HOME SWEET HABITAT No progress on the wheel bearings yesterday. Reassembled twice, still can't see why it's not quite fitting together properly. But as usual, just keep banging that head against the brick wall and maybe somehow you'll break through... I usually do. Yesterday I was actually aiming to wind my way to talking about housing. The other day I saw part of an interview on TV with someone who had done a study that claimed in the next few days the total mass (well I'm guessing mass, maybe volume but that seems a less reasonable measure) of man-made materials will exceed the total of all living things. Also noted was that the average human (nobody ever wants to be him) accounts for their own weight in man-made materials every couple of weeks. Clearly this is the sort of headline-grabbing study that it isn't wise to place very much faith in (even less my paraphrased version of it), but regardless it's a good starting point to look at where those materials go and what they are all really for. Cutting to the chase, because I need to get back to swearing at my wheel hub, it's houses. Not just the building, but the habitat that they provide, that we create for ourselves. They are capsules that protect us from the Earth, because honestly as much as we praise it, we hate it out there. It's always either too bright, or too dark, or too cold, or too hot, or too wet, or too dry, or too uncomfortable, too dirty, too public, or just too boring. So we pool up all our energies to make and maintain our own ideal habitat. To do this we pull in a seemingly infinite variety of resources that come together in goods made from materials completely unknown to the natural world, often formed in ways beyond our own individual understanding. In pulling these materials in, the houses themselves also pull themselves together. The strain against the environment is less easily shared over distance. So towns form, within them factories, services, to create and operate more goods so that everyone can live more comfortably in their personal habitats, ever more removed from the world outside. Towns grow into cities, where more factories and services serve other factories and services, and from them all that can be seen, sitting atop the earth on layers of concrete and tarmac, is the framework supporting these capsules, which are drawn together ever more densely, ever more removed from the world that they're made from. That the natural world suffers from this should surprise nobody. To consider nothing more than the now-barren earth underneath the buildings of all the world's huge cities, the impact is undeniable. As for whether it can be sustained, well there are already countless cases where towns and even cities have become abandoned because their locations made them unsustainable within the vast economic structure that supports most of them, once whatever resource they relied on failed to take the strain against the rest of their displaced natural environment. This will go on, and get worse. But at home we'll keep on living in the best environment we can, pulling against nature with all our strength, pulling along with some and against others, but all against the world that we're from. - The Free Thinker