[url=http://scienceblogs.com/casaubonsbook/2011/04/what_is_adapting_in_place.php]What Is Adapting in Place?[/url]

So what is Adapting In Place anyway? It is partly about preparedness both individual and community partly about changing expectations partly about achieving a kind of balance. It seems pedestrian in a way – lots of questions about how to do the laundry and keep food cool and work with your neighbors – ordinary things. Trivial seeming things.

Or perhaps not. In a way this may be the biggest question of all – how do we go on where we are with what we have in this new world? Moreover how do we create a model of a life worth aspiring to that isn’t destructive that honestly takes a look at where we’re going? This is not trivial and it isn’t purely personal – in fact you could argue that this is the world’s single most central question. With policy and with military might and with money and with Hollywood and with everything we have we have modelled consumption we have modelled cheap energy and we have set up almost 7 billion people to want something that 7 billion people cannot have.

We can’t have it because the earth can’t sustain it – it lacks the resources. It lacks the capacity to absorb the pollution and outputs. Re-creating the dream creating a vision of a life worth having that takes limits into account is a project that is quite literally life or death.

It starts with staying. The world cannot handle more people who pick up and leave for new territory after they’ve raped the place they live in. And while we know that there will be many relocations and radical changes most people are going to make the best of the infrastructure we’ve created over the last years simply because we have no choice.

There is insufficient time to remake our world dramatically. There are compelling reasons to believe that we may not have enough time to take a world created for cheap energy and transform it into one that can handle expensive energy and replace much of that with renewable power. The idea that we will be able to make a massive societal retrofit occur rapidly depends in large part on I think the idea that the current economic crisis is just an unpleasant coincidence that happens to be occurring just as peak oil and climate change are really hitting us. This I think is a radical error in reasoning – in fact as nearly every serious analyst who really grasps peak oil gets the economic limitations are part and parcel of our present crisis. That is our ability to do new things is going to be more and more constrained over time.

Which means that most of us aren’t going to be living in new urbanist walkable communities or in perfect ecovillages driving electric cars – we’re going to be living where we are. Some projects will be done – but the idea that we’re going to do a full-scale overhaul of our society seems deeply wrong – we did a radical build out to get ourselves here and we used up the easy cheap segment of our resources. Which means that most of us are going to be limited to what we can accomplish ourselves using our personal resources what resources are available through family friends community and governments of various levels. Much of our way of life may have been as Kunstler refers to suburbia the greatest-misallocation of resources in history but it is how we allocated the resources – we’ve done this build out and we’re going to be living with the results.

While the current situation has created mobility for some people for many people the current situation works to keep them in place. Nothing is selling in their area – so they can’t sell their house and move to another. Or they are afraid to change jobs because the loss of seniority would lead to making them easy targets for layoffs in this economy. It may not be possible any longer to get back what they owe on their house – but it may still make sense to keep paying the mortgage because they expect extended family to move in or because they can grow food on the land. Family – biological or chosen – may tie them to an area as may familiarity with the climate and region. We may decide that strong community ties make an imperfect area (and all areas are imperfect) enough to keep us there. Or we may lack the resources to move.

Staying in place isn’t always the best of a bad lot of options – sometimes it is simply the best option. There’s been a tendency to rhetorically abandon areas we don’t know what to do with – inner cities exurbs suburbia – all of these are dismissed sometimes as though this will magically vacate them. The fact is that millions of people cannot simply all go out to the countryside to their own bunkers unless we wish to create a new suburbia with barbed-wire each ticky-tacky bunker lined up in the countryside next to its neighbours . Food alone will mean that the countryside and suburbs (near the city markets often built on good farmland) will have to be populated – and the cities were usually cities for reasons long before oil – those reasons won’t go away.

More and more I am advising people to stay put or at most move to a place fairly near and like the one they live in now. I don’t think there’s enough time to adapt to new climates and environmental conditions to retrofit new homes and build communities – now that doesn’t mean some people won’t have to move. But if you can stay put I think there are some real advantages for most people – it takes *time* to build community to build soil to learn the bus lines to get into the carpools to find the cheap produce to learn about pests and diseases and how to keep cool or warm. We need a model of a new life now – not ten years from now when we’ve found the perfect place.

The nuts and bolts of adapting in place are ordinary so ordinary they seem small. Should I insulate? How do I collect rainwater? How little electricity can I do with? What do I do if the power goes out entirely? What is the right thing to eat for dinner? How shall I preserve it for later? What do we teach the kids?

I don’t live in the perfect place and these ordinary trivial seeming things are the bread and butter of my life too. They become almost invisible and we learn to miss their enormous impact – the aggregate of millions eating and pooping and keeping warm and cool and getting around.

I don’t live the perfect life in the perfect place but I remake it in the image of my dream a little more each year. I once read that people who build their dream houses spend 2 years building them – and then live in them for an average of 7 years. Because dreams change. Because sometimes what we dream about is the thing we can’t have not the thing we do. And yet most of us in the developed world have more possessions more comforts than the kings of old than the richest people of our great-great grandparent’s time. We have more ease than the slave owners of the past with fossil-fueled slaves to do our bidding. If we can’t come to embrace what we do have and a fair share who can? If we can’t do with less will you ask someone who lives a harder life with less to do it? If we who made the dream and sold it to the rest of the world can’t change our dream when it doesn’t fit us anymore what hope is there?

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