Note that any notion of "$\ge 1$" is equivalent to an ordering of the ring in question - namely, view $a$ as less than $b$ if $b-a+1\ge 1$. So really you're asking about whether there is a natural way to order $\mathbb{Z}_2$. Although it is of course impossible to prove that there is no "natural" ordering on $\mathbb{Z}_2$, since "natural" is an informal term, we can show that any ordering of $\mathbb{Z}_2$ would have to be algebraically pathological:
If $\mathbb{Z}_2$ were an orderable ring, then $\mathbb{Q}_2$ would be an orderable field - any ordering of a ring induces an ordering on its field of fractions, and if the former is compatible with the ring structure then the latter is compatible with the field structure. But there is no ordering of $\mathbb{Q}_2$ which is compatible with the field structure. This can be seen by noting that $\mathbb{Q}_2$ contains an element whose square is $-7$, and hence $-1$ can be written (in $\mathbb{Q}_2$) as the sum of finitely many squares; this means that there is no real closed field containing $\mathbb{Q}_2$, hence by the Artin-Shreier theorem $\mathbb{Q}_2$ is not an orderable field.
So the evidence points to "no."