Part 3
Healthy
living encompasses body, mind and spirit. If our minds and
bodies are healthy,
our spirits can soar above the earthly confines of the physical
world. Therefore, keeping ourselves healthy
in all ways is of vital importance.
In our Healthy
living Program, we are delighted to be able to present you with a
series of interviews with leading experts and discussions on
innovative research. We seek to provide some fun, practical and
simple approaches to address your health on all levels.
Welcome to the world of Healthy
living!
Maybe you are like many of us who live in a city,
surrounded by ideas of how to improve the planet and how to stop
global warming but still without a really good idea on how to
start the process.
Supreme
Master Television traveled to Pasadena to visit a very
interesting family, who live an inspiring and beautiful green
lifestyle in the midst of the city. Not only do they live off their
own land, they also sell and make a living by cultivating organically
grown fruits and vegetables, grown from a piece of land that is a
mere tenth of an acre in size!
Would you like your energy bill to be only $19 per
month for a household of 5 in Pasadena? The energy is even clean,
green wind energy. How about learning how to grow organic vegetables
and even make biofuel?
How do they live this almost totally green life,
you may ask? So did Supreme
Master Television - that’s why we decided to visit them
to investigate just exactly how one can live a green life in the
middle of the city. Let’s join the Dervaes family in Pasadena and
find out more about their organization: “Path to Freedom,” on
today’s episode of Healthy
living.
Interviewer:
When Supreme
Master Television visited the Dervaes family, we had the
opportunity to meet with other members of the family. Anais, one of
the daughters, shared her interesting “green” products and view
of life.
Anais: I
have a sun oven which we use to cook our food in using the free
energy that the sun provides us almost every day. In the summer we
use it more, of course, because the suns out; we try to cook maybe
four, five meals a week in this and what’s great about this is your
food doesn’t burn and they are using these widely in third world
countries where deforestation and fuel is limited. Well, right now
I’m warming some beans, some black beans for dinner tonight. One
thing you have to know about sun ovens is that you put food in
earlier, like if you expect rice an hour to cook, what have you, it’s
like maybe two hours depending of course on the time and sun, winter
longer of course, but you know two rules about sun ovens cooking is
you put it in early and you position your sun oven to the sun, so
that’s the two things. What’s good about the solar oven cooking
is that food doesn’t burn. It’s more nutritious because it
requires less water and it’s not high temperature, so it’s
retaining the heat at low temperature so you’re getting more
nutritious
foods and the vitamins are staying in the properties of the food.
Well that’s what we do on Saturdays; on Saturdays we go hiking in
the mountains and you can put, you know, warm up your soup if you
make it the night before. You know, you put the pot of soup in and
you come back and you have warm food right away and it’s great, we
love using it. Of course it takes time because you kind of have to
be in tune with nature, you can’t just say, “I’m home,” you
know microwave….you know fifty seconds later you have… now your
like ok, is the sun today, what position is the sun and when do I
put….. so you become more in tune I think with nature cooking this
way.
Interviewer:
When our camera crew arrived 45 minutes earlier the family put out
their solar oven and put in some beans to warm up. After they finish
with their walk through the garden, everyone examines to see just how
well solar ovens work.
Anais: It’s
very hot. So, and also it’s good you would cook with you know black
pots and things. And there are little tips and tricks you’ll learn,
you know like if you put in a pan you cover it with another pan to
keep you just retain. So those little tricks sometimes what I’ll do
is if I need more I put bricks in depending on in winter. One guy who
emailed me from I think it was Illinois, I think it was 14 degrees or
something like that and it was snowing and he put this out and within
3 hours he had his meal ready, so it can used in all hemispheres. If
you have the sun you can cook with this. It is compact. There are
different models. We made our own. It’s very huge. It’s made out
of recycled plywood and cookie tins that we were recycling and
things. But the reflectors are just so huge that they are under
repair. But this is a model you can buy. There’s a couple of models
you can buy. You can make some out of cardboard, even pizza boxes, so
you go on the internet; we have plans on our internet. You can just
make it within a day with your kids and you have free energy and cook
food, no electricity, no gas, no pollution. It’s all natural.
Interviewer:
Being a vegetarian
herself, Anais shared her thoughts and reasoning about vegetarianism
with our viewers.
Anais: Well,
first it was my father read a little when I was about 15, I think 16
years old. My father read a little piece saying that the meat was
destroying the rain, every hamburger you ate was destroying so many
square feet of the rain forest and he was like, ‘Oh I don’t want
to be contributing to the deforestation of the rain forest so lets
not, lets cut meat out of our diet.’ And ever since then we haven’t
eaten any red meat or chicken. And actually I’ve lost the taste for
meat. There are so many greater, better options out there so we’re,
my father started us on the path; now it’s ours, so we are becoming
more health conscious. Now we are vegetarians.
So, now we are like 16 years. So, it’s been a while and of course
when we very first became vegetarian
we were like, “Oh boy, it’s going to be hard’ and it was kind
of hard at the very beginning. Now you go into the health food stores
and there are so many options. You know you have soya ice-creams that
taste so much better than ice-creams. Now there are more choices.”
Because it is becoming almost like a mainstream choice that people
have to have that option so people are coming up with better
products. It’s easier to become vegetarian
now.
Interviewer:
Anais Dervaes informed us of how solar oven gets used in
different areas across the globe, bringing relief to those in need
throughout Africa, without electricity.
Anais: So, and
then they are using these in the Darfur refugee camps too because of
women. So there’s a little campaign going on sending these on to
help women and the environment in the third world countries. you’ll
see them being used in India, South America and especially in Africa;
there’s a real heavy duty campaign to get these in there, those
countries so that they can save lives.
Anais: When
people see our project now and they say, ‘Wow, I can’t do what
you guys are doing now.’ And well we always like to tell them it’s
always about the baby steps. Take small steps. Make simple changes in
your life every day and then in time you’ll look back and see how
far you’ve come.
Interviewer:
Supreme
Master Television also met with Jordanne who demonstrated
the family’s very interesting blender, powered by human energy
through pedaling on a bicycle. Afterwards she introduced her pet
friends to us.
Jordanne: This
is blackberries we froze from last summer and maple syrup. I’m
going to blend it. Using the power of my feet.
Jules:
Somebody invented this little thing. It has a shaft right here. And
the tire runs against this metal part right here and so the tire will
run it and up here it turns this shaft right there. And then on the
bottom of this. See when it turns the blades inside the blender and
it mixes it. So you are transferring this motion of the wheel going
round and round to a blade going the other way. That’s your blender
blending with the blades right there so somebody kind of invented
that. Now so also we have a bike that grinds grain into flour and
they also have parts that you can make this into electrical
producing. It produces enough energy to produce a bulb or run, I
guess, an appliance. So, it’s all these different things of taking
one form of energy, muscle power and turning it into another and
replacing electricity. So, there are just alternatives out there. We
just thought that was kind of cute because you are exercising and
then you are also getting a product out of it. So then when you
finish you just drink. Instead of plugging in and having electricity
run this giving you a drink you are exercising and you also have the
drink when you are finished. So, that’s kind of cool.
Jordanne:
These are my pets,
primarily they do provide companionship. Originally I had five
chickens, I will be getting five chickens again. I have chickens and
ducks and two goats, the goats are pets,
they do provide compost, we give them yard waste and then they
transform it into soil. These are the leash train, I take them for
hikes, I take them for walks, I take them to schools for show and
tell for kids. They know six commands three tricks. We don't eat our
animals.
They're just pets
primarily and I find that interaction with animals
leads to a better you. Going to pet beg? You're going to pet beg? No
not on me, you know better than that. You're going to pet beg? Good
girl. I know you don’t feel like it? You're going to say hi? Say
hi. Good girl! Give me a kiss, going to give me a kiss, can I get a
kiss? Come here give me a kiss. Good girl. So the other ones all
have to do it outside. She'll dance on command, she will pirouette,
but we don't eat the animals.
These could be milk producers, but I’m just not going to do that.
The ducks are land ducks. They don't need water to be happy; they
just need a small pond water to take a dunk every once in a while.
Interviewer:
Jordanne Dervaes also shared her views and reasons for being
vegetarian.
Jordanne:
Well, originally it was a conscious choice, an environmental
choice due to the fact so much rainforest was destroyed. Then that
was done when I was four years old so I didn't really have a choice.
Then it's been my choice ever since. I prefer to drink rice and soya
milk over milk. So what I got involved with animals
for was because I wanted to show that a lot of people think animals
are just like these things in the dairy farm or the battery hens that
are in the supermarket and my thing was to show they are actually
little individuals with different characters and personalities. This
one her name is Blackberry, that one is Lady Fairlite, the duck in
the front is Dixie, the one in the middle, he doesn't have a name
right now. He's just new and the other one in the back is Dawn, the
little chicken going around here is Clementine. So some people say,
how can you tell the different voices of your animals,
like between the two ducks or the five chickens I have had. And
that's what I try to prove doing animals
here. So many people are species centric, they just want a cat and
dog. So, and being involved with animals,
it opens you to more awareness with the environment and with the
world around you, because they sense so much beyond our sensing; that
when you are in tune with them you get to learn a lot more what's
happening. That's why I got involved with so many animals
besides the cat and dog, because just dealing with the different
species has been rewarding.
This one is Clementine. She was one of five
originally. My other chickens died of old age and she's the last
remaining- got some babies coming soon. I had one chicken that would
watch the sunset every night and I had another chicken that loved
being held like a baby. This one doesn't love it so much, but yeah
you're not the one that loved to be held like a baby. They were hand
raised from babies and I like taking them to schools and too often
kids have this ‘ animals
are bad, animals
are stinky, animal something’, so I like to show them that it's not
that way. They're all part of the universe here and we’re sharing
the earth with them. They were here first actually in the country;
we often try to cage them or put them in little places. So I try to
teach children the way to treat them right. Not to fear them, to
respect them. All too often people say, ‘Oh, chickens, it's going
to attack me’. And I find a lot of children think animals
are going to hurt them. Like when they see a goat, they’re like:
‘It’s going to attack me’. You just respect them, and when you
show them friendship they will treat you with friendship.
Interviewer:
Thanks to Jordanne Dervaes for sharing her love and insight on
animals.
And thank you to the Dervaes family for showing us how to
live an inspiring and beautiful green lifestyle.
Please join us next Monday on Healthy
living with our raw food specialist Angela Stokes. Up
next after Noteworthy
News is Enlightening
Entertainment, here on Supreme
Master Television.