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LINKS
YES! MAGAZINE. Perhaps the single most inspiring journal you could read, you will find us referring to Yes! Magazine frequently. It's banner says it all: A Journal of Positive Futures.
SIMPLE LIVING NETWORK. The concepts of simple and frugal living take a wide variety of forms, from the global to the personal, from conscious investing to home gardening and food preservation. The Simple Living Network provides access to most of them, in some 3000 pages of newsletter, links, tips, and so on.
CO-OP AMERICA. Of special interest is the Green Almanac, providing an extensive and thoughtful list of easy, straightforward actions each of us can take toward a more earth-conscious way of living.
AWAKENING EARTH. An elegant site hosted by Duane Elgin, author of Voluntary Simplicity, an early classic book on the values and liberation of changing our consumption habits. Here you'll find an excellent and thorough annotated list of links.
CARBONFUND.ORG is a simple and affordable way for you to reduce your climate footprint. We reduce the threat of climate change by supporting renewable energy, efficiency and reforestation projects that reduce carbon emissions.
HYBRID CENTER. A project of the Union of Concerned Scientists, this site is a kind of consumers' guide to hybrid vehicles. It's especially good for seperating out some of the hype around certain hybrids.
MORE LINKS . . .
BOOKS
Diet for a Small Planet, by Frances Moore Lappe. Thirty years ago this revolutionary book presented eye-opening evidence of the harmful effects of a meat-based diet on the planet. She showed how a more plant-based diet could eliminate hunger, solve environmental problems and improve human health worldwide.
No Logo, by Naomi Klein. A user-friendly handbook that looks at the insidious practices and effects of corporate marketingand the powerful potential of a growing consumer activist movement.
Our Ecological Footprint, by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees. Despite its light hearted approach, this is a very serious exposition of just how much our personal lives and our growth economy demand of the planet.
The Overspent American, by Juliet Schor. An analysis of overconsumption and why people are driven to spend more and more even though it is rarely satisfying: an "indictment of consumerism".
MORE BOOKS . . .
JOURNALS |
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Our Day to Day Living Practices
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Use it up
Wear it out
Make it do
Do without
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Eleanor Roosevelt’s words can still help us find our way as we make a thousand decisions in the course of a day. Have you ever played the Extreme Reuse Game? Here’s how it goes: How many times can you use the same piece of aluminum foil? How often can you clean and reuse a single vegetable bag at the grocery store? Can you cause your living companion who puts his or her nose in the bag to exclaim, “Yech! Enough!” How many scribbled reminder notes can you get on one piece of paper before you confuse your doctor’s appointment with your hot date?
We all know the usual, and extremely important, energy-saving stuff: use compact fluorescent light bulbs, turn ‘em off when you leave the room, turn down the heat, wear a sweater. There is now a wealth of earth-friendly products we can buy. For example, toilet paper, Kleenex, other paper products. You can actually get a completely adequate wipe using 1-ply toilet paper, and save trees while you’re at it. (Consumers who purchased recycled paper products from one company saved 27,000 living trees, 70,000 cu. ft. of landfill, and 9.8 million gallons of water in one year.)
We’ve all been grateful on occasion for the readily available bottled water when we’re having a big thirst away from home. But a recent study gives alarming statistics about the use of bottled water: its consumption has doubled in the last 6 years! This translates into massive costs in packaging the water using petrochemicals, and in transportation to marketplaces. The demand for bottled water in America alone requires more than 1.5 million barrels of oil annually, enough to fuel 100,000 US cars for a year. The waste is also staggering, and takes up to 1000 years to degrade. A lot of times we could fill up one of those empties and put it in our car or purse to carry with us and avoid having to buy and throw away that bottle. Remember the days when you went to a meeting and there were glasses and a jug of water on the table?
Coffee lovers can get a dime off their latte at Starbucks when they bring their own cup.
It’s easy to put a small drugstore purchase in your purse instead of accepting the bag the clerk is quick to grab for you. Or just get in the habit of carrying a cloth bag when you go out.
There is another aspect of recycling that has received a lot less attention. It has become increasingly clear that manufacturers are going to have to begin building products that have recycling and re-use of components designed into them as standard features. Many companies actually use recycled materials in their final products.
We can all recycle diligently, but it especially important to realize that this practice is symbolic of how we need to view our impact on this planet: how to be mindful of exactly what resources we use in our daily activities, and how to minimize waste.
It is up to us to simply be aware of our daily actions; use less, waste less, recycle more, and encourage producers to do the same. In the Reuse / Recycle Game, you can be creative, have fun and everyone wins, especially the Earth.
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