot further.

5. You do not need all of those snack foods in the house. Again, this is not a sacrifice, it is common sense. Forget what your children demand. Make real popcorn, use fruit for snacks and get the sugar out of your diet.

6. Eliminate soda. Neither you nor your children need it and it is not good for you. Water works just fine. Cut back a little each week and watch how you feel better and watch your dollar go further.

7. Forget the latest fashion. Dress basic. You do not need to constantly purchase new clothes just because fashion changes. All you are doing is making someone else rich, at your expense. You are better off buying quality that lasts than buying cheap clothes that do not hold up.

8. Reduce unnecessary driving and save gas. If people do not show up to events, sports, or other social functions because of the cost of gas, maybe someone will get the hint.

9. Rent the movie, don’t go to one. The cost of movie theaters and the food that they sell are ridiculous. This is just wasted money.

10. Live differently. Forget how others say you should live and go with what your instincts say. A more natural life is a less expensive life. Stop mindless consuming and buy what makes sense. Your money can change the way business does business. Don’t buy what “they” say you need, buy what you really need and watch your expenses shrink.

The so called “economic crisis” that we seem to be in is self induced. The banks and lenders did not have to raise rates. They did not have to make loans to people they knew were not financially sound. Oil prices did not have to skyrocket. Consumers did not have to waste millions on junk. We did not have to settle for poor quality and products that polluted the environment. What we have done by default, can be undone by conscious choice. Consumers can make its own “course correction” and by their action create an economy that is sustainable, efficient, environmentally compatible and logical.

The tips offered are just a beginning. If you are losing your home, let it go if it was truly out of your reach. Use this as an opportunity to re-think your priorities, the way you live, the way you spend your money. Use this as an opportunity to re-shape your world into one that makes sense to you, and not one created by the latest commercials that would have you give all to line the pockets of those who have much. Buy a few less beers, eat healthier foods, get off the sugar habit, stand up to wasteful buying, ignore the ads and take control of your life.
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When do you feel most accomplished?

Posted on Apr 8th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 08, 2008:

Whenever I decide out of inspiration to take on a challenge and act on it with all my heart for the greater good, then I feel something gets accomplished through me and others.

It is not your aptitude, but your attitude, that determines your altitude. ~ Zig Ziglar
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If you could give one gift to our elders, what would it be?

Posted on Apr 10th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 07, 2008:

Senior_citizens__feliciation_program_patan_rotary_clubs_01oct2007
The gift of recognition and appreciation of their lives and their contributions to society, community, and family and for just being themselves.  I remember taking part in one such occasion when our area Rotary Clubs organised a senior citizens' felicitations programme last October to honour them.  It was a festive occasion and the seniors of every household came in their best attires and each were presented with shawls and scarves.  Those over 100 years old were invited on stage (see photo).  I think for many of them, our being there to listen and keep them company for a while were their most cherished moments.
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Tagged with: QaR, elders, gifts, sharing, age

Overwhelmingly successful (elections in Nepal)

Posted on Apr 10th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Nepal_elections
Nepali Times Online POSTED ON 10 APRIL 2008 | 10:50 PM NST

Nepal's Election Commission has said that Thursday's historic voting for a constituent assembly was "overwhelmingly successful".

Chief Election Commissioner Bhojraj Pokharel told a packed press conference on Thursday evening one hour after polling ended nationwide that an average of 60 percent of the electorate voted, a much higher number than expected.

"The election was overwhelmingly successful given the participation of the people," he said. He added that although information hadn't come in from all over the country, voting had already started and the first results would start coming out on Thursday night itself.

"This election is a model for the rest of the world that if it is in the interest of the people no power can stop it," Pokhrel said. Indeed, the level of violence was much lower than expected for an election in which a former guerrilla force took part only two years after a ceasefire.

He thanked the voters, government officials, political parties, security agencies, civil society, national and international observers, and the media for making it a success.

The EC has said polling had to be postponed in 33 of the country's 20,882 polling centres due to scattered violence. The date for voting in these centres will be decided soon. Two people, including a candidate in Sarlahi were killed.

"We have received a few complaints of booth capturing, the commission will look into it," he said.

PHOTO: NAYANTARA GURUNG KAKSHAPATI
10 April 2008, 5 PM: Polling Officer Thakur Raj Panta seals ballot boxes at Rajtirtha, Lalitpur- 3. His polling station received 496 voters today.



SMOOTH GO

POSTED ON 10 APRIL 2008 | 1:25 PM NST

People across Nepal are voting in overwhelming numbers and with great enthusiasm, according to reports coming in from various parts of the country.

In some polling booths in Janakpur and Kathmandu, 40 percent of the voters had already cast their votes in the first three hours, and there was heavy turnout in most polling stations across the hills. In Chitwan, the Election Commission said 65 percent had cast their ballots before noon and in Morang and Sunsari, there was more than 70 pecent turnout in the first five hours.

There were electoral hotspots where trouble was expected, and here polls have been postponed. Out of the 20,810 polling centres all over the country, intimidation and threats have been serious enough for the polling to the postponed in only six. According to the Election Commission, there hasn't been a single incident of polling being postponed in any of the constituencies in far-Western Nepal.

Among the trouble spots were Dolakha, where YCL Maoists chased away voters and started stuffing ballot boxes, in Nar and Phu in Manang it was the voters who boycotted elections because no candidate had come to canvass.

The most incidents were reported from the eastern tarai districts of Saptari, Siraha and Sarlahi, but even here they were not serious enough for the polling to be cancelled. In Ramecchap Maoists blocked roads leading to polling centres in Doramaba and in Chitwan, YCL cadre threw ballot boxes into the Rapti River.

NC and UML cadres have also engaged in violence in parts of Dolakha, while it has been the Jana Morcha that has been beating up UML and NC candidates in Baglung.

Election in constituency No 1 of Surkhet district, which was postponed after an UML candidate in the constituency Rishi Prasad Sharma was killed on Tuesday will be held in April 19.


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When has your imagination been the most vivid?

Posted on Apr 12th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 11, 2008:

Well, that would be when my son was 3-8 years old and would demand stories at bedtime, not from books but original fiction in which he and his friends would be the characters in an adventure story of all sorts, from spy thrillers to adventures in the jungle, in outer space, magic kingdom, underwater world, in heaven.......

Remembering them now, it was incredible what stories I could weave at those times and the best part was when he would interrupt and change some of the scenarios or dialogues to suit his interest.  If I had written them down it could have been made into a book.  My son ended up not sleeping of course, because he was so fascinated about the stories, so my husband would interrupt and tell his own 'make you sleep' types.  Precious memories.
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Where in your life do you follow your heart?

Posted on Apr 12th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 12, 2008:

Open_your_heart_to_life_myrna_shoa
Listening to my heart is a constant in my life (as I replied to in a previous QaR). I've been following my heart in every area of my life, and so far no regrets.  Life is wonderful!
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Tagged with: QaR, heart, love, intuition, life, calling

The Fire in Your Eyes

Posted on Apr 12th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Adapted from The Spontaneous Fulfillment of Desire, by Deepak Chopra (Harmony Books, 2003). Courtesy care2.com/greenliving

If you have fire of soul, then Vedic sages say it is reflected in the shining of your eyes. It’s reflected spontaneously in our body language and body movements. Everything you think, feel, say and do will reflect the same fire.

Do this exercise to connect with the fire in your eyes:

Whenever you look into a mirror, even if it’s just for a second or two, make eye contact with your image and silently repeat the three principles that are the foundation of self-referral. First, say to yourself, “I’m totally independent of the good or bad opinions of others.” Second: “I’m beneath no one.” Third: “I’m fearless in the face of any and all challenges.”

Look into your eyes in the mirror and see those attitudes reflected back to you. Just in your eyes, not in your facial expression. Look for the shine in your eyes to remind yourself of the fire in your soul.
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(Making up for) Lost time

Posted on Apr 12th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Comment by Senior Journalist Kanak Mani Dixit
Nepali Times Issue #395 (11 April 08 - 17 April 08)


The real work now begins to build a New Nepal

They said the people would never rise up, until the People’s Movement surprised us all. They said the parliament could never be revived, but it sprang to life. They said elections would never happen after being twice postponed, but it happened. Now they tell us there will be chaos after the elections. How many more times do you want to be wrong? The sheer willpower of the citizenry that generated the People’s Movement has propelled us into the Constituent Assembly. The constitution will get written amidst turbulence, but it will be written. Nepal is just not structured to deliver a cut-and-dried peace process to those who want to wrap it up and be gone to the next world hotspot. Instead, we muddle through and get ahead, with the political parties in command of the speed and the direction.

The Constituent Assembly is not just part and parcel of the peace process, but a state-restructuring exercise foremost. It also represents a return to pluralism and representative government after nine long years. This is where the emerging, conflicting and complementary demands of communities will be discussed, instead of the frustrated recourse to burning tyres.

The Nepali spirit will see us through in the days ahead, including the vulnerable period over the next three weeks while the ballots are counted. The political party that gets the largest number of votes will take the lead in fashioning the new polity, but it must carry along all political forces including the Maoists in the running of the government and drafting the constitution.

The assembly has to be called within 21 days of the final results. The first task at hand will be the parties acting on their manifestos to declare the country a republic. To be gracious, the historical kingship can be thanked for its role in the creation of the nation state 239 years ago.

As the constitution-making begins in earnest, the 601 framers must start with a philosophical commitment to values incuded in the superseded 1990 constitution: multiparty pluralism, representative government, fundamental freedoms and human rights.

Looking beyond, a set of draft directive principles developed by the Interim Parliament (‘federalism’, ‘secularism’ and ‘inclusion’ included) will serve as the basis for the sovereign Assembly to begin work on developing a samabesi loktantra. The definition of federalism will be the most challenging task before the CA, and the framers must rise above populism to define a provincial structure that is practical and economically sound, while responding to identity and inclusion demands.

There will be those outside the party-political process who will question the right and ability of the Constituent Assembly to represent the entire populace, but the elected members will surely be much more empowered to respond to such challenges than the appointed nominees of the Interim Parliament. Not to forget that the proportional 335 seats, to be approved by the Election Commission according to the population categories, will make the CA among the most inclusive legislative bodies in the world.

While the Assembly itself will be relatively inclusive and representative, a countrywide participatory consultative process must support the assembly and allow the citizens to own the document that emerges. It is the new constitution, more than any institution, language or manufactured mythology, that will henceforth provide the glue to bind the people of Nepal.

The Assembly’s other task is of course to serve as a legislature to back and watchdog the executive branch over the next two years and more. Immediately, it will be important to separate the positions of head of state and head of government, responsibilities borne over the last two years by Girija Prasad Koirala. The ministers of the coalition government which emerges in the days ahead will have to be answerable to the prime minister rather than to their individual party bosses.

The new government must make haste to ensure that the people begin to enjoy the long-delayed peace dividend, and it must energetically restart development projects after a decade of waiting. The international community must help.

There is so much more that the needs to be done, to give the public confidence in state administration and rule of law. We should not forget the need for accountability for the atrocities of the past, by whichever side. The matter of ‘security sector reform’ must be addressed, bringing the Nepal Army even more firmly under civilian control. The Maoist fighters in the cantonments must be brought into the mainstream as a priority.

The Constituent Assembly will write our new Basic Law, but the immediate hope of those who voted yesterday is that the elections will usher political stability, help mend the tattered social fabric and trigger economic growth. We have to make up for a dozen years of lost time.
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Clouds in your coffee?

Posted on Apr 13th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
Cupz
Drink in this article about foam cups and containers, styrene migration, and your health. And we'll also explain why, there is no such thing as a Styrofoam cup!
Source:
grinningplanet.com

Polystyrene Foam Cups & Containers, Styrene Migration, and Your Health

THE MYTH OF “STYROFOAM CUPS”

This article explores the issue of whether styrene from foam cups and containers can leach into food. But first, let's clear up something: Styrofoam cups cannot possibly be a problem in this regard—Styrofoam cups do not exist! "How can that be?" you say, "I just drank from one this morning!"

Nope. You most likely drank from a polystyrene cup. Styrofoam is a trademarked material made by the Dow Chemical Company—and they don't make cups, plates, egg trays, or other types of food packaging from it! To quote them directly: "Next time you get a cup of java to go, remember, you can't drink coffee from a STYROFOAM cup—because there is no such thing!"

All day long in our fast-paced modern world, coffee gets poured into foam cups. Double-decker mega-burgers get plopped into foam clamshells. Restaurant leftovers get put into "doggie bags"—usually foam food containers.

Most foam cups and containers are made out of polystyrene, and therein lies the rubber biscuit. The basic chemical component of the material (styrene) has the potential to leach into your food and then into you. This article discusses the probability of this happening and the potential health effects.

INTRO — FOAM CUPS AND FOOD CONTAINERS

It was big news years ago when McDonalds moved some of its sandwiches out of their trademark foam clamshells and into paper wrappers. The environment was proclaimed the winner and we all went back to saying, "Yes, I'll have fries with that."

But foam food containers—or more properly, polystyrene food containers—did not go away. Today they are still going strong in both food and non-food applications. The table below provides examples.
Polystyrene Food Containers and Related Applications Non-Food Applications of Polystyrene

* coffee cups
* soup bowls and salad boxes
* foam egg cartons; produce & meat trays
* disposable utensils
* packing "peanuts"
* foam inserts that cushion new appliances and electronics
* television and computer cabinets
* compact disc "jewel boxes" and audiocassette cases

Polystyrene clearly has many non-food uses, but this article will focus on the implications of using polystyrene in food and beverage applications. Most importantly, we will talk about how styrene—the "monomer" form of polystyrene—can migrate into your food and beverages from polystyrene food containers.

STYRENE MIGRATION FROM FOAM CUPS AND CONTAINERS

The migration of styrene from a polystyrene cup into the beverage it contains has been observed to be as high as 0.025% for a single use. That may seem like a rather low number, until you work it this picture of polystyrene coffee cups way: If you drink beverages from polystyrene cups four times a day for three years, you may have consumed about one foam cup's worth of styrene along with your beverages. Mmm.... chem-i-callyyyy...

Styrene migration has been shown to be partially dependent on the fat content of the food in the polystyrene cups/containers—the higher the fat content, the higher the migration into the food. Entrees, soups, or beverages that are higher in fat (like a bowl of three-cheese chili or tall cupful of Triple-Cream Frappa-Mocha Java Delight) will suck more of the styrene out of the polystyrene container than, say, water. Some compounds found in beverages, like alcohol or the acids in "tea with lemon," may also raise the styrene migration rate.

When it comes to more solid food, the meat or cheese you buy from the market on a clear-plastic-wrapped polystyrene tray may be picking up styrene from the foam container. Styrene also appears to migrate more quickly when foods or drinks are hot.

HEALTH EFFECTS OF STYRENE


Studies suggest that styrene mimics estrogen in the body and can therefore disrupt normal hormone functions, possibly contributing to thyroid problems, menstrual irregularities, and other hormone-related problems, as well as breast cancer and prostate cancer. The estrogenicity of styrene is thought to be comparable to that of Bisphenol A, another potent estrogen mimic from the world of plastics.

Long-term exposure to small quantities of styrene is also suspected of causing:

* low platelet counts or hemoglobin values;
* chromosomal and lymphatic abnormalities;
* neurotoxic effects due to accumulation of styrene in the tissues of the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves, resulting in fatigue, nervousness, difficulty sleeping, and other acute or chronic health problems associated with the nervous system.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer lists styrene as a possible human carcinogen, though this conclusion is primarily based on studies of workers in styrene-related chemical plants. The Vallombrosa Consensus Statement on Environmental Contaminants and Human Fertility Compromise includes styrene on its list of contaminants of possible concern, noting that even weak estrogen mimics can combine with other such chemicals to have negative effects even when the chemicals are individually present at levels that would have no impact. On the positive side, a 2005 expert panel convened by the National Institutes of Health concluded that there is negligible concern for developmental toxicity in embryos and babies.

RECOMMENDATIONS ON FOAM CUPS AND POLYSTYRENE

Overall, the evidence of health impacts from polystyrene, styrene, and foam food packaging is suspicious though not clearly damning. More studies are needed. But we know from studies of other chemicals that long-term, constant exposure to small amounts of foreign substances—especially those that mimic hormones—causes problems. Further, styrene is a benzene-based molecule, and the evidence against benzene is pretty clear, so we personally avoid polystyrene (and all plastic) when it comes to consuming or storing food.

A CERAMIC MUGGING

Always using a ceramic mug instead of a foam cup is highly advisable, and mugs with lead-free components are preferable. If you use a "regular" mug, watch for breaks in the inner ceramic surface that might expose your beverage to the lead. If chips or scratches show up, pitch the mug.

Our recommendations are:

* Use ceramic plates, bowls, and mugs/cups whenever possible. If you can't do that, choose paper over polystyrene.
* Item 1 applies especially if your food or beverage has medium to high fat content; contains alcohol or acidic substances; or is hot. On this last point, never microwave or heat food in polystyrene containers.
* If a supermarket item came in polystyrene packaging, consider transferring it to a non-plastic container until you're ready to cook or eat it. Glass, ceramic, or porcelain containers, bowls or plates are preferable for food storage (so you don't get chemicals from plastic food containers). If you can choose food products that don't come in polystyrene containers in the first place, so much the better. (And remember that most restaurant "doggie bags" are really polystyrene food containers.)
* Buy food in glass containers when possible. For non-glass-packaged items, buy the larger sizes, where the surface contact between the contents to the container is reduced. (Buying in large sizes makes economic sense anyway, assuming you can use it all.)

FOAM CUPS AND CONTAINERS — POST-NOTE

People occasionally have sent us questions and comments about foam coffee cups, foam food containers, and related issues. Here are a few of their questions ... and our answers.

Q. I read somewhere that a US EPA study found styrene in 100% of fat samples biopsied from human subjects. Is that true?

A. Yes, it's true. The study results were presented as part of the agency's document, "The Broad Scan Analysis: Human Adipose Tissue Survey." The study has been criticized by some for its choice of methodology, but that is not to say that its results are necessarily invalid.

Unfortunately, like so many other scientific documents, it seems to have disappeared from the EPA's web site, so you can't go look for yourself.

Q. I was recently on a flight [and] I was quite upset that they still serve hot drinks in Styrofoam cups [sic]. How do we get words out there for a change to a safer choice [like] cardboard?

A. First, as we've mentioned before, Styrofoam is not used to make food containers. That said, here is our answer.

There are worse environmental and health threats out there than polystyrene, but since alternatives exist and it's easy to make the switch, why not do it? Some people will listen when you tell them things like "drinking out of a foam cup is not your best choice." Others just think you're a nut or a hypochondriac and ignore you. The first group is why we started Grinning Planet -- to try to inform people. As for the latter group, it usually takes some personal health disaster before they wake up and start paying attention.

Environmental and public interest groups can also have some effect by organizing boycotts and letter-writing campaigns, and by working directly with companies to try to get them to change their policies, supply sources, and products. Supporting these efforts is a good thing.

Q. On my way to work today, I decided to stop by a local Mexican restaurant drive-through and order a taco plate. It came in a [foam] container, which is still the normal serving container for smaller restaurants. I took the food to my desk and squeezed some lemon juice on my tacos from the freshly cut lemon wedges that were served with the meal. I then placed the lemon wedges in the top portion of the container. When I was finished eating, about 10 minutes later, I moved the wedges to throw them away and noticed holes the in container where the wedges laid. Imagine my surprise at the realization that something natural (lemon juice) could breakdown something manmade. Could lemon juice be the solution to get rid of the [large amounts of foam trash] in our landfills?

A. Another of our readers suggests an answer for this question:
Citric acid in the rind will "pop" the beads [that together form the polystyrene material], letting air escape.

Sounds plausible to us. The reason the beads pop would be that the structural integrity of some of the polystyrene beads has been damaged by the citric acid. Once polystyrene is converted to styrene, natural processes can break it down the rest of the way fairly readily, so this sort of reaction could be helpful in catalyzing the overall degradation of polystyrene.

But we suspect that to take on mountains of polystyrene trash with lemon juice would not be so simple, since the foam trash is crammed together with all the other trash. The lemon juice (and the microbes than break down styrene) are unlikely to work effectively in such an environment.

Q. Are there any studies that you are familiar with that compare environmental impact of [foam] plates and cups with biodegradable paper compared to china? Comparisons of energy required to produce products, as well as impact to dispose of products would be helpful. Also energy required to wash china and impact of detergents so that there is a net impact both to the environment and the health of humans and or animals connected to the use of the various products.

A. There may be studies, and your question is reasonable, but it's beyond the scope of this article. That said, here are some general thoughts.

In our opinion, it's preferable to use washable dishware. The cost of the "real" cups, plates, and utensils plus the water use and energy use are part of the equation, but the pollution factor associated with polystyrene has to be given a lot of weight. "Plastic pollution" is becoming a very, very big problem in the environment generally and in the ocean specifically. Reducing the amount of polystyrene trash in the environment is a good thing, period.

The monetary cost-benefit case will be harder to make since many of the costs of product manufacturing, use, and disposal are externalized as unbilled environmental degradation and human health impacts. I suspect that polystyrene food containers are going to easily beat the cost to procure and manage a set of real dishes. But in our opinion, any company that wants to take a step forward in protecting the environment and the health of its employees can do so by making the switch from polystyrene food containers to real dishes (or at least to foam containers made from natural materials).

Q. Styrene is a naturally occurring product that is in many of the foods we eat. Do you think that, just perhaps, some of that styrene found in one's body may have come from actual food?

A. Migration from foam food containers into food is not the only way we can get an unwanted intake of styrene. Other sources include:

* dental fillings
* agricultural products
* food additives
* breathed-in fumes from some protective coatings, glues and adhesives
* polluted air or cigarette smoke

On the food front, a 2005 NIH Monograph on the Potential Human Reproductive and Developmental Effects of Styrene (opens as PDF, 6 MB) lists some "natural styrene content" values for selected foods:
Unprocessed Food Styrene level (ppb)
Cinnamon 170 - 39,000
Beef 5.3 - 6.4
Black currants 2 - 6
Coffee beans 1.6 - 6.4
Peanuts 1 - 2.2
Strawberries 0.37 - 3.1
Wheat 0.4 - 2

The report did not give an explanation for cinnamon's outlying value.

The same report also looked at styrene values in packaged food, which in general were higher than in the natural foods. Here are a few:
Processed Food Styrene level (ppb)
Milk and cream 134 (avg)
Beer 32
Yogurt 26
Desserts 22
Soft cheese 16

The amount of styrene in the food was found to be directly proportional to the fat content of the food and inversely proportional to the size of the container. The latter point makes sense, since larger containers would expose a lower percentage of the food to the container.

What does all this mean? Mostly it means you'll have a pretty hard time avoiding styrene altogether. To us, though, it does not mean that we're just going to shrug and not worry about it. Instead, we choose to be sensible—to avoid plastic and foam packaging when we can and eat whole, non-processed foods as much as possible. The latter point is a good idea regardless of the evidence on styrene migration or how serious a health threat it might or might not be.

Updated: 08-APR-2008
(Originally published: 01-NOV-2005)

Know someone who might find this article about foam cups and food containers interesting? Please forward it to them.
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What is your relationship to conflict?

Posted on Apr 15th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 15, 2008:

Conflict has been like my personal teacher.  I've been through a lot of conflicts in life where I've played different roles - as a participant, a mediator, a perpetrator, a "victim", an observer, etc.  I consider conflicts in human relationships as inevitable and look at them as learning opportunities and as windows to growing in self-awareness.  I don't think I would have grown up without such conflicts.  Overtime I have learned that conflict isn't a problem between two people  or groups but merely an internal imbalance.  Rather than reacting to a conflict and proving oneself right, one actually can choose to resolve it or learn and grow from it or ignore it or let it run wild and be burdened by it.

Sharing a quote on conflict:

It has been a life's work to make our partner wrong. Then when we enter inquiry, we lose. It's a tremendous shock. And it turns out to be grace. Winning is losing. Losing is winning. It all turns around. ~ Byron Katie in Question Your Thinking, Change the World

Better to be happy than to be right. ~  K. Stone

And here's a link to 10 Steps to Handle Relationship Conflicts
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What separates you from others?

Posted on Apr 20th, 2008 by Mila : ɹǝɹnʇuǝʌpɐ Mila
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for April 20, 2008:

Together
We are all one and yet each one is unique. There is value in both so I enjoy both ways.  As a unique being, a drop in the ocean, I have my specific role to play in how the world would evolve and I enjoy discovering and living that uniqueness.  As a part of one, I enjoy being in the big ocean, together with all other waterdrops, pulsating and making the world unfold as it should.
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Tagged with: QaR, others, separation,