I major in Environmental Science with minors in Political Science and Sustainability. Most things that I do are through the lens of these subjects. That includes just the general way I take in the world around me. For example, when I look out my dining room window right now, I notice the beautiful vines that are growing on the outside of the house. I also notice that they are creeping their way in between bricks and windowpanes, meaning in the winter that house will need more propane to stay warm. When I do things there is always a cost benefit analysis going on in my mind of how environmentally conscious I could or could not be. This applies to small things like taking out the trash, taking a long shower, eating meat; it’s also present in my larger life decisions like what job to apply for. Will I contribute more to a sustainable human-planet relationship by doing laboratory science, working for non-profits, or reaching out to the larger populous through film and story telling? I’m taking this class as a way to challenge myself and my presumed role in combatting and adapting to climate change. If I could tell the story of a specific place in the Lehigh Valley, it would be the Lehigh Gap Nature Center. Its history as a Zinc factory, Superfund site and now reclaimed natural area is fascinating. The visuals of that place are also stunning and communicate the complex reclamation process of a toxic waste site into a nature reserve. The problems that the Nature Center encounters are also fascinating to me, like how the trees they planted on the landfill are great for reducing erosion and keeping the toxic waste under the soil, but also create an outlet for toxics as leaves absorb underground zinc deposits and are blown into the nearby river, spreading toxic contamination to surrounding areas.