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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • Where is the existing building mass in those pictures? It’s all weird glass pods. I don’t want to live in a glass pod. Did we just blow up all the old brick warehouses, Victorians, old farmhouses that got engulfed by the city, etc etc?

    I want to see my little old house from the 1930s that’s been energy retrofitted, with solar panels and a solar water heater and barrels under the gutters, with apple trees and chickens in the backyard and some bicycles in front.








  • We are from Scandinavia and right now we are in the Alps, later we are going to Italy.

    There’s been work on the railways that has changed our itinerary and caused some delays but otherwise it has been ok.

    We are not huge travelers but previously we’ve driven in our little car or flown and rented a car (ie Iceland, visiting family in the US). My main concern was changing so many trains with children and luggage but they’ve done really well (they are tweens). They are used to trains though.

    Pros:

    • I don’t have to drive for hours and hours (I am the only driver in the family)
    • not having to go through security, also we have been inside the Schengen area so no passport controls
    • you can get up and move around in the trains and it is more comfortable than in a plane
    • not as much queueing as at airports
    • night trains can save an overnight at a hotel
    • you get to see the landscape you are crossing, and even if it is just fields or industry it is better than freeway or clouds
    • other travelers seem more chill and less stressed than when flying

    Cons:

    • you can’t bring as much with you as in your car and you have to handle your own luggage when changing
    • there’s still waiting around and risk of missed connections
    • it takes more travel time out of the total itinerary than flying
    • still risk of motion sickness especially with seats where your back is to the direction you’re traveling
    • still not cheap

    I would do it again but there are still some destinations where I would prefer to drive, such as far out in the countryside or where the public transportation is not great.





  • I think it’s also important to have a diversity of aesthetics and cultural representations to gain a more universal appeal - and also that diversity needs to be understood very broadly. Movements like this seem to typecast themselves relatively quickly, as there are few role models available and people adopt an aesthetic, or mannerisms, or jargon as a sort of identifier that they belong to the group, which ends up being just as exclusionary as it is a marker of inclusion.

    There will always be people who see the extreme version as wildly inspiring, and those who see it as ugly or frightening or wildly unrealistic. Ex: earthships - personally I think it’s awesome to have a self-sufficient space with indoor gardens, but they are huge and ugly af. But people renovating and retrofitting their century old houses with natural materials and respect for the original architecture? Yes please.

    I guess I’m trying to say that the fantastic needs to have a place under the umbrella alongside the pragmatic, and the vegans alongside the people with turkeys in their backyard, and the DIY permies alongside people who would never ever use an old bathtub as a planter but are willing to xeriscape their front lawn with native perennials, and the people who make their own sandals out of bicycle tubes alongside the people who buy really expensive shoes for life etc etc.