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April 1 - April 30, 2020
Jaime Desormeaux's avatar

Jaime Desormeaux

Chikara

"To minimize my overall carbon footprint."

POINTS TOTAL

  • 0 TODAY
  • 0 THIS WEEK
  • 749 TOTAL

participant impact

  • UP TO
    1.0
    advocacy action
    completed
  • UP TO
    19
    conversations
    with people
  • UP TO
    1.0
    documentary
    watched
  • UP TO
    3.0
    hours
    volunteered
  • UP TO
    67
    meatless or vegan meals
    consumed
  • UP TO
    140
    minutes
    spent learning
  • UP TO
    21
    plastic straws
    not sent to the landfill

Jaime's actions

Oceans

Learn about Our Oceans

I will spend at least 50 minutes learning about how our oceans support life on Earth by producing oxygen, regulating climate, and providing habitat, food, and jobs.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Climate

Earth Day Action: Write a Love Letter, Poem, or Song to Earth

I will express my love and gratitude for our Earth by writing a love letter, poem, or song to Earth.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

People

Earth Day Action: Share Eco Tips

Through social media or on the Earth Day Ecochallenge feed, I will share my favorite environmentally friendly habit with my friends, even if it’s not an Earth Day action.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Oceans

A Web Browser to Save our Oceans

Make OceanHero your default search engine and recover one ocean-bound plastic bottle for every 5 searches.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Oceans

Say No to Plastic Straws

An estimated 71% of seabirds and 30% of turtles have been found with plastics in their stomachs. When marine wildlife ingest plastic, they have a 50% mortality rate. By asking for no straw when placing a drink order, I will keep 1 plastic straw(s) of out of the ocean each day.

COMPLETED 0
DAILY ACTIONS

Food

Reduce Animal Products

I will enjoy 2 meatless meal(s) and/or 2 vegan meal(s) each day of the challenge.

COMPLETED 0
DAILY ACTIONS

Food

Watch a Documentary about Food Sovereignty

I will watch 1 documentary(ies) about food sovereignty: the right of local peoples to control their own food systems including markets, ecological resources, food cultures and production methods.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

People

Connect While Social Distancing

I will connect with at least 1 person/people a day through phone call or video chat to support mine and other’s mental and emotional health during this challenging time.

COMPLETED 0
DAILY ACTIONS

People

Volunteer in my Community

I will volunteer 1 hour(s) in my community helping people who are most at need right now, including elderly and immunocompromised people, people without childcare, and people whose jobs have been affected by social distancing measures.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Participant Feed

Reflection, encouragement, and relationship building are all important aspects of getting a new habit to stick.
Share thoughts, encourage others, and reinforce positive new habits on the Feed.

To get started, share “your why.” Why did you join the challenge and choose the actions you did?


  • Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/30/2020 8:09 PM
    I am glad to have had the opportunity to take part in this challenge.  I learned that there are really so many ways to do our part for the environment and make it more habitable for generations to come.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Oceans Learn about Our Oceans
    What is one way in which oceans support your life on Earth? What is one way you can help take care of ocean health with your actions?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/25/2020 1:48 PM
    Oceans contain marine life.  For many cultures, people depend on marine life for food. Oceans are also providing water through desalination processes in places like Israel and Cape Town, South Africa.

    We can take care of the oceans by not overfishing, by supporting careers that focus on marine life and oceanography to continue awareness, and learning about our daily impact on oceans as consumers who buy, use, and waste.


  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Food Watch a Documentary about Food Sovereignty
    How does food sovereignty address the complex agrarian transition to modern food systems?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/24/2020 8:17 PM
    Often times when we go to local markets and corner stores in an urban environment, such as in New York City, the boroughs, it can be challenging to find quality food.  Today, the options are many more than when I was a child growing up in Brooklyn.  I never heard of the word "organic" before adulthood, except when I was learning chemistry in high school, and then I didn't relate it to food.

    What is super awesome about New York City is that there are so many options for food today because of the development of cuisines from various nationalities all over the boroughs.  Because of decades of immigration since the late 1800s from European countries and Asian countries especially, there is not one cuisine you cannot find from your mother country as a resident of New York.

    I watched "Food on the Go" on Netflix, which was a snap shot of the journey Italians took to be accepted in the Americas from the time of mass immigration (around 1890) until now.  The commentators cited that this acceptance can be most attributed to Italian cuisine.

    Coming to Argentina and New York in the greatest of migration waves, Italians were actually taken aback at how much meat was available. Most of them left Italy to gain a better economic position for themselves and their families and meat was rarely on their table.  And the meat in the Americas was cheap.  So they jumped at the chance to fill their plates with loads of their favorite dishes featuring the meats they missed back home.

    One of the elements to their cuisine that they did lack in the Americas was variety and quality in vegetables.  Some of the early migrants traveled with some of their favorite vegetables and planted, grew, and sold in makeshift markets.  As I understand it, this is when they began to exercise their food sovereignty in the places they settled.  The markets took over the streets and the mayor or local official gave them places in markets in neighborhoods all over the borough.   Their markets had backroom cook shops that eventually turned into restaurants.  This brought wealth to the Italian population.

    This wealth helped the Italian diaspora to be recognized in its culinary offerings to the Americas.  Italians were able to teach their cuisine and express pride in their cooking methods and offer their foods not just in restaurants but in markets and supermarkets globally.

    In this documentary, Food on the Go, I understood that at some point the government has to see value in what a people bring to the economy and culture of a place and take a stand to make place for this ethnic group.  But if the Italians didn't advocate for themselves-to be able to sell the products they knew were lacking in their communities, and products that were essential to the totality of their everyday cuisine: vegetables-they would not have been seen.  The mayor may not even have known how many Italians were truly present and deserving of representation in markets where they lived.

    As Italian food has become a favorite for most families in the Americas, Italians can continue to ensure their cuisine maintains authenticity, not by continuing to work on farms back home, necessarily, but by supporting the farms and investing in markets for every neighborhood in the Americas and abroad to feature the very best of their cuisine, in restaurants as well, from Sottocasa to the local pizzeria.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Climate Earth Day Action: Write a Love Letter, Poem, or Song to Earth
    What are you grateful for about our planet? Share what you created or your general thoughts of love and gratitude with everyone else!

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/21/2020 11:36 AM
    There never was such a place as Earth,
    With all its unique creations from His work.
    Emerging from darkness, bestowed with light,
    Illumined by the sun, unapologetically bright.
    When rain fell down, its surface became lush,
    With all sorts of plant life and waters to enjoy in no rush.
    Look at the species, beings--there are so many,
    Defying extinction, despite the irony…

    “How can I ever thank you? Oh, sweet Earth of ours!”
    -Be kind to you and be sure to mind my human powers.

  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    People Earth Day Action: Share Eco Tips
    What environmentally friendly habit have you most recently implemented? How do you ensure that you are successful in creating or changing a habit?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/18/2020 3:04 PM
    I used to throw out soft plastic packaging.  Then I learned that BUGS and my grocery COOP take these wrappings, so I have saved them to be recycled.

    I create habits by first learning about the benefits.  I maintain a self-improvement lifestyle so I look for ways the habit can benefit me and then it isn't hard to start.  I use lists in an app called Evernote and on my phone's notes app to keep track of things.  If I really want to be reminded about something I may forget, I will mark it on a calendar I have that I can see when I first walk into my home.

  • Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/18/2020 3:00 PM
    Besides loads of greens/salad, here are some our favorite meatless meals: spaghetti with "beyond beef" sauce; tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwich, Haitian-style rice and beans (with a Jamaican scotch bonnet for extra flavor and heat).
    Yummy, yum, yum. 

  • Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/17/2020 7:52 PM
    Taking part in this eco challenge makes me want to be a more responsible global citizen. My awareness has certainly increased.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    People Volunteer in my Community
    How does volunteering enhance your community and/or change your relationship with it?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/14/2020 6:04 PM
    When volunteering in one's community, you create a stake in that community for yourself.  It becomes part of who you are; in essence, your family, because you take care of it in some way.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    People Connect While Social Distancing
    How does connecting with others help your own mental and emotional health? How can it help support others?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/14/2020 6:01 PM
    It is nice to talk to others while in quarantine.  You are reminded that you are not the only one going through this and you can put forth thought on someone else's well-being right away.  The other person can feel the same and we supply the human need of interaction at that moment.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Oceans Say No to Plastic Straws
    What single-use items (e.g. straws, coffee cups, vegetable bags, plastic bags) do you regularly use? What could be substituted instead?

    Jaime Desormeaux's avatar
    Jaime Desormeaux 4/14/2020 5:58 PM
    I use vegetable bags, but I reuse them.  I use them for storing things in my fridge.