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We're not there yet, people

  • May. 29th, 2007 at 5:03 PM
wwo, world without oil, mia
great posts last week fromCeeGee, [info]lead_tag, [info]meggido_tell and the war is in words. They've made me go out and look at what's bad in Bristol since the crisis.

I've been a bit guilty of concentrating on the positive - of which there's been a fair bit, like the new Severn Barrage, the food rationing, the new allotments and the new, more practical teaching in our schools. I've learnt more about cooking, growing and building than I ever knew before the crisis, and I feel far less stressed out since they removed some of the exams.

But there have been consequences here that haven't been so good. Like others say, whilst some people have profitied from the crisis (like Greg's solar company) and most people have survived so far, those close to the breadline before have had their worlds pulled apart.

The number of student houses still with letting signs up is incredible - usually the streets of Redland and Clifton are packed just before christmas with students but although there's a fair few still around, they are quieter - that student loan's got to spread even further, I guess. I wonder what'll happen when I'm applying to university next year - will the whole system have changed again? I'm enjoying biology the most now - coupled with the stuff I'm learning about growing plants. It's looking like a good option to study further.

There was a report in the paper saying that a lot more students were applying to their home unis than ever before - it used to be most students would move to a different city on their parents' money but apparently there's been a big shift this year. Some kids I met on holiday in France said nearly everyone studies from their home university there, so I guess we're just catching up with the rest of Europe.

Scary stuff from around the world, especially Venezuela and the prospect of war with Iran... it's all too much. Can't we just all get along? I guess not, when the oil is running out.

There are positives though. Mum was saying it's been a long time since she heard about a car crash. I had a think then. Of all the people I know who died that weren't over 50 or in the army or something, they were almost always killed by a car crash. With people driving less, so long as we keep a decent grip on healthcare and crime, could this crisis actually reduce the number of deaths?

A lot of angry programs at the moment on the tv about the lack of oil, mostly the more infamous b-list celebrities complaining that their lifestyles been cut down. Another positive then!

We're entering a new world. There are positives and there are negatives. As oil gets less, there will be hard times. But I think as long as we're prepared to adapt, there will always be positives.

Update: As Prudent RVer linked to this article, so will I. It's a great look at how we can change things but we'll have to make a few very hard turns to do it.

[author's note: week 30. Two days to go!

A short one with my last two exams coming up. Expect tomorrow's post to be very small or missing entirely.]

Comments

[info]lucy1965 wrote:
May. 29th, 2007 05:00 pm (UTC)
You've reminded me: I found out during the interview for the position that I'm going to have to learn to drive over here!

I don't know why I didn't think of it sooner: of course I've always driven to my mothers, so why wouldn't I do so here? But I've never driven a standard transmission, and everything's on the wrong side! I wish someone had had a camera; I imagine my face was something to see!

At least I don't have to buy the car: they're the property of the clinic, with the NHS logo all over the doors and the first of the diesel hybrid drivetrains under the hood. I'll have to check one out with a Smartcard AND sign out with the guard at the secured parking gate when it's time to do rounds.

David lived with us when he went to uni in the States -- it's very strange to write that -- and it wasn't that bad, but it takes a lot of mindful negotiation to live with one's children once they're legally adults. It's a habit we've gotten out of, and it doesn't take a tarot deck to foresee a lot of tension and anger during the readjustment period.

We had thought that David and Emily would be living with us, but they might wind up in Scotland, as he's got a job offer from the RSPB; they need an aviculturist for one of their peregrine reintroduction programmes. Never let them tell you that volunteer work doesn't matter, love: he was at the Aviary every day they'd have him from the age of 13, cleaning up bird shit and stuffing vitamins down dead fish -- now he has more hours logged raising raptors than a lot of adults, and it's led him right into work.
[info]cycleboy_wwo wrote:
May. 30th, 2007 12:42 am (UTC)
as a result of the shock, student housing here has gotten cheap as crap. everything is negotiable.
[info]miawithoutoil wrote:
May. 30th, 2007 10:36 am (UTC)
totally the same. Still, the amount of landlords that used to mess their students about with deposits and expensive rent have it on the other foot now!

I'll check out that band cocorosie? always on the lookout for more tunes!

-Mia

About miawithoutoil

Miawithoutoil is the blog of a fictional character, Mia, in the alternative reality game 'World Without Oil'. Every day in the real world is a week in the game, where oil prices are spiralling out of control and the world struggles to cope with the implications.

Mia lives in Bristol, England. She is 16 and lives with her single mother, with her father away in a farm in the mountains of Wales. Newly finished school, Mia is struggling to come to grips with the changes she's witnessing but dearly wants to make a positive difference.

This blog is the creation of twenty-something science fiction writer Tomas L. Martin. His real blog can be found under the livejournal name 'darrkespur'. Thanks for reading and enjoy the story!

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