dragonlady7: self-portrait but it's mostly the DSLR in my hands in the mirror (Default)
dragonlady7 ([personal profile] dragonlady7) wrote2020-01-19 01:13 pm

lalitrus:Reminder that the aesthetics of green living

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lalitrus:

Reminder that the aesthetics of green living aren’t the same as actually making good ethical decisions about the resources you have access to.

jenniferrpovey:

Also, durable plastic is not nearly as much of a problem as single use plastic.

Many people can’t afford a wood and bristle hair brush anyway…they’re like six times more expensive.

lets-close-the-loop:

Why do I have a plastic hairbrush?

My friend was visiting me the other day and as she sat in my living room she noticed my plastic hairbrush on the table.

“Why do you have a plastic hairbrush I thought you care about nature and you try to avoid plastic!”

Why? Because I can still use it. I have had this brush for cca 12 years. It is not broken. It’s fine. And I will have it for as long as it works and then buy a good alternative. We don’t throw away things that work perfectly fine just to prove to other people, that we care. We use the things we have FIRST!

There is no need for buying a stainless steel lunch box if you can still use an old plastic one. It’s fine.

USE WHAT YOU HAVE FIRST and when it no longer works like it should, dispose of it responsibly and then get a good alternative. You don’t have to prove anything to anyone.

Love

K.

This is a thing that makes me grit my teeth a bunch at Instagram advertisements. I even saw a WhateverBox-style subscription service whose entire premise was that it’d send you a random box of Green Lifestyle Implements every month. More stuff, shipped to you through the mail, whether you needed it or not, to give you that Green Lifestyle. There was another one too, that was for secondhand clothing, they’d just mail you a box of new-to-you clothes every month or whatever, so that you could have new things but it’s green because they’re secondhand.

The greenest thing you can fucking do is not buy anything. There’s no money in that, though, so they’re not going to be selling you that– but. oh my god.

I actually do have a friend on Instagram who was talking about that; she had a picture of a bunch of plastic quart bags and was like “I’ve decided to cut out my plastic use and I’m excited for that but first I have to use all these plastic bags until they fall apart because otherwise I’m just generating a mound of trash for the aesthetics of a plastic-free kitchen, so, here I’m labeling them with Sharpie so that I won’t cross-contaminate when I reuse them, and in four to six months I’ll have used them up and I’ll be using glass instead.” Like, you go girl, that actually means something, and the post wasn’t just performative it was actually informative. I do that too now, it was useful.
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)

[personal profile] sabotabby 2020-01-19 01:57 pm (UTC)(link)
This is what I'm wondering re: calculating carbon footprint. I saw a thing a few years ago about the biggest lifestyle changes one can make to reduce one's carbon footprint: Give up flying, go vegan, don't have kids, get an electric car, etc. And the biggest when they calculated was get an electric car. This makes no sense to me because of the carbon cost of manufacturing said car (unfortunately, I suspect the big lifestyle change is "give up flying," which I don't want to do) and disposing of old cars.

I have all kinds of leather stuff from my pre-vegan days, and it's lower impact than the equivalent "vegan" leather. I'm positive that my reusable plastic lunch containers are lower impact than bringing a paper bag every day. Etc.