The desire to grow is firmly rooted in our characters.
Throughout our formative years and well beyond, growth is a
preoccupation. To be able to crawl, to reach the water tap or to
have our own way all require getting bigger. The residual urge
to grow has been harnessed to stimulate the expansion of
material consumption. The dilemma is that, while each of us
wants to grow, collectively we have already grown to confront the limits of our planet. The solution has a well established
precedent in
each of our individual lives. For the most part, our physical growth
comes to an end as we become adults. Physical growth is replaced by the
development of our understanding, skills, relationships and appreciation
of what life offers.
Conserver lifestyles are easier to promote when it is clear that they offer abundant opportunities for growth. Life-based pursuits, or the '3 L's' -- Learning, Love and Laughter -- as they are referred to for our sound bite world, offer boundless frontiers. The development of skills, scholarship, art, music, sport, dance, friendship, spiritual aspiration, parenting and service were the essence of human culture before the commercial era pressed acquisition to its current place of prominence. The saturation of landfill space, problems with pollution and painful experiences with finite natural resources bid us re-consider the emphasis we place on the pursuit of our human birthright.
In the same way that a developing embryo goes through the stages of evolution, civilization will likely follow the pattern of individual maturation. As a culture we are in late adolescence. We have grown big enough to accomplish anything which life requires of us. Now, as self-centeredness gives way to responsibility, our rapid physical growth can transmute into the growth of the remarkable qualities which make people unique among life forms.
'Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens
can change the world,
indeed it's the only thing that ever has.'
-- Margaret Mead