I never thought I would be this enthused about garbage
A few months ago I was watching viral videos of animals sick and dying, caught up in our irresponsibly discarded waste. You don’t have to be a PETA member or environmental advocate to see that we are better than this. As a human race we’ve treated our planet like its dispensable, just like that styrofoam cup or a plastic spoon that ends up in the trash at a restaurant every single day.
This is when I stumbled upon the Zero Waste movement. Through small changes, we are able to significantly reduce the amount of waste a household produces. It starts with baby steps like reusable water bottles and bringing your own tumbler to the coffee shop. Just when you think, “This is cool, I can do this,” it gets slightly more complicated.
The biggest deal breaker for my husband was getting rid of paper towels, no lie. I bought more cloth towels and said, “Just try it and if you hate it we’ll go back to paper.” Once we got in the motions of using them, it was absolutely no big deal. Use a cloth towel and add it to the laundry. No more chucking one-use towels in the garbage every time we had to clean.
As of now, we’ve transitioned into fully zero-waste shopping. I use my own bags and containers to go to the store. I buy many items in bulk with my own bags and empty them into containers in my pantry. Often these are much cheaper than prepackaged items anyway! We no longer own paper towels. I make my own toothpaste, fabric softener, and dish soap. We have also found more sustainable options for shampoo, conditioner, body wash, makeup, and detergent. It's so fun to get crafty and try new ideas, especially if they end up saving money.
So what’s the bigger picture? Do these changes actually amount to anything? Just this week, my husband casually mentioned that he forgot trash day. Before, this would have been quite alarming. “It doesn’t matter,” he said, “We didn’t have anything to take out.” Within just a few months we had cut our household waste in half just with these minor changes. Some established Zero Wasters have been able to reduce their yearly waste to the size of a mason jar. Considering that the average American produces roughly 5 pounds of trash a day, any means of reducing can be helpful. It’s almost like a game, looking at the everyday things that we throw away and considering more sustainable options that fit for our lifestyle.
Photo Credit: Celestine Ngulube https://unsplash.com/search/landfill?photo=N69l4qUJm2I
thanks for sharing, followin
thank you! :) following
Wow, this is so inspiring! I've realised we produce so much trash, although I've started making small adjustments to reduce it, like always having a cloth bag in my back pack for shopping. Your journey to zero waste shows me it's doable, thank you for sharing and please add more tips on this subject. Upvoted and followed :) I've tried to resteem it but there must be a bug currently, I don't see the resteem arrows :( ... weird
Thank you :) it is definitely do-able. From an outside perspective it seems like such a large lifestyle change until we see that it is gradual adjustments that have such a large outcome. It almost has become a game, analyzing things in the household that could have more sustainable alternatives.
Sometimes taking little steps can take you a long ways in the right direction!
namaste!
It need to be recycled. It also the main problem in Indonesia. It can causes flood almost every rainy season
I'm so sorry to hear that :( do you guys have local recycling programs? California just banned plastic bags after being tired of seeing so much waste along the coastline. I'm hoping more places will encourage sustainability.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-beyond-bag-ban-20161121-story.html
We have buy still few of it. The government has big homework to socialize and campaign bout trash. The rules still weak and need to streghten it as soon as possible
You go girl. So inspirational! Resteemed :D
thanks love <3