Lakitu
@weez
Lakitu
@weez
greener neighbourhoods that offer a connection with nature might actually reduce the health gap between rich and poor and lead to a better, more equal society.
“Human rights' are meaningless if the ecosystems that sustain us do not have the legal right to exist.” Lucy Jones - Losing Eden

Community action 4 public health
Losing Eden by Lucy Jones
A case for why connection to the wild is so important to our mental, physical, spiritual and community health.
The health of the human body is ultimately dependent on the health of habitat and community. And yet, this connection is almost universally ignored in modern health disciplines where biomedical reductionism rules the day. Human health and environmental preservation are treated as entirely different fields, with miles of empty space between them.
Keeping Americans at or above a certain baseline of good health requires collective action to assure the availability of such necessities as food, housing, and transportation.
The broad mission of public health is to “fulfill society’s interest in assuring conditions in which people can be healthy.” (p. 1)
Today, most of us lack the direct experience of being witness to a meaningful and family-centered dying process. We have outsourced the washing, dressing, and burial of the body of our beloved. Furthermore, just as grief is too often viewed as an illness to overcome, death, too, is seen as something to “fight.”
Death is pushed to the margins in modern life. There is much drama about the funeral, but this often remains external and superficial. Our consumerist society has lost the sense of ritual and wisdom necessary to acknowledge this rite of passage. The person who has entered the voyage of death needs more in-depth care.