Human impact on this planet is undeniably inevitable but we can effectively EXERT CONSCIENTIOUS OPTIONS to MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
Five basic ways to begin living more conscientiously:
http://health.howstuffworks.com/mental-health/coping/5-tips-for-conscious-living.htm
(Googling 'how to be eco-friendly', 'conscientious living' and other related terms are ways to find more info.)
Our individual choices - every time we decide to think, say or do anything - are highly relevant in the grand scheme of our fragile species and its survival in the long run. Our actions are not just our own, they ripple and multiply through the other 7.4 billion people we share this earth with, affecting our ecosystem and us all. Seven billion inhabitants and counting (exponentially - see first entry) collectively coexisting on a planet containing a very finite amount of space and resources. Limited essentials for life such as fresh water, land, food, trees, oxygen. Our existence here is based very much on a balance, down to the basic elemental mixture allowing us to evolve to our current state of being.
All of us together are throwing off that balance slowly but surely. We must acknowledge it regardless of divisive differences, because we are all human and we must all take accountability. The planet perfected its delicate state of equilibrium long before we got here, even the first humans coexisted within nature's ebb and flow for a long time. But right now is a different time, a unique time. It's no longer the past and it's not yet the future, we need to recognize our role now. Each one of us should bear the responsibility of (not to mention take pride in) the inseparable bond we share with this planet that gives us life. Without it, there is no us, so why aren't we each trying harder? Why are we not eagerly striving to sustainably coexist?
Don't make justifications for your negative actions or lack of positive action. Even seemingly insignificant effort matters, for better or for worse. Some may argue that only one person's actions won't make a difference, or that we need not individually take action because everyone else will. When people use one of those two excuses, they become part of the problem instead of part of the answer. We are too knowledgeable of a species for that. Did humans evolve to this point just to be selfishly destroyed by a few generations who couldn't shift their mind and thought process to secure their future? We are a highly intelligent species but we are letting our advantages, securities and conveniences get the best of us while also taking for granted our primal roots.
We can change. Because we have to start doing things differently than we are now. We make these decisions every day, no matter what, and we can practice putting certain priorities, like our future, ahead of trivial details that are only superficially important.
**Put It Into Practice**
An informative article to help get the action of change started:
http://greatist.com/happiness/ways-help-environment
(Don't stop there, keep researching, learning, growing, creating, and teaching!)
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