Transition Colorado

Brad Jarvis
  • Male
  • Arvada, CO
  • United States
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I can only speak to my own experience. For most of my life I took the lead from my father and his cohorts in developing my worldview. When he died (a personal catastrophe), I took a few years to examine every aspect of my life -- including my values…
yesterday
The thing which I am trying to figure out, is whether this shift in values you speak of, which I agree is at the core of the change we need, is possible to achieve with a "smooth" transition. ( I.e. can people gradually shift their perspective in a…
yesterday
Brad Jarvis is attending Margaret Emerson's event
January 15, 2010 from 6pm to 8pm
Transition Westminster presents the first potluck and used book exchange event! Bring a dish to share and bring your good used books that you don't mind exchanging or giving away. Fiction, non-fiction, it's all good! This is a great way of getting…
on Sunday
Great insights, both of you. Thanks for your thoughtful and deeply-felt love for our world.
on Sunday
I attended a talk by Lester Brown last month and he shared your viewpoint on the futility of politics solving the problem of climate change. He said (and I agree) that egos stand in the way. No one country wants to concede more than another. A few y…
on Sunday
December 19
Brad Jarvis updated their profile
December 19
Brad Jarvis updated their profile photo
December 19

Profile Information

How are you currently involved in the Transition movement?
I am a member of the core group for Transition Westminster/Arvada/Broomfield.
In what ways do you identify with the Transition movement? Why are you interested?
I am concerned about diminishing resources and see the need to rapidly develop renewable alternatives.
What background and skills do you bring to this community?
I have a strong background in physics, telecommunications, educational research, and technical writing. In addition, I have considerable knowledge of astronomy, space exploration, and sustainability, including personal research into the relationship between population and resource consumption. I also write poetry and fiction.
How can you help the growth/acceptance/vitality of the Transition movement?
Writing, preparing and giving presentations, analyzing and reporting on relevant trends and data.
Your Favorite Books/Websites/Blogs/RSS Feeds for Information about the Transition Movement
"Superbia" by Dave Wann; "Toward Sustainable Communities" by Mark Roseland; "Ecology: A Pocket Guide" by Ernest Callenbach; "Heat" by George Monbiot, "The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight" by Thom Hartmann.
Your Personal Website (if you have one)
http://www.bigpicexplorer.com

Brad Jarvis's Blog

Brad Jarvis

Tweaking the Future

Recently, two critical efforts to improve the future, health care reform in Washington and climate catastrophe mitigation in Copenhagen, hit a wall of compromise that proved (to me, at least) that our current model of relying on “leaders” to solve big problems does not work, and should not be expected to. The status quo simply has too much inertia for any small group of people to successfully challenge, especially if their livelihoods and personal power depends on maintaining it.

Unfortunately,… Continue

Posted on December 19, 2009 at 8:30am — 4 Comments

Brad Jarvis

Living Our Values Every Day

Coming to terms with the fact that maximizing individual consumption and power over others is incompatible with maximizing the longevity of our species and the well-being of the most number of people, I’ve become increasingly revolted by the overarching promotion of consumption and competition in the socioeconomic system I currently inhabit.

Emotional reactions typically stem from a clash with one’s values. This might suggest that my values have changed, given that it is a major change from how… Continue

Posted on December 3, 2009 at 6:30pm —

Brad Jarvis

The Superiority Illusion

There are at least three ways we can present ourselves to the rest of the world. We can “look good” by hiding or disguising anything that doesn’t match our perception of what’s positive about ourselves (where “positive” is defined by our values). Doing the exact opposite, we can “look bad” by displaying only the parts of ourselves that we don’t like. Third, we can “look true”: enable others to perceive us exactly as we are. In reality, each of us tends to be somewhere in the spectrum between the… Continue

Posted on November 28, 2009 at 10:54am —

Brad Jarvis

Invasive Species

In ecology, “invasive species” are species that evolve in one type of ecosystem and either move, or are moved, into another type of ecosystem. Once there, they typically wreak havoc by outcompeting native species. Humans are arguably the most successful invasive species on the planet; and will continue to be, until we either change, or finish driving ourselves extinct along with as many other species as we can take with us.

Our corporations and empire-building nations are perhaps the most visib… Continue

Posted on November 8, 2009 at 5:00pm —

Brad Jarvis

World Domination

I recently watched the movie “The World According to Monsanto,” which together with the movie “Flow” illustrates how corporations are acquiring as much power as they can, up to and including controlling the basic necessities of survival. It is apparently anathema to them for anything to be free and for anyone to not be totally dependent on them. This is the path to monoculture, and because it increases both consumption and the vulnerability of the entire population to single points of failure, t… Continue

Posted on October 26, 2009 at 5:48pm —

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At 2:10pm on January 25, 2009, David Braden said…
Thank you for your willingness to share. Here is the new discussion - Pathways to Sustainability.

Please start by stating any differences you have with what I said in the discussion introduction :-)
At 12:51pm on January 25, 2009, David Braden said…
I am now through the first 5 of your blog posts here and visited your other blog (We are the Asteroid) and website. I do not disagree with your mathematical projections of population growth and consumption of resources, rather, I agree that people respond better to opportunities and the focus on optimizing happiness . . .

I wonder if a comparison of your research and the ideas contained in Resources are not Scarce would make for a discussion that attracts participation?
At 10:38am on January 25, 2009, David Braden said…
Brad, I just read your latest blog and want to read more. You may be interested in a concept adapted from Paul Krafel's work I call complexity spirals.

Much analysis is conducted in a linear - two dimensional - fashion from resources -> consumption -> disposal. In a system analysis - three dimensional - every thing we dispose is also a resource and we can think in terms of whole system design.

Any way, I am hoping we can start a discussion of these ideas and involve more people in our mutual exploration. :)
At 3:58pm on November 15, 2008, David Olivero said…
I didn't realize when I met you last night you were the author of those intriguing blogs I've been reading! Thanks for those.
At 12:43pm on September 28, 2008, Les Squires said…
Greetings Brad! You suggested asking "What is your background?" on your Transition Resume. Done! This question now appears -- What background and skills do you bring to this community?" You've made your mark!
At 4:10pm on September 26, 2008, Dana Miller said…
Welcome, welcome, Brad....we at Transition Denver like you already! Hopefully you will join us tonight at the Quaker Meeting House for our second offical Transition Friday event on permaculture (see events)....sounds like you have amazing talents and I look forward to meeting you very soon!
 
 

Latest Activity

18 hours ago
Brad Klafehn and evi klett are now friends
18 hours ago
18 hours ago
18 hours ago
Dan Graeve updated their profile
18 hours ago
Pot luck sounds great!
yesterday
A potluck!-good food and good talk!-sounds like a plan Margaret! Can't wait until you're back! My best to you up in Boulder, hoping you feel better each day!
yesterday
evi klett might attend Nichole R's event
Sustainable Greenhouse Design at Denver Botanic Gardens
February 6, 2010 from 1pm to 5pm
Have you ever wondered if it could be done? Can you create a greenhouse that needs NO supplemental heating year round? – the answer is yes!! This greenhouse design, involving stored water as thermal mass and our bountiful Colorado sun, can be used w…
yesterday
evi klett is now friends with Kevin Price, Jim Sincock, Paul Riederer and 3
yesterday
I can only speak to my own experience. For most of my life I took the lead from my father and his cohorts in developing my worldview. When he died (a personal catastrophe), I took a few years to examine every aspect of my life -- including my values…
yesterday
yesterday
yesterday
yesterday
yesterday
Hi Paul, Sorry for the delayed response. Life got way too busy in December. I'm out of town right now but will be back by January 1st. I'll call you to discuss what we did at the library and to see what we all can cultivate for 2010 in Colorado :)
yesterday
yesterday
yesterday
Hi All. Good to be part of this group. I'm planning on coming to the watershed meeting in January. Pavlos, I'll rsvp soon.
yesterday
A group about events, programs and community building at Woodbine Ecology Center
yesterday
yesterday

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