July 18, 2007



How we avoid making trash

http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/07/how-we-avoid-ma.html

In case you’re new to the No Impact Man project, 
you should know that we've broken down our lives 
into six areas and tried to figure out how to 
live with as low an impact as possible in each 
area. The six areas are: trash (as in we try to 
make none), carbon-producing transportation (as 
in we don't use it), inconspicuous consumption 
(as in we buy nothing new), sustainable eating 
(as in our food all comes from within 250 miles 
or less), reduced power use (as in we use almost 
none), and environmentally-friendly water use (as 
in we’re still figuring that bit out).

That may all sound extreme­and it is­but the fact 
is that we've found that it is tenable and 
possible and doesn't make us feel deprived, which 
is one way of saying there is hope for the 
possibility of living on the planet without 
destroying it. But that’s not the topic of this 
post. This post, a list in no particular order, 
is about how we avoiding making trash:
    * No soda in cans (which means we’re probably 
less likely to get cancer from 
<http://www.cspinet.org/reports/chemcuisine.htm#aspartame>aspartame).
    * No water in plastic bottles (which means we 
get to keep our endocrines 
<http://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/101/plastic>undisrupted).
    * No coffee in disposable cups (which means 
we don’t suffer from the morning sluggishness 
that comes from 
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6422279.stm>overnight caffeine withdrawal).
    * No throwaway plastic razors and blade 
cartridges (I’m staging the 
<http://www.motherearthnews.com/DIY/1972-03-01/How-To-Use-A-Straight-Razor.aspx>straightedge
 
razor comeback).
    * Using 
<http://www.lunapads.com/default.aspx?>non-disposable 
feminine-hygiene products that aren’t 
<http://www.spotsite.org/village.html>bad for 
women and are good for the planet.
    * No Indian food in throwaway takeout tubs.
    * No Italian food in plastic throwaway tubs.
    * No Chinese food in plastic throwaway tubs.
    * Taking our own reusable containers to 
takeout joints (except that now we’re 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/03/eating_local_vs.html>eating 
local so this tip is out for us).
    * Admitting that we sometimes miss Indian, Italian and Chinese takeout.
    * Hopping on the scale and celebrating the 
loss of my 20-pound spare tire since I stopped 
eating bucketsful of Indian, Italian and Chinese takeout.
    * Buying milk in returnable, reusable 
<http://www.ronnybrook.com/site_new/home_start.html>glass bottles.
    * Shopping for honey and pickled veggies and 
other goods in jars only from merchants who will 
take back the jars and reuse them.
    * Returning egg and berry cartons to the 
vendors at the farmers’ market for reuse.
    * Using neither paper nor plastic bags and 
bringing our own 
<http://www.theorganicreport.com/pages/445_reusable_bags_tackle_plastic_bag_mess.cfm>reusable
 
bags when grocery shopping.
    * Canceling our magazine and newspaper subscriptions and reading online.
    * Putting an end to the 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/05/stopping_the_ju.html>junk 
mail tree killing.
    * Carrying my ultra-cool 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/07/my-ultra-cool-r.html>reusable 
cup and 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/07/my-ultra-cool-1.html>water 
bottle (which is a glass jar I diverted from the landfill and got for free).
    * Carrying 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/04/oh_no_here_come.html>reusable 
cloths for everything from blowing my nose to 
drying my hands to wrapping up a purchased bagel.
    * Wiping my hands on my pants instead of 
using a paper towel when I forget my cloth.
    * Politely asking restaurant servers to take 
away paper and plastic napkins, placemats, 
straws, cups and single-serving containers.
    * Explaining to servers with a big smile that 
I am on a make-no-garbage kick.
    * Leaving servers a big tip for dealing with 
my obsessive-compulsive, make-no-garbage 
nonsense, since they can’t take the big smile to the bank.
    * Pretending McDonalds and Burger King and 
all their paper and plastic wrappers just don’t exist.
    * Buying no candy bars, gum, lollypops or ice 
cream (not even Ben and Jerry’s peanut butter 
cup) that is individually packaged.
    * Making my own 
<http://noimpactman.typepad.com/blog/2007/04/help_i_need_to_.html>household 
cleaners to avoid all the throwaway plastic bottles.
    * Using baking soda from a recyclable 
container to 
<http://www.realsimple.com/realsimple/content/clean/0,21770,1030037,00.html>brush
 
my teeth.
    * Using baking soda for a 
<http://www.realsimple.com/realsimple/content/clean/0,21770,1030037,00.html>deodorant
 
to avoid the plastic containers that deodorant 
typically comes in (cheap and works well).
    * Using baking soda for 
<http://www.naturalfamilyonline.com/go/index.php/389/why-you-should-go-no-poo/>shampoo
 
to avoid plastic shampoo bottles.
    * Using the plastic bags that other people’s 
newspapers are delivered in to pick up Frankie the dog’s poop.
    * 
<http://www.lesecologycenter.org/composting_worms.html>Keeping 
a worm bin to compost our food scraps into 
nourishment that can be returned to the earth 
instead of toxins that seep from the landfills.
    * Switching to real­meaning cloth­diapers 
which Isabella, before she was potty-trained, liked much better.
    * Not buying anything disposable.
    * Not buying anything in packaging (and count 
the money we save because that means pretty much 
buy nothing unless it’s second hand).
    * Shopping for food only from the bulk bins 
and from the local farmer’s market where food is unpackaged and fresh.
    * Forgetting about prepackaged, processed food of any description.
    * Being happy that the result is that we get 
to 
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/2814253.stm>eat food instead of chemicals.
    * Giving our second-hand clothes away to 
<http://www.housingworks.org/home_f.html>Housing Works or other charities.
    * Offering products we no longer need on 
<http://www.freecycle.org/>Freecycle instead of throwing them away.
    * Collecting used paper from other people's 
trash and using the other side.
    * Using old clothes for rags around the apartment instead of paper towels.
    * Talking with humor about what we’re doing 
because making a little less trash is a concrete 
first step everyone can take that leads to more 
and more environmental consciousness.

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