The room is dark. About fifty people sit with silent and energetic expectation. The screen shows a sky full of bright stars. A couple walk arm in arm, and as their faces are lit by the projected starlight, a voice comes through the darkness:
“Imagine it’s 2015, and you’re taking an evening stroll down a street in London, looking up at the stars..”
So began the presentations this evening at the end of the London Sustainability Jam. This first idea, called “StarGazing St.” aims to encourage people to turn off the lights in office buildings.
It is just one of many great ideas that were thought of, researched, prototyped, and in some cases even developed between 7pm on Friday evening and 3pm on Sunday.
It’s hard to pick favourites, but there were some which maintained their focus on simple, actionable, deliverable, measurable ideas and as such stand out from the rest a little more:
- [Stranded Wisdom](http://strandedwisdom.appspot.com) asks the question: What piece of wisdom would you like to tell your grandchildren?
- Cyclinks creates micro-jobs and fitness opportunities by re-disrtributing bikes in city-bike-hire schemes (aka 'Boris Bikes' in London) from full docking stations to empty ones.
- FreeFlow makes [freecycling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Freecycle_Network) as easy as using Twitter or Instagram.
- StarGazing St uses a range of positive motivations to save energy consumed by buildings.
This event was put together by Rob Maslin and many others (who’s links I neglected to get, sorry), who was kind enough to invite me to be amongst a number of us to be mentors and judges: Luke from Carbon Culture, Amy at Secret Seed Society, Alexie from Thomas Matthews, Rob at Beagley Brown, Emma from Futerra, Claire from Alertme.
What I found so hugely, hugely inspiring is that so many people - strangers at first - came together, formed groups, and worked together to co-create improvements to humanity’s / the planet’s situation. They took it as the default that a) this is what needs to be done, and b) they were the ones to do it, and c) they were even prepared to pay for the experience.
At least three teams are going to keep on working on their ideas, and have asked me to keep mentoring them. That makes me hugely proud, and reassured that I’m a human being doing.
As I walked home I was listening to the Muppets Green Album, and the song “Rainbow Connection” came on. The lyrics seemed particularly appropriate:
http://open.spotify.com/track/3J0xqMnEVz4h5hhNqBeWgB
Why are there so many songs about rainbows
- and what’s on the other side?*
- Rainbows are visions, but only illusions,*
- and rainbows have nothing to hide.*
- So we’ve been told and some choose to believe it.*
- I know they’re wrong, wait and see.*
- Someday we’ll find it, the rainbow connection.*
- The lovers, the dreamers and me.*
Who said that every wish would be heard
- and answered when wished on the morning star?*
- Somebody thought of that and someone believed it.*
- Look what it’s done so far.*
- What’s so amazing that keeps us star gazing*
- and what do we think we might see?*
- Someday we’ll find it, the rainbow connection.*
- The lovers, the dreamers and me.*
All of us under its spell. We know that it’s probably magic.
Have you been half asleep and have you heard voices?
- I’ve heard them calling my name.*
- Is this the sweet sound that called the young sailors.*
- The voice might be one and the same.*
- I’ve heard it too many times to ignore it.*
- It’s something that I’m supposed to be.*
- Someday we’ll find it, the rainbow connection.*
- The lovers, the dreamers and me.*
I looked for stars, but I saw only one. Only one from the millions and millions there are out there to see. And yet this delight of being able to stargaze is only temporarily denied us. For there are people who hear the voices calling their name, beckoning them to tell new stories of what we can do together.
That’s what’s so amazing that kept me stargazing tonight.