It's Important-One Resident's Thoughts About 'Stuff'
Itâs Importantâ
One Residentâs Thoughts About âStuffâ
By Kendra Bobowick
The Bee is introducing the new series, Itâs Important, which includes a brief interview and video revealing â one resident, one idea at a time â what is important to you. Be part of Itâs Important. Contact Kendra at 426-3141 or reach her at Kendra@thebee.com.
Who: Benjamin J. Roberts is a representative for First Affirmative Financial Network LLC and runs Conscious Financial Directions from his One Riverside Road Office.
What is important to him: The Story of Stuff â a 20-minute online video. According to its website, The Story of Stuff is a âfast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns ⦠[that] exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable world ⦠it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.â
Leaning forward in his office chair, Mr Roberts was quick to say that everybody needs to see this story.
âYou need to laugh, but itâs so depressing when you really think about it,â said Mr Roberts, who had not thought of the video for a while, but watched it again recently and called it âeloquent, easily understood,â and, he hopes, âa challenge.â
Stuff. A consumer society. Diminishing resources. Accumulating trash. The online video looks at how and where things are manufactured, a productâs arrival in stores, then explores an itemâs lifecycle. Things are purchased, used, and ultimately thrown away. Mr Roberts talks about planned obsolescence. âHow badly can [a manufacturer] design stuff so it breaks and you buy more?â
âEverything we do is bound up in it,â Mr Roberts said. Trash. âWe see this as a separate problem, but no, no, no. Itâs the way weâve organized the economy thatâs done this.â
He is concerned about stuff, and âthe way things become obsolete,â including cars, buildings, coffee mugs â everything we purchase. âItâs a systemic problem.â He worries that we âthink of it in bits, and somehow things will work out, itâs compartmentalized.â But thatâs âmagical thinking,â he said.
He concluded, âWe have a lot of work to do; we have to make personal choices. We need a sustainable system.â Even frugal, conservative families struggle to minimize their consumption of âstuffâ he notes, but the efforts often are not enough. He would stress several times, âWe canât be passive. We canât expect technology to fix this for us.â
Visit NewtownBee.com to view the online interview with Mr Roberts, and also to learn how you can share whatâs important to you in an upcoming Itâs Important column. Learn more about The Story of Stuff at TheStoryOfStuff.com.