Trash that is transformed into luxury!
24.10.09 - 8:48 | Categories: Ecoblogs Network

People who have talent are born with it. This is undeniable. I’m amazed with Usha Velasco’s admirable work. The designer transforms materials found in the trash into surprising furniture and decorative objects. Paint cans, newspapers, pet bottles, iron scraps, construction wood, buckets and whatever else he finds in recycling centers.

Don’t miss the opportunity to check out this young man’s sensational work. I’m still drooling. I’ll try to make something for my new apartment—that is, if my lack of ability doesn’t get too much in the way. Too bad these pieces are not for sale. However, the designer offers courses and workshops. Check out the details of the room above:



The pieces are designed for easy reproduction. According to the artist, they don’t require any special ability (ha, ha, ha, he doesn’t know that I’m totally clumsy). You can copy, save, reproduce or change the designs. The entire blog’s content is absolutely copyright-free. Everybody can be inspired by the designs, copy and disseminate them. And quote the source, of course, because the artist deserves and is entitled to this recognition.

This precious tip was sent to me by dear @anaclaudiabessa. Thanks, girl!

Photos - AteliĂŞ do Lixo

We can live without plastic bags
16.10.09 - 8:58 | Categories: Ecoblogs Network

The Ministry of Environment has selected October 15 to celebrate the Day without Plastic Bags. The members of Rede Ecoblogs—of which I’m a proud participant—have prepared this beautiful e-card (above) to make people aware of the number of plastic bags consumed in Brazil and stimulate them to go an entire week without using them.

And I will go even further: I’m working to eliminate them for good. With patience and determination, we can replace the infamous plastic bags with alternative bags.

I’ve written several posts about it:

Ladybug Lu Freitas has precious tips on how to get rid of plastic bags. Take a look and do your part too: help to spread this campaign! You can e-mail this e-card to your friends; or tell in your blog what you are doing to replace the plastic bag, with a link to Rede Ecoblogs: http://www.ecoblogs.com.br/, all right? I’m counting on your contribution!

To paraphrase our dear Cintia Costa: “kisses (one from me and another one from the planet)!”

Teacher, a necessary or a disposable thing?
14.10.09 - 6:22 | Categories: Ecoblogs Network

Are we developing the “Burnout syndrome,” which according to research conducted by the National Confederation of Education Workers (CNTE) affects approximately 25 percent of the teachers? “It’s not stress, depression or anguish: it’s worse, because the teacher becomes a robot, which is a very serious thing since education implies in dedication.

The syndrome makes workers feel detached from their work so nothing else matters and every effort seems useless. It makes them feel highly unmotivated and appears when workers face the violence that is hitting both private and public schools. This violence affects teachers and harms the performance of the students.”

When I look at the students, I realize that they are not quite sure about what the purposes of our classes are, and why they need to learn all these things. I try to explain why by showing that our history can be registered using several methods, from different types of Arts, and that, in their lives, they are able to choose their favorite method to learn the universal history of the nations, travel through the human adventure, and uncover the most transcendental issues about the meaning of life.

My job is to introduce them to the Literary Art. None of them has asked me why, in this case, they are not forced to have Music, or Painting, or Sculpture, or Archeology, or Anthropology or Drama classes, for example. In their opinion, knowing the literary movements, their authors and works is not really useful, except for the things they’ll come across in their “SATs”

So, I think that, if students ask “why do we need this for?” or “why do we need to know all of this?” it’s either because my classes are not conveying the importance of learning Literature or because the content is boring and out of context. What is their lack of interest trying to tell me? What do they really want to tell me when they talk, make jokes or sleep during classes (yes, some of them sleep in class) or behave aggressively?

I feel that their attitudes are not aimed specifically at me or the subject they need to learn, but to this boring, asphyxiating environment that classrooms have become. Perhaps they’d rather be in another place, certainly in their rooms, or playing computer games or in an environment that makes they feel like participating in the activities and never wanting to stop.

At these moments, I see my limitations to turn my classes into something creative and interesting, and to go beyond my limits. And I ask myself: “why am I a teacher,” if everybody has within themselves an anxiety, a natural curiosity to uncover their past as well as the means to get such knowledge (provided this is what they want, of course)?

So I come to the conclusion that, for students who really want to broaden their culture and satisfy their hunger for knowledge, simply attending classes and seating at those desks is not enough. I need to rethink my methods. Perhaps we, the teachers, have already been discarded and swallowed by the globalization engine, as we face a generation whose purposes are so different and immediate. A robot teacher. Really? Read more about the burnout syndrome here and here.

Image: Repliee Q2 Robot