Putting yourself in the shoes of another December an impressive short - Green Ecologist

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Feel sensations and put yourself in the shoes of another

Putting yourself in the place of the other, listen before speaking, recognize the individual feelings of each one, in the other or try to understand our environment, what "is right or wrong." All this is part of the same statement, the ability to "empathy" from each person…

Christmases are dates where less responsible consumption prevails and many times our actions represent "unethical" towards the environment, evidently according to the eyes with which one looks at it.

So I highly recommend seeing this short present in full. December directed byAndreas Pasvantis. Putting yourself in someone else's shoes and try to feel their sensations or emotions can sometimes be embarrassing but also as a starting point to begin to understand another perspective or reality.

Just a number … Approximately 25 to 30,000,000 million real trees are sold for Christmas in the United States.. The zeros are well placed and data drawn from the National Christmas Tree Association. Data on Europe, we have not found, but in the North there is a lot of tradition.

At this time … many crazy things! And this is seen in the portal of Muyinteresante. Some students at the University of Sheffield (United Kingdom) have developed a calculator that estimates based on four mathematical formulas how many balls, tinsel and lights are needed to optimally decorate the Christmas tree.

So, for example, the number of balls that should adorn a 180-centimeter tall tree would be 37, to which would be added 565 centimeters of Christmas lights and 919 centimeters of tinsel. As for the size that the star that crowns it should have, it is calculated by dividing the height of the tree in centimeters by 10…. The calculator is offered as the idea of… "We hope that our formulas will make Christmas easier for everyone."

Other surprises of this world, comes from the hand of the University of Philadelphia where a biologist argues that at Christmas it is much more ecological to cut real trees than to buy plastic (Article HERE).

The reasoning is the same that is usually used to make it sound sustainable and ecological: If you take it as an industrial process and you are really going to plant new ones in fields provided for this, choosing genuine and authentic trees you will be removing more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than buying artificial trees produced with petroleum derivatives and transported from Chinese factories….

Each one to adopt his action and opportune decorations, but a good nativity scene is the tradition in many "in Spain" homes.

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