So there I was in the grocery store check-out line this
morning, gathering up my two reusable bags (which I had, on my way in,
forgotten, as I often do, and returned to the truck for, because that's just
extra steps on my journey to be fitter and healthier, right?), and as I stepped
away I heard the checker's helper ask the lady behind me, "Plastic
ok?" Her response: "Can I have extra plastic bags, please? Like, a
lot? We're running low on plastic bags at home."
Seriously?!? On Earth Day?!?
ARRRRRRRRRRRGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!
Sigh.
Which reminded me that I just wanted to mention a couple of
things today:
1. Here in Southern
California, where water is scarce, the spring weather has been quite lovely
(and mostly without precipitation). Folks can be seen everywhere carrying iced
drinks—tea, soda, fancy coffee, fancy water. But ask yourself: Where do all
those ice cubes go? I mean, if you think of ice as the water it is, and you
imagine how many times a day someone throws a take-out cup in the trash with
ice in it, that's a significant amount of water.
I keep an old pitcher out on the back patio that I use to
water the potted plants. Now every morning when I give Sgt. Thomas Tibbs fresh
water, I dump his day-old water into the pitcher. If I make iced tea (or happen
to pick up a lovely tall unsweetened black tea from that one popular place
because yet another student has given me yet another gift card), I dump the ice
in there as well. And if it is a take-out cup, I rinse out the paper cup and
the plastic lid (plastic straw still attached) and toss them in the recycle
bin. Yes, I love Mother Earth that much.
2. For those of you
who love public radio as much as I do, you still have time to plant a tree
today (because you're a good person and you love Mother Earth, too, and you
really wanted to do something for Earth Day but you had to go to work) by
donating to KPCC in Southern California. Click here, follow the clicky buttons,
and when you donate—whatever you can afford—a tree will be planted. (Well, I
mean, probably not at the precise moment you enter your card info. I mean, it's
not instantaneous—but wouldn't that
be cool?!?)
3. Come on. Don't be
like Extra-Plastic-Bags-Please lady. Break down and buy yourself a couple of
reusable bags. Put them in the trunk of your car. Yes, you will forget them
every single time for the first—How many repetitions does it take to "make
something a habit"?—30 times or so. Make yourself walk back and get them,
and you'll not only start to remember, you'll be able to shave a minute off
your boring treadmill time. Over the course of a year, you'll keep hundreds of
plastic bags from going into a landfill where they don't break down, they just
float around. And if you guilt one other guy into doing the same, and he guilts
one other guy, and so on, we could actually begin a true revolution. You know, like we
used to talk about back in 1969 when the idea for Earth Day got started.
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