MyWonderfulWorld

Intern Update: Jeremy Creates Social Change from Coast to Coast

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
Jeremy Blackman was an intern with My Wonderful World during the summer of 2008. He is well remembered for his interests in food, art, and creative combinations of the two (ever heard of a Happy Meal pizza?) A native of Turlock, California, in the Central Valley near Modesto--he grew up on almond farm--Jeremy recently completed his undergraduate degree at UC Berkeley. I caught up with my old buddy "Jerms" to find out how life's treating him, and to glean whether or not his internship had a lasting impact on his post-grad plans. I'll let you be the judge.

Well hello all you My Wonderful Worlders,

I know, I know, it's been too long since you last heard from me. Honestly, I cannot believe that an entire year has nearly gone by since I began my summer internship at National Geographic and wrote my first blog post for the My Wonderful World campaign. I really don't know where all that time went. One day I went to sleep a happy-go-lucky guy, interning and living it up in our nation's capital (as happy-go-lucky as anyone subjected to unbearable swamp-like humidity could be!) and the next I awoke right back here in good old Berkeley, California, enjoying my last few days as a Cal undergraduate (amidst sunny, beautiful, not-humid-one-bit weather).


woman.jpglaundrylogored.gifSo what have I been up to these past months? Well, after departing from D.C. last August I made my way north to New York City, where I spent the rest of the year interning with a small art non-profit called The Laundromat Project. The organization works with artists in the Bedford-Stuyvessant neighborhood of Brooklyn to construct engaging art exhibits in local laundromats to engage community members in new ways. Anyone who tries to argue that geographic knowledge is not important in today's world obviously hasn't spent time working with projects and organizations such as these. In order to understand how art could be used as a tool to spark social change, it was essential that I spend a lot of time both researching Bed-Stuy's unique past and conversing with neighbors about how drastically the community's urban landscape is evolving as more and more people of diverse ethnic and financial backgrounds move in.


Long story short, the time I spent in New York left me with a lot of time to reflect on life and on my future. I returned home to California in January even more uncertain of what I wanted to do or where I wanted to go after graduation. For some reason, amidst all my confusion, my gut was telling me that returning school for one final semester was not what I needed to do. Having already completed the requirements to earn my degree, I set my sights on continuing my real-world educational journey. I became involved with Three Stone Hearth, a progressive cooking business based in Berkeley that models itself after community supported agriculture (CSA) programs.

For those of you who haven't heard of these, they consist of individuals who subscribe to local farms, much like one would subscribe to a magazine. Each week, members receive a box filled with fruits and vegetables--basically whatever is in season. Instead of produce, however, Three Stone Hearth expands upon the traditional CSA model by using seasonal ingredients raised and grown by local farmers to make healing, nutrient-dense meals that members pick up each week. The hope is to reconnect people to food--where it comes from, how it's prepared, and its importance in bringing individuals together. In fact, many members actually come in to help in the kitchen and learn new cooking techniques. And to throw another geographic aspect into the mix, the menu, which changes weekly, is always based on a different cultural or traditional diet, be it anything from Korean, to Peruvian, to East African.

Now I know all these experiences might not seem to go together all so well--working for a summer with National Geographic, followed by an internship in a New York arts project, and then cooking at a local business in Berkeley--but, in a roundabout way, they do. Each of them is driven by a desire to bring people together and to increase awareness of culture, diversity, and the need for human-to-human relationships. I don't know where I'll be in five years from now. I'm definitely less sure of my future than I was a year ago. But, in a way, I'm more excited about having that big question mark in front of me, because I know that no matter what I end up pursuing, I will be bringing with me knowledge and an appreciation for connecting with others from diverse geographic and social backgrounds. And in my belief, that's the only way we can, as human beings, begin to create real and beneficial social change.

Inspiring, no? Thanks for the update, Jeremy! Look for more on community supported agriculture next week in our June newsletter, themed "go local." We'll have a step-by-step guide for planting a garden in your backyard and tips for eating, shopping, playing, and investing in your local community. If you're not already a My Wonderful World campaign member, subscribe to the newsletter today!

Sarah Jane

Images courtesy the Laundromat Project.

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://blog.mywonderfulworld.org/admin/mt-tb.cgi/5924

Leave a comment

Blog Home
Campaign Home
About the Campaign
Join the Campaign
 

Archives

This is the blog for the My Wonderful World Campaign, a National Geographic-led initiative to expand geographic learning in school, at home, and in communities.

About Our Bloggers

Caban

Sarah Jane is manager of social media for National Geographic Education more..
Cedar

Julia graduated from the University of Kansas with a major in geography and a minor in business more..
  Subscribe to RSS feed
  Find us on Facebook
   Find us on YouTube

Enter your email address:


Twitter Updates



MyWonderfulWorld Tshirt