Much Better Than Going Blue … Or Gray

Tuesday 04.14.09

On Monday I had the honor of getting to speak at the local MOPS group about Going Green.  When I received an email asking if I’d be willing to be part of a panel of women talking about their efforts at bringing green living into their households, I was supremely flattered … and a bit nervous.  Why do they think that *I* know anything?  Don’t they realize that I’m librarian in nature:  sharing information that I don’t *necessarily* apply to my life?  Now I’ll be responsible for my words and actions:  well, crap.  But the idea of getting to hang out with the lovely ladies (and drop my children off in child care for a bit) won out, and I agreed to participate.

The first woman spoke on the benefits of purchasing organic cotton and the negatives of wearing non-organic cotton.  She had props.  And printed-off information.  And statistics.  What did I have?  A shoddy note-book, less than six hours of sleep, and my smart-ass wit:  a fairly typical day.  :)   But it seemed to go well:  people were engaged, asking questions, not getting up to move to the craft table early or throwing jelly beans at each other – success!

Here’s a bit of what I shared.

In a theology class I read a book about consumerism.  One point talked about the industrial revolution and how that changed the role of mothers from being creators/producers to being “managers of consumption” — which I *hate* being, and which puts a whole lot of pressure on mothers.

Ways I’ve Tried to Go Green:

REDUCE what I bring into my home

  • Toys, clothes – use or give away
  • Heat – keep at 66 – use sweaters
  • Library – get most materials (books, music, dvds), put holds online for easier pickup
  • Meal plan – use what I have rather than buy more
  • Trash/Recycling – links to my area garbage service, explains what can and can’t be recycled in the can or on the premises
  • Baking Day – try to bake breakfast foods one morning, freeze – reduces oven time
  • Car & Trips – only have one car, reduced trips into town, spend more family time together, spend more time in the neighborhood

REUSE what I already have

REPURPOSE what I have into what I need

  • Spaghetti jars/yogurt tubs – hold bulk items, kids toys, craft items
  • Veggies/chicken bones – turn into stock in the crockpot
  • Community eating – either through a meal swap or a CSA

Going green, and life in general, is meant to be lived in community:  we can’t do this alone.

Make choices out of love, not out of fear.

Think of the larger pictures:  I may choose to reduce the animal products I eat because I don’t like the potential toxins, OR I may choose to reduce the animal products I eat because the industry puts animals and people into horrible conditions that are soul-sucking – I don’t want to support something so deameaning to all involved.

Give yourself grace.

Find life and joy.

Here are some other links that might be helpful:

Oregon Master Recycling

Little House in the Suburbs

Angry Chicken

Eat Wild

Oregon Farmer’s Markets

I hope it’s helpful, and I’d love to hear things you’ve found useful!

Random Remarks

3 Responses

  1. Terra Jones says:

    Thanks for linking to me!

    I enjoyed your ‘note’! :)

  2. Sally says:

    I’m glad I’m “the first woman” and not “the other woman”… just sounds better. LOL :) You did a great job A.J. and I would not have guessed you were nervous. I was shaking in my boots nervous. I enjoyed learning some new tidbits from you for sure.
    -Sally

  3. Jenn P. says:

    I’ll take your smart-ass wit any day :)

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