Sunday, 22 June 2014

The Real ‘Super’ Markets

Walking through the Gembrook Market today, I enjoyed perusing the home-grown fruits and vegetables, fragrant handmade soaps and candles, colourful woollen clothes, sparkly jewellery, and smooth, wood-turned ornaments. Everyone was friendly and relaxed, enjoying the winter sunshine. A skilled quena player from Bolivia set the mood with his haunting music, and ended up becoming a new friend after some conversation in Spanish, sharing about experiences as migrants in Australia. We also got chatting with Jen from ‘Jen’s handmade soaps’ about her business and what it was like being part of the local market scene in Eastern Victoria. We left after a good hour or more there, laden with carrots, apples, lemons, honey and soap.

This was a rare day out with the leisure to browse and enjoy quality, local produce. The trap that we usually fall into in my family is that of leaving purchases of food, gifts and other products until they have run out, and then the only place open at that time that sells them is the large franchise down the road. Everything that one could possibly need is on offer in these supermarkets, discount stores, chemists and other large-scale chain stores. Items are usually sold for a reasonable price and there is a wide range from which to select one’s purchase.

But who really benefits? The original producers are far away, unknown, faceless workers who, one can only hope, are paid a fair wage for their labour. In order to produce such a large quantity of food, land and animals on the supply farms are stretched to the limit and often lose their quality as a result. The materials for non-fresh food products may come from a place entirely foreign to where they are assembled, and the owners and designers of the products sit in boardrooms in wealthy countries, planning how to reach a wide target audience with the minimum cost and the maximum profit. Foreign products are often subsidised to make them more competitive than their Australian counterparts, taking profit away from our magnificent country. The stores themselves may or may not even be owned in Australia, let alone locally, and look the same wherever you go.

To give credit where it is due, many supermarkets are now putting photos of the Australian farmers on some fresh food products. This helps to at least put a face to the food. There are also products that are certified ‘Australian made’ and ‘Australian owned’ and state that they are made by a family business. Purchases of these items do help to stop the ever-present infiltration of home brand replacements that end up closing down many a medium-sized business in favour of the franchise giants’ more ‘economical’ cheap, mass-produced versions.

In comparison with the franchises, products in local farmers’ and craft markets are unique and have a story. Every stallholder knows their wares inside out, having designed and made them themselves. Every purchase directly benefits the local community and local people, and products are often made in ways that use less chemicals and large machinery, and help to maintain skills learnt in families and community settings.

It may take more planning, browsing and may cost a little more, but can you imagine the benefit to everyone if local markets were the main place to buy and sell the items needed for everyday living? Imagine the creativity, the blossoming of small businesses, the new friendships made and the skills that would be learnt.

Could it be that local produce and craft markets are the real ‘super’ markets?


Comment time…
What would you like to buy in a local market?
What would you sell at a local market?
What is one item that you would like to learn to make yourself?


For more information see the websites below:



Sunday, 8 June 2014

Una Nueva Forma de Resistencia a las Compras de Ropa

Desde hace años, he odiado ir de compras para ropa. No estoy segura de cómo comenzó esta aversión. Quizás cómo adolescente estaba consciente de mi forma física (¡teniendo caderas visibles!), o quizás sentía que comprar ropa demostraba cierto materialismo que no quería promocionar. O será que no encontraba mi estilo. Comoquiera que resultó, el resultado fue una joven de 17 años que pasó un verano entero vestida de camiseta enorme y regalada, un short verde y cómodo, y usando el mismo par de sandalias gastadas, diciendo que mi vida ideal sería la de una chica indígena de una tribu aislada, preferiblemente en un siglo del pasado más sencillo. Aunque dijera que no me importaba mi presentación física, sentía en lo profundo de mi corazón una vergüenza acerca de mi modo de vestir, y me quedé con la idea de que era menos 'mujer' que mis compañeras porque no me gustaba ir de compras y no me cuidaba mucho la apariencia.

Imagínate la reacción cuando este adolescente desaliñada llegó a la capital de la belleza: Argentina, Sudamérica, en la cual la gente se baña dos veces por día, se lava las zapatillas al menos una vez por semana y se viste de ropa ajustada, sin importar la forma física. No pasó mucho tiempo antes de que mi familia anfitriona me hizo saber que mi ropa no estaba bien y me llevó de compras.

Regresando a Australia, mi familia y amigos notaron la diferencia. ¡'Rosa' tenía forma y estilo! A pesar del nuevo estilo latino, todavía me pesaba ir de compras, y mi esposo querido se recuerda del barrinche que hacía cada vez que íbamos de compras para buscar ropa, ya que mi linda ropa argentina se estaba gastando. Yo no veía el sentido de comprar ropa hecha por mayor, de telas sintéticas, de tiendas de cadena y mayormente fabricada en el Asia del Sur, donde yo no tenía ni idea de las condiciones laborales o el impacto ambiental de las telas en las cuales yo estaba invertiendo. No me importaba si la ropa estaba barata. Para mi, esas compras todavía contribuían a una lenta muerte global.

Un par de años después, estaba sentada en una clase de educación física en la universidad, viendo un documental llamado 'La Económica de la Felicidad'. Casi lloraba viendo los efectos terribles de las compañías multinacionales que cerraban negocios locales y rendían anticuadas las culturas tradicionales en todo el mundo con sus fábricas enormes y sus cultivos agotados de mala calidad y llenos de veneno. Afortunadamente, el final del documental proveyó una semilla de esperanza que despertó algo en mi: la denominada 'localización'. ¡Así tiene que ser! pensé. Tendría que hallar el productor local de lana, un cortador de sastre y un diseñador de ropa para vestirme, o bien, aprender a tejer ropas por mi misma. Soñaba de un modo de vida en una comunidad en la cual cada persona produciera un producto diferente y todos vivieran una existencia completamente sostenible.

Faltando las habilidades y recursos para realizar este sueño, buscaba ropa en las ferias. La ropa ahí era más que nada del estilo 'hippie' que no me interesaba mucho, y la ropa 'australiana' que encontré en Internet no estaba fabricada acá y la mayoría no estaba hecha de textiles naturales. Encima, esa ropa era muy cara. El próximo intento fue buscar ropa en las grandes tiendas de buena reputación, que fuera al menos de calidad y no se tendría que reemplazar cada año. Ninguna de estas tiendas pudieron decir que tenían ropa de telas naturales, y eso buscaba yo para evitar el sudor y picazón que me daba mi ropa sintética.

Al final, busqué en Internet la frase 'ropa orgánica y natural en Australia' y encontré la respuesta que necesitaba. Había varios sitios web que vendían ropa cómoda y duradera, de algodón orgánico, bambú y lana merina, a un precio razonable. Aunque sea esto sólo el comienzo de este nuevo viaje de compras sostenibles, me alegró mucho saber que el campo de ropa ética y sostenible esta creciendo. Me gusta la idea que, estando fuera del modo de compras que hace la mayoría de la gente, comprar todo de negocios pequeños y éticos por medio de internet en vez de comprar todo en los centros comerciantes sin pensarlo dos veces ¡se puede considerar como una nueva forma de resistencia a las compras!

Y bueno. Ya es tiempo que ustedes comenten: ¿Tú alguna vez has hallado un producto ético que te encantó en absoluto? ¿Tienes una marca preferida de ropa natural? o ¿Sabes coserla? O bien, ¿Sentiste alguna vez un desencanto con las prácticas de compras comunes y encontraste una mejor alternativa?

Saludos pensativos,

The Learning Philosopher

A New Kind of Clothes-Shopping Resistance!

For years now, I have hated shopping for clothes. I'm not sure how it first started. Perhaps as an adolescent I was somewhat conscious of my shape (that is, having visible hips!!), or felt that buying clothes showed a degree of materialism that I did not want to endorse. Or maybe I hadn’t found my style. However it came about, the result was a 17-year old who spent an entire summer in baggy, stretched hand-me-down T-shirts, comfy green shorts and the same pair of worn thongs, saying that my ideal life would be an all-natural indigenous girl in a tribe somewhere, preferably hundreds of years in the past. While saying I didn’t care about clothes or physical appearance, deep down, I felt embarrassed about my presentation and somehow developed the idea that I was less of a ‘genuine’ woman than my peers because I didn’t love shopping and was not well groomed.

Imagine the reaction when this scruffy teen arrived in presentation capital: Argentina, South America, where many people shower twice a day, wash their runners at least weekly and wear skin-tight clothes no matter what their shape. It wasn’t long before my host family let me know that my wardrobe was not ok and took me shopping.

Coming back home to Australia, my family and friends noticed a marked difference. ‘Rosa’ actually had a shape! Despite this apparent Latina makeover, I still found shopping painful, and my dear husband remembers tears and tantrums on trips to the shopping centre to look for clothes as my well loved Argentinian gear started to wear out. I could not see the value in buying mass-produced, synthetic clothing from large chain stores, and mostly made in South-East Asia where I had no idea of the work conditions or the environmental impacts of the fabrics I was investing in. I didn’t care if it was ‘on sale’. For me, those purchases were still contributing to a slow, global death.

A couple of years later, I was sitting in a Physical Education tutorial at uni, watching ‘The Economics of Happiness’. I was almost in tears watching the disastrous effects of large-scale multinational companies that were shutting down local businesses and rendering local cultures obsolete around the world with their massive factories and poor quality, thoroughly poisoned and overworked crops. Fortunately, the end of the documentary provided a seed of hope that ignited something in me: ‘localisation’. That was it! I would have to find the local wool producer, seamstress and designer, or learn to make all my clothes myself! I dreamt of a commune-type lifestyle where everyone produced a different product and lived a completely sustainable existence.

Lacking the skills and means to make this a reality, I looked around at local markets for clothing. The clothing there seemed to follow a certain ‘hippie’ and tie-dyed theme that I wasn’t so interested in, and the Australian clothing I found on websites was not necessarily made here or even made with sustainable, natural materials. Plus, they were very expensive. Next stop was the reputable stockists of quality apparel at the shopping centre, with the hope that at least high quality clothing would last longer than the cheaper options I had been replacing annually. None of these stores could say that they stocked clothes made of natural materials, which I was looking for, having experienced some itchy and sweaty side effects of synthetic and bleached materials.

Finally, an online search for ‘organic and natural clothing Australia’ returned refreshing results. I found multiple Australian websites offering comfortable and durable clothing made of organic cotton, bamboo and merino wool, suitably priced for a medium budget. Although it is only the beginning of this new shopping journey, I am thrilled to find the growing list of suppliers of healthy, ethical and somewhat local clothing, and rather fancy that, being outside of the mainstream smorgasbord of international retailers, this approach is a new type of revolutionary, ‘resistance’ shopping!

Ok. Comment time! Have you ever found an ethical product that you absolutely loved? Do you have a favourite brand of natural clothing or know how to make it? Or have you ever felt dissatisfied with following mainstream shopping practices and found a better way?

Yours musingly,

The Learning Philosopher



Sunday, 1 June 2014

Aprender a Filosofar - Una introducción breve a mi blog

«Nada tiene sentido —dice el Maestro—, ¡ningún sentido en absoluto!». ¿Qué obtiene la gente con trabajar tanto bajo el sol? Las generaciones van y vienen, pero la tierra nunca cambia.

Cuanta más sabiduría tengo, mayor es mi desconsuelo; aumentar el conocimiento sólo trae más dolor. (Eclesiastés 1:2-4, 18 NTV)

¿Algunos de ustedes cuestionan muchos aspectos de su vida, a diario? Por ejemplo: ¿Cómo mi consumo de electricidad hoy afecta el calentamiento global? o ¿Quién habrá fabricado mi ropa realmente, y bajo qué condiciones? o ¿Qué política e ideologías estoy poniendo en práctica en mi salón de clases de primaria, quizás sin saber?

La verdad que me preocupan esos temas globales y cómo mi vida diaria tiene un impacto.

El propósito de este blog es filosofar acerca del aprendizaje y aprender a poner en práctica la sabiduría.

Algunos comentarios hablarán sobre el aprendizaje en el sentido de la educación. Otros hablarán de varios aspectos de la vida, de la lavada de platos a la planificación urbana y el tango.

Espero que disfruten y me acompañen en este viaje de ideas, y por favor comenten sí desean. ¿Quién sabe? Puede ser que nos inspiremos los unos a los otros a demostrar mayor amor y sabiduría.

Saludos meditativos,

The Learning Philosopher