Skip to main content

Since My Last Confession

OK, so I'm not Catholic.  But it has been a very long time since my last confession here--meaning, the last time I posted our weigh-in of plastic trash and recycling.  (Why do I count recycling?  Because, although I do recycle everything I can, plastic is not like aluminum or glass that can recycle endlessly; plastic actually "downcycles" and becomes, essentially, hazardous waste for thousands of years after only a handful of reuses.  So it all counts, sooner or later.)

The last time I posted our weigh-in was back in July: a two-week tally of 3 lbs. 1 oz.

In the ten weeks since then, we have generated 6 lbs, 7 oz. of trash, which would average out to about 17 lbs of plastic waste per year per person for each of us... in comparison with an American average of over 80 lbs per person.

Of course, I'm not counting my totaled automobile in that amount.  I have to hope that many of the plastic parts will be salvaged, and used on other cars.

But I am counting the dead twenty-year-old eggbeater that we disposed of last month.  And we're still coming in with a lighter yearly average, based on the last few weeks, then we did at the beginning of the project. 

So, while I compromised the weigh-in part of the no-plastics diet, Peter and I did manage--mostly--to stay on it.

So, what made up our trash over the past two months?

  • Construction packaging.  We moved into a new/old house, and some parts--replacement springs and housings for the windows upstairs, for instance--were only available by special order, and came packed in--ugh--styrofoam.
  • Old products we no longer buy, like toothpaste in plastic tubes, or deodorant in plastic.
  • Lots and lots and lots of plastic caps for glass bottles.
  • Packing materials for the canning jars I bought to try to preserve local produce over the winter.
  • Prescription drug containers.  No avoiding these, apparently--and they aren't even recyclable.
  • One yogurt container--we haven't begun making our own yet.
  • Plastic pull tabs on frozen juice containers--and, yeah, there's a thin plastic membrane lining the paper tube, too.  We are starting to regard this as an occasional luxury, rather than a staple in our diet; both from the standpoint of food-miles and plastic packaging, this makes sense.
  • Straws and even one plastic cup from times we weren't quick enough to make sure to tell the waitress not to give them to us.  (We still goof from time to time.)
I will admit that I have on a couple of occasions not only forgotten, when out at a restaurant with friends, to ask for no straws or plastic containers (for sour cream, salad dressing, etc.) but even to bring the offending item home with me at the end of the night.

However, I've come to appreciate the way that requesting no plastic turns into a kind of opening to witness to the importance of reducing plastic trash.  Not because I make speeches, but because the waitress asks about it.

I can see why No Impact Man chose to use a canning jar for his commuter mug, too.  I mean, I'm very fond of my stainless steel mug.  But there's no question that using a canning jar makes its own quiet statement about the need to challenge and change our current consumerist culture.

That's it for now.

Comments

Heather said…
I'm trying to find ways to reduce the use of plastic in my own life, so I find it helpful to read about your struggles with this. One thing that caught my eye in this post was your mention that you no longer use toothpaste and deodorant that come in plastic packages. The area of personal hygiene is one that seems to be particularly hard to reduce plastic in, so I was wondering: Where do you find these products in non-plastic packaging, and how do their prices compare to those packaged in plastic?
Thanks, H.
Hey, Heather,
Sorry about the delay. I've been working some really long hours this month at the school where I teach: huge stacks of essays have pretty much eaten my life.

I have not been able entirely to eliminate plastic from the toothpaste category. I know, there are those who use baking soda for that, but I'm fifty, and my teeth show signs of wear already; baking soda is supposedly rather harsh on dental enamel.

However, Tom's of Maine puts out good toothpaste in a mostly metal toothpaste tube! It's easily as good as the big companies, and quite competitive for price, too. There's still the cap, but it's an improvement!

I know there are people out there who can do without deodorant, also, but I'm not one of them. Putting it bluntly, I'm stinky. (Unlike my husband, who smells like a rose no matter how hard he works. Nature is not always fair...)

At first I tried something called a "Thai deodorant crystal" I bought at the coop. Not only do I have no idea what it's made of, not only did it come encased in a thin shell of plastic (and with a real little wicker basket it sits in between uses) but it doesn't really work.

Just this week, I've begun using baking soda, which I'm storing in a glass jar in the bathroom, and applying with a big cosmetic brush. It's a trifle messy, so I try to apply it over the sink (where it is useful for cleaning the sink when I'm done) but otherwise... SCORE! This seems to work. Not, admittedly, as well as the nasty chemicals in plastic tubes I used to use... but reasonably well.

And the cost? Trivial! Huzzah!
(By the way, Heather: I love your blog! I follow it on the sidebar at my Quaker Pagan blog, in case you never noticed. *smile*)
Pallas Renatus said…
Do you have any CVS pharmacies in your area? We've had recyclable prescription bottles for ages. The bottles and caps are even marked individually so you can recycle both, which is nice, considering how recycling plants will just chuck out the unmarked plastic caps you usually come across.
Good tip, Pallas! I will ask. If the local branches do not have this ability yet, perhaps they can get it with a little push from some friends.

Popular posts from this blog

Fame

(Note: there were so many thought provoking comments in response to this post that it generated a second-round of ideas. You can read the follow-up post here .) I have a confession to make. I want to be famous. Well, sort of. I don't want to be famous, famous, and ride around in a limousine and have to hire security and that sort of thing. I just want to write a book, have it published by somebody other than my mother, and bought and read by somebody other than my mother, and maybe even sign a couple of autographs along the way. Mom can have one autographed, too, if she wants. It has to be a spiritual book. A really moving and truthful book, that makes people want to look deep inside themselves, and then they come up to me and say something like, "It was all because of that book you wrote! It changed my life!" And I would say, no, no, really, you did all that, you and God/the gods --I'm a little fuzzy on whether the life-changing book is for Pagans or for Quake

Peter on Grief and Communities

Well, that was unexpected. For the last year, ever since my mom's health took a sharp downturn, I've been my dad's ride to Florence Congregational Church on Sundays. That community has been important for my dad and the weekly outing with me was something he always looked forward to and enjoyed, so I didn't mind taking him there. It meant giving up attending my own Quaker meeting for the duration, but I had already been questioning whether silent waiting worship was working for me. I was ready for a sabbatical. A month ago, my dad was Section-Twelved into a geriatric psych hospital when his dementia started to make him emotionally volatile. I had been visiting him every day at his assisted living facility which was right on my way home from work, but the hospital was almost an hour away. I didn't see him at all for three weeks, and when I did visit him there, it actually took me a couple of seconds to recognize him. He was slumped forward in a wheel chair, lo

There is a Spirit Which I Feel

I was always a "rational use of force" gal. For most of my life I believed that the use of force--by which I meant human beings taking up arms and going off to war to try to kill one another--was a regrettable necessity. Sometimes I liked to imagine that Paganism held an alternative to that, particularly back in the day when I believed in that mythical past era of the peaceful, goddess-worshipping matriarchal societies . (I really liked that version of history, and was sorry when I stopped believing in it as factual.) But that way of seeing reality changed for me, in the time between one footfall and the next, on a sunny fall morning: September 11, 2001. I was already running late for work that day when the phone rang; my friend Abby was calling, to give me the news that a plane had flown into the World Trade Center in New York. So? I thought to myself, picturing a small private aircraft. Abby tried to convey some of what she was hearing--terrorists, fire--but the mag