I've grown up in the Midwest, so most of my childhood was spent in nature. In the summer I spent most of my time in a willow tree in my front yard. As I grew up we had to cut down branches, and I saw it age into decay. In a strange way it could be likened to the giving tree, but we didn't cut it down, and I want it to survive. As a part of my own work to reduce my own emissions. I think about the trees and other energy sources as I consume resources for my own survival. As I grow up and become more and more independent I am trying to reduce food waste and eat locally. My family and I belong to a local grocery co-op which delivers us local food. I am working to develop more strategies to consume resources I've grown myself.
This past semester I began my senior project a work which analyzes savior narratives in food and agriculture. My focus likens soy as a savior crop to the evolution of monotheism from polytheism. My hope with this project is to develop a critique of savior crops in agriculture, and introduce how these narrative work against their goals. Originally I planned to ground this project in a paper, but I am considering introducing multiple platforms including a podcast. The podcast section would have a series of interviews with soy farmers, soy historians, and soy scientists to gather information about the soy industry, before introducing a critique and making the parallel evolution of religious histories.
I've never been a huge fan of scientific articles. Consuming any sort of information has been much more palatable when it comes in the form of a narrative or it can be directly related to my own life. I grew up in a public school system dedicated to the sciences and memorization. Because of the strictly fact based environment, I had a lot of trouble navigating and connecting facts to a greater schema. Storytelling and creativity are really important components to connecting all of the really important scientific discoveries being made right now. Stories force facts into relevance, and broadens the audience who receives them. Stories like Interstellar widened my grasp of the closeness and concern for climate change. I get to create meaningful stories and develop my storytelling capabilities with One Planet Podcast & The Creative Process.