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Eco-Love and Marriage
A Live Green, Live Smart
Briefing
Finding
love, or even a date, can be a complicated project. Its not
easy to get to know another person let alone oneself. One
issue that always eventually arises is values and environmental
values are increasing as an identity issue.
Do you
desire a companion who recycles and composts everything but
toenails, and lives in a crib lit by compact fluorescents or can
you accept someone who proudly drives an SUV and tosses glass
bottles in the trash? For a growing number of daters, environmental
attitudes are a bottom line for qualifying potential beloveds.
As concern about climate change and environmental issues
have become mainstream, for many people living their values means
finding like-minded carbon-footprint reducers who take their
sustainability seriously. A new trend dubbed eco-dating
helps create social networks of self-proclaimed tree-huggers, Prius
drivers and composters who prefer a date familiar with Al Gore and
global greenhouse population over one tied into television
desperadoes and housewives and conspicuous consumption.
Eco-dating is socially responsible dating with a twist, the
twist being shared concern for the environment. This is not
just a meeting of minds: theres plenty of romance but it may be
observed with locally grown organic flowers instead of shipped-in
roses, and the chocolates are likely to be fair trade and
coercion-free. Organic wineries are doing their bit to provide
bottles worthy of amore, and even pillows are being made of
non-toxic renewable bamboo fibers.
And the result of
eco-dating may be an eco-wedding, where the debris of nuptial
merry-making is recyclable plates and compostable waste after an
organically-grown banquet.
Green Social Networking
Driving the eco-dating trend is, of course, the
Web, where social networking sites cash in on the green cache.
Ecosexuals have entered the lexicon as tree-huggers devoted to
energy reduction and environmental activism and they can be found at
web sites devoted to people who are, well, just like
you.
Chief among the ecosexual sites: Green Singles
(greensingles.com), Green Passions (green-passions.com), Vegan
Passions (veganpassions.com) and Earth
Wise Singles (ewsingles.com). A quick
glance at the sites shows they all have various levels of membership
benefits and fees, ranging from free to $48 annually, in one
instance.
They are not much different than other
dating sites except for one thing the shared passion for the
environment.
Topics of discussions on the sites and on
dates might include global warming, socially responsible
investing, public transit, political activism and other
green-related issues. Restaurants and artists and dream
(green) homes are offered to the communitys attention. After
all love deserves great background.
Earth Wise Singles
describes itss members characteristics: green-living and
environmentally responsible adults; friends of Mother Earth; organic
gardeners, farmers, and ranchers; lovers of nature and the outdoors;
concerned about human rights and world peace; interested in
alternative and holistic medicine; looking for long-term friendship
and romance.
Sound about right? Sound like you?
A Case Study in Shared
Causes
Lets look at Jan Stillman (not
her real name) from the University of Northern Iowa, and her date,
Eric (who requested anonymity). They might have met at any of
the businesses or environmental cause rallies they both frequent
but they actually met online, using a website that promotes meetings
between daters of an Earth-aware frame of mind.
They both
dress in organic cotton clothing on dates [Only on dates??], take
personal mugs to coffee shops to avoid wasting paper on disposable
cups and bike almost everywhere they go. They use public transit
when they cant bike due to weather.
They buy organics and
try to eat at restaurants that focus their menu on locally grown
foods. Jan never wears perfume and Eric never wears
after-shave lotion. Eric sometimes wears shoes that have been
purchased from the local Good Will store just to show his interest
in recycling he wears leather, but only secondhand leather, so he
wont encourage excessive animal agriculture (Jan accepts this,
though she prefers her own footwear cruelty free).
Both
Jan and Eric have contributed to socially responsible funds, like
the Carbon Fund.Org, which offsets the amount of carbon their
educational footprint has created. We share a desire to change the
world in our own way by reducing our use of fossil fuels and our
consumption of consumer goods, says Jan. We hope to inspire others
to do the same. When they save or (eventually) invest, they
will insist on environmental sensitivity in their funds.
Some
people in the environmental community see the value of such focused
social networking sites. Joshua Houdek, an organizer for the North
Star Chapter of the Sierra Club in Minneapolis, sees the eco-dating
sites as providing an opportunity to meet people with similar
values and experiences. Its a way to learn more about other
individuals who are doing their part to produce a more sustainable
lifestyle. I see it as a good trend. And in a large city or in
dispersed rural communities, time to find an eco-soulmate can never
be too abundant, nor opportunities too many.
Green Marriage
Ceremonies
Eco-dating sometimes leads to a wedding. And
weddings tend to be wasteful affairs, with people holding several
pre-ceremonies bachelor parties and bridesmaid gatherings, gift
showers and engagement parties at various locations prior to the
ceremony. The ceremonies and the receptions often take place at
different venues, leading to more transportation for guests who
travel to be with their friends and loved ones for this special
adventure.
Add in paper invitations, balloons and other
decorations, plates and disposable champagne glasses and other
materials, and you have a small landfill of celebratory
stuff.
Houdek and Kristi Papenfuss are doing their wedding
differently. Houdek met his bride at a contra dance, and their
subsequent first date involved climbing and camping. Both committed
environmentalists, they quickly found they had much in common,
including several ideas for a different kind of
wedding.
Were doing as much as we can to reduce the
consumption thats involved in a typical wedding, says Houdek.
Its not a perfect process. We wanted to get married in a park and
the park we chose is in a suburban location so people will have to
drive. But we have suggested a web site where carbon offsets can be
purchased by people attending the wedding.
The park may be a
bit out of town, but the couple made sure to have the reception and
wedding at the same location to avoid having to make people drive
between locations.
After Houdek and Papenfuss, an elementary
school teacher, gathered more information on green weddings they set
about on a strategy to reduce consumption and energy.
They selected rings
made out of recycled gold. They sent modest postcard invitations
without the extra envelopes for RSVPs.
They chose locally grown, organic food
and beverages for the reception. They made sure the plates and
flatware would be reused, rather than plastic throwaways.
The entire wedding will be
zero waste, meaning the materials used can either be reused,
recycled or composted, says Houdek. He first became aware of the
potential for zero waste events when a local recycling organization
helped him plan a zero waste Tour de Sprawl in 2006.
The
popular one-day biking event which the North Star chapter holds
annually offers riders a chance to learn more about urban sprawl,
traditional neighborhood design and smart growth. More than 250
riders participated, ate lunch, and produced no waste that could not
be recycled.
Were trying in every way to make people
more aware of their environment and how they can contribute to
making the world a better place, says Papenfuss. Rather than
a wedding registry or gifts, the couple asks attendees to sign up
for reforestation or recycling projects or donate to favorite
environmental causes, including the Sierra Club.
Having a
green wedding is not as challenging as it may seem. In a perfect
world, Papenfuss concedes, her wedding would take place in a park
directly on a transit line. But she and Houdek have made it much
greener than the average wedding without that much more
effort.
Its pretty easy and you can do it on almost any
budget, so why not do it? she says. If you can do just bits and
pieces, like using recycled plates, having the reception close to
home, or using a vintage wedding dress, and going to an eco-resort,
or camping. Its not an all-or-nothing proposition, and every
little bit helps.
And instead of throwing rice, fellow
eco-daters attending the event might consider scattering a little
organic birdseed as the happy couple departs for their honeymoon
maybe some eco-tourism, with accommodations in a solar-heated and
wind-electrified inn.
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