Featured Posts

A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Fourth "Tips for Green Living" Carnival The fourth Tips for Green Living blog carnival.

Read more

15th Carnival for Green Living15th Carnival for Green Living Welcome to the fifteenth edition of Tips for Green Living! We have so many good submissions, so let’s get started!. dining & entertaining Sam over at Best Cheap Weddings shares some...

Read more

A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Back to Basics: Recycle The final post in a series of three on the basic principles of green living.

Read more

A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Call to Action Will you help save the earth with only one hour of your time? www.EarthHour.org Back to Basics: Reduce The first in a series of three posts on the basic principles of green living. Back...

Read more

What are Parabens, Exactly?What are Parabens, Exactly? Labeled as one of the new culprit for many a-modern defect is a group of preservatives called parabens. You may have seen the Breast Cancer Fund site's rundown of them or just saw a lotion bottle on the...

Read more

It Ain’t Easy Being Green

Category : For the Greenhorns

Last Friday, we were out celebrating my father’s birthday at a restaurant. He was telling a story about trekking through the snow in some of the local mountains to perform his job when he mentioned that his water bottle had tumbled out of his pocket on the way up an embankment.

Being a good green blogger, I asked, “A plastic bottle?”

My Dad looked at me oddly. (Granted, the water bottle was not the point of the story, the nine-inch-across bear track was.) “I was probably being more ‘green’ than you are because I was eating the clean snow right from where it was!”

He laughed and I frowned. “You know you could get a good stainless steel container that you could keep with you for cheap.”

“I know, I have a thermos for my coffee!”

“Yes, Dad, but I mean for your water too.”

“But how would you refill it?” my brother piped in. “You can just take a couple of extra plastic bottles with you but what would you refill the steel container with?”

“A sink?!” I said.

This is a typical conversation with my family. My father does not believe that global warming/the climate crisis is a fact. He firmly believes that it is put out by the left wing media to… but I digress.

I am not a political animal, Internet, I’m really not. What I am is an artist and a philosopher. I think about specific circumstances, dilemmas of the individual, and personal solutions. I happen to firmly think that no change can come about unless individuals decide to change. And while, yes, you can influence people en mass in media platforms (like blogging), political change and the like, I don’t write for the masses. I write for YOU (yes, you, switching tabs in your web browser between this and MSN’s Wonderwall).

So, for those individuals who happen to believe that the climate crisis is a ploy by the <insert group here> to <insert dire and horrible controlling action here>, I want to ask you: Does it matter?

Does it matter if the scientists and liberal media et alii are wrong and the climate is just doing its thing? What would be wrong with conserving your (I’m assuming) hard earned money and the resources we have? Abundant or otherwise, shouldn’t we wisely use as little as comfortably possible so we do not tax our resources unnecessarily and spend more of our personal resources (time, money, energy) than necessary to live a comfortable life?

I guess my point is here at Green Your Apartment, I do not advocate any political party or agenda. I hope you have learned to think for yourself and have your own opinions.

What I use Green Your Apartment to advocate is ways to, yes, save our natural resources, but also ways to save your time and money. Ways to enhance your life instead of dampening the senses. Ways to set you free of harsh (and unnecessary) chemicals, expensive habits, and wasteful modern mindsets that fly in the face of pre-20th century thinking. To live well and tread lightly.

So Dad, if you’re reading this, don’t be surprised if you find a BPA-free, stainless steel water bottle like Kleen Kanteen’s 40-ouncer in with your Chanukuah or Christmas presents this year – I don’t think anyone will doubt who it’s from. While I respect your opinions, please just use the damn bottle so I won’t dream of its disposable plastic counterparts choking our landfills and littering our forests. And Mom, I swear it’ll save you at least $20 a month on groceries. (I knew you’d like that!)

EDIT: 9 Dec 09

I have been informed that canteens do indeed exist at my parents house and plastic water bottles are rarely used. I will still be razzing my father about using them and I’m sure he’ll come back with some witty, smart aleck response that I will roll my eyes at. Ah, the family dynamics.

And my Mom would like the record straight: only $5.99 a month is spent on bottled water, if that. Consider the record straight.

Happy drinking!

No related posts.

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Post a comment