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Books community Hong Kong Projects I like

Read More Hong Kong

readmorehk

Spotted in Pacific Coffee this morning: a corner shelf full of preloved books. The books are part of a city–wide sharing initiative, known also a ‘book floating‘.

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Environment

Sharing is good. We should all share more.

Yesterday I went to a fabulous workshop put on by Waste Watch on shared community assets. It was basically a room full of people all doing great things in their communities, encouraging principles of “collaborative consumption‘ and a better use and allocation of resources.

I learned some really interesting things, like how people prefer higher levels of health, happiness and love to wealth (based on research by the New Economics Foundation). I know this may sound like a given but in this age of excessive consumption that fact is both surprising and oddly reassuring.

I also met some lovely people running very inspiring projects, like TimeBank, Food Cycle, Lourish, Ecomodo, and many others. Although most people in the room came from different backgrounds, the common ground was all of our interests in sustainable consumption, through sharing various things, like time, food, possessions and space.

Sharing as a concept, way or life, value set – whatever you’d like to refer to it as – isn’t anything new. We are taught from a young age that sharing and being generous are good qualities. Yet somewhere between being young and told to share toys with others kids we get lead astray by many things, including shiny adverts and cultural attitudes alluding that a life with more stuff is an enhanced way of being. And it’s not.

The difficulty of course lies in behavioural and cultural change. How is it that you can show people that you don’t need to own a drill to be able to use one or have access to one. Or that one company’s food surplus could make a world or difference to a small charity trying to feed London’s poor? Why don’t more people share?

At the moment a lot of sharing services live online. The internet has had a profound impact on how people interact with each other and redefined what a community is. However, I’d argue that the vast majority of people using online swap services all come from a similar demographic, the demographic that I fall in. Digitally active. Young (ish). Middle class. For me, I find it super easy to kit out my house in free stuff. It’s also really easy to trade clothes online. But what I’d really interested in is sharing as a movement and way of life rather than just loads of cool services available to those who know how to look for them. It would do the planet a whole lot of good if people stopped buying things they only use once and started thinking about where they can get something they need or want before heading to the shops. For some people, this is already the norm, but for most, more needs to be done to pave the sharing way. Hopefully more people, in addition to the lovely ones I met yesterday will champion the shift to a society that shares more and shares better.

Ps- Out of interest I Googled sharing services. Who knew you could rent goats? Or share horses?

 

 

Categories
Fashion

Swap Shop

Nice jeans, eh? I inherited them last week at a clothes swap at Green Thing HQ. Inspired by The End of The New, a fashion conscious experiment in not buying new clothes, I thought it would be fun to get a bunch of friends and colleagues in the same room with bags of old clothes and swap around. And that’s exactly what happened last Wednesday evening.

I also managed to bag this lovely yellow terrycloth Lacoste dress. Perfect for the beach.

It was amazing sharing experiences of our wardrobes and stories about just how much stuff we all owned but either never wore, wore until it went out of fashion or wore it thin. I think most people walked away pleased with their ‘new’ items of clothing and hopefully we will all think a bit more before we buy throwaway fashion. Even though it’s cheap and accessible, I’ve found that clothes that have a history and have been loved are the best. With swap parties because everything is valued the same, you end up coming away with things you may have never worn before and you become a bit more creative about what you wear and how you wear it.

There are plenty of places to swap clothes with people online, like The Big Wardrobe and Posh Swaps. And, if you’re really keen just organise one of your own. No experience necessary!