EcoDorms 2025

Promoting Environmentally Sustainable Behaviors in First-Year Students

Author: Maya Heikkinen

Journaling, Mental Health, and Environmentalism

Journaling might not first bring to mind environmental sustainability, but they are more connected than you think. 

Maintaining good mental health is an essential part of activism and caretaking, whether you are involved in climate justice organizing, stewarding the land, or caring for a loved one. Before caring for others, the earth, and the well-being of future generations and ecosystems, we must care for ourselves. Journaling is one of the best ways to do this, as it entails expressive writing, a therapeutic process of making sense of thoughts and feelings on paper. Expressive writing can lower stress and level out strong emotions, as well as increase optimism. Also, writing down negative thoughts and experiences can help us process them and rationalize them, freeing up mental space and energy for other pursuits. 

Studies have shown that regular reflective writing can lower distress and promote resilience in patients with anxiety, and others have suggested that it can even bring about physical health benefits such as immune health, as well as ability to cope with grief and trauma. Considering the often crushing sensation of grief we now experience on a daily basis in response to climate change and a host of worsening global tragedies, journaling could perhaps help us process this pain, allowing us to avoid growing numb to tragedy and instead funnel our emotions into productive action. 

Additionally, on a day-to-day level journaling allows us to heighten and make sense of our awareness of life and our surrounding environments, fostering deeper connection with not only the natural world around us but also with our local communities, encouraging us to build the stronger connections and passions that truly build social and environmental sustainability and justice from the roots up.

Lastly, the piece of dark chocolate you will find alongside your journaling supplies plays a role too. Cocoa is high in flavanols (the darker the chocolate, the more flavanols), which reduce blood pressure as well as help regulate mood and depression.

Information for this article was found in a Mindful blog post, as well as Psychology Today.

Mug Cakes, Microwaves, and More Connections to Sustainability

Curious to learn more about how microwaving your mug cake is related to reducing your environmental footprint? Mug cakes and the environment may seem like disparate and only distantly connected topics, but as we began to uncover in our last post, what you choose to consume and how you cook it are closely related to sustainability and make up a large portion of your personal environmental impact. 

Beyond saving energy and lowering heating costs, as well as reduced air pollution and fewer dirty dishes to wash, cooking food in the microwave is in certain ways much more efficient nutritionally and functionally, making it more conducive to a low-impact and more sustainable lifestyle. 

Due to the lower cooking temperature, reduced cooking time needed, and more even heating of food through deeply penetrating microwave radiation, microwaves waste and break down fewer nutrients in food. Spinach, for instance, retains nearly all of its folate (a vitamin for healthy red blood cells) in the microwave but loses 77% on a conventional stove. Microwaves also produce less of the cancer-causing carcinogens often produced through the charring of food; for instance, potatoes are less likely to produce acrylamide, and bacon produces less nitrosamines. 

In terms of preparing food sustainably for one person, microwaves are more suitable for cooking smaller, single servings of food, as opposed to heating an entire oven for a single meal. Also, smaller portions mean less leftovers, and less food waste. Microwaves also take up much less space, meaning they are well-fitted for a tiny home or smaller living space, such as an apartment or converted school bus. 

Maintaining your microwave also has implications for the environment: because microwaves are smaller, they require less cleaning product, and also turn off automatically, which reduces the risk of fires—and all of the damages inflicted by fire. Also, making sure to clean your microwave regularly will actually make it even more effective and energy-efficient by maximizing the radiation reflected back at food (The Scientific American). 

So, microwave (and enjoy) your mug cake knowing that you are at least producing a smaller environmental footprint, as well as maximizing the nutritional benefit you receive from your food, than if you were to bake an entire cake in a conventional oven. However, is the microwave the most environmentally-friendly option, and are there more important questions to consider? Looking at the broader picture, it is worth reconsidering how we can most sustainably utilize space, energy, and nutrients to cook our food, as well as related issues such as where our food is coming from, how it is produced, and whether food and resources are being distributed equitably across populations with minimal waste. The facts in this blog post come from a History of Microwave article.

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