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You may think that I am an anthropomorphizing fool. I don’t care.

I want you to think of Elena Tonra’s words coming from the point of view of a product you consume, perhaps an electronic device. I envision my computer singing the words of this song. How when I am finished with it, will it end up in a landfill? Will I dispose of it so easily and carelessly? Am I not in some way married to it? Am I required to have its use necessary for me to finish my schooling? To finish this project? To blog this to you now?

Yet it is so easy for me to forget, now. Possibly I’ll just leave it at a train station one day. Because of this class, because of this project, I am more aware of the natural world and the perceived dependence for survival with technology, with consuming. My computer is not trash. It is a resource, and one that I intend to make long-lasting.

I will not throw you in the landfill.

“This is torturous.”

This is Trashy.

I’m kind of a “momma’s boy.” Really, I have a difficult time saying “no” to my mother sometimes. Aren’t most families the other way around?

My trash from this past week was generously gifted from the fam. Shall we do this again? One more time…

Bread: basically every grocer will supply this in a single-use plastic bag. Try a local bakery which displays their goodies in open cases, in which you can bring your own cloth bag. Or, try baking your own bread at home! Remember to store it in a closed container away from sunlight. I like to put mine in the refrigerator. I don’t eat much bread, and it keeps longer.

Deli-cuts: just say no. Or, something close to no. All deli items are packaged in single-use plastic. They are then cut in slices and put into single-use plastic baggies for you to take home. Try bringing your own container to avoid that additional baggie, or avoid these easy eats and cook with paper-wrapped meats and cheeses. I hear cheese is hard to find without a plastic rind, so your best bet is a small, local producer.

Cereal: bulk grocer, bulk grocer, bulk grocer!

Raisins: bring your own containers to bulk grocery stores. In Manhattan, try People’s or even Hy-Vee.

Bars: candy, granola, snack, and whatever else is packaged individually for single use. You just have to say no. Many of these items can simply be made at home. You can then package them yourself in reusable containers or recyclable foil. What a pain, cooking and planning and shopping for ingredients. Pinterest anyone?

These are all changes I’ve made in my everyday life for this project. Three more days, and it will have been for 60 days. Take a gander, this is my trash for 60 days.

From left to right: (1) plastic seal from contact solution, (1) plastic seal from peanut butter, (1) plastic cap from scintillation vial, (7) pairs single-use laboratory gloves, (1) chocolate bar wrapper, (1) chip bag, (1) snack cracker bag, (2) granola bar wrappers, (2) mini cereal bags, (1) plastic deli bag, (1) plastic bread bag, (1) plastic raisin bag, (1) plastic mail sleeve, (1) plastic check holder, (2) strips plastic packing tape.

This was such an adventure. This was such a learning experience.

We’re almost done here, folks.

This is Trashy.

World Owes Nothing. The world owes nothing and I owe an apology.

Once more, Beth Terry, I have failed you. This is number 70 on her “Plastic-Free Living Guide.” Link below.

I ordered checks from my local bank to be mailed to my place of residence. Silly me, I thought a paper product would simply be packaged in more paper. Instead, the packaging was a plastic sleeve. I also received a flimsy plastic check holder which I will never use. Oh, and I acquired some plastic packing tapeFantastic.

It could have been so simple to request no plastic or styrofoam packaging.

Instead, I learn the hard way.

This is so Trashy.

http://plasticfreeguide.com/

I am naive. Not in my nature, but in my relation to the entire world. I therefore write this to you with my limited knowledge of this much over-due topic. My descriptions will be general, and I implore you to research further, as this is a simple way in which to reduce personal waste from consumption.

Compost.

Compost is basically dirt. This nutrient-rich dirt is the waste of hungry, hungry microorganisms which live within organic matter. They require a certain environment to live, and perform this job. They need a certain temperature, humidity, and diet. For more of this info:

http://www.mansfieldct.org/Schools/MMS/compost/microbes.htm

http://www.composterconnection.com/site/ingredients.html

Now, how do ya compost? Let me breakitdown…

If you live in an area which reaches temperatures above 40 degrees Fahrenheit sometime during the year, and have access to Earth’s dirt floor, you can make your own compost pile! There are also a variety of other ways to yard compost.

http://www.composting101.com/building-a-bin-article.html

http://www.composting101.com/compost-bins.html

If you live in an area which reaches temperatures above 40 degrees Fahrenheit and do not have access to a yard, search areas near your community in which you could begin composting. Ask friends and neighbors to compost with. Otherwise, many state counties provide composting and recycling facilities for public use. This is what I have been doing, but do note that Riley County Transfer Station charges $11 per drop-off of food waste. Gross. More info for the Manhattan, KS area:

http://www.riley.ksu.edu/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=197

And if you are limited on space, something such as these may be doable.

http://smallnotebook.org/2008/04/06/how-to-make-a-worm-compost-bin/

http://www.naturemill.com/howItWorks.html

Now, what can ya compost?

Oh. My. Goodness. Almost EVERYTHING can be composted!!! Just remember – no glass, metal, plastic, or poo. And for denser matter like bone, only in commercial composting facilities. They reach the needed, much higher temperatures than any home composting.

http://life.gaiam.com/article/compost

Where do ya put it now, before ya compost it?

I’ve heard some call it a “compost bin.” But, that’s actually referring to the container in which the intended composting processes occur. This is the big bin usually outside the home. What we need is a “compost storage bin.” This is the intermediate container. This is usually a 5-gallon (or smaller) closed container which sits in the kitchen (where the majority of home compost material is produced). When it is time to empty, its contents are then transferred to the big “compost bin,” or “compost pile.” Isn’t language glorious?

There are so many links, and no pictures, and I do apologize. This was the big one for me. With my limited purchasing of packaged foods, I mainly rely on produce for convenience. This convenience produces food waste. In relation to recyclables, I produce alot of compost material. Isn’t that awesome?!

And ya know what’s more awesome? I don’t even have a picture to show you, because this week…

I DID NOT PRODUCE TRASH.

Wonder Why.

Do you wonder why? Do you wonder? I am always wondering. And sometimes, I am in wonder.

It’s little things for me. Like, going for a run without knowing the time. Or, waking up to the chatter of birds. Visiting home for a weekend is nice, too.

That’s what I did last weekend. It was very nice, and seems to have been much needed. I would pronounce to you my troubles as a college student, but they are truly not troubling. My perspectives on why I do some of the things I do is changing. This is more of what I wonder…

I am not rude. Or at least, I try not to be. Everything is culturally defined. And, I think this is one reason why we, as an American culture, to me, seem trashy. It’s not that we don’t care. I am a part of this “we,” and I do care. To me, it’s that we don’t wonder.

I wonder why this sort of packaging is being used. Even with Frito-Lay, which is producing biodegradable packaging! In 2010, they introduced the world’s first compostable chip bag with SunChips. This bag was very noisy to consumers, and was later pulled from shelves. An alternative bag was developed, which equals noise levels of other chip bags, but it is used to package only Original flavor SunChips.

And currently, this is all the information I am able to find. From viewing today’s stores’ snack shelves, I think all of those extra-crinkly chip bags are biodegradable, but I’m still unsure…

The other packaging pictured is from Wonka chocolate and Wheat Thins. There are other chocolate bars packaged entirely in paper and foil, which are recyclable. And for snack crackers, there are also others packaged entirely in paper. These are just a few common snack items which have less trashy alternatives.

I have all this packaging in my trash for this week because I love my mom. I went home last weekend, and when preparing to leave, she always goes through her kitchen and donates to me her unwanted groceries. I’m a poor college kid, and I couldn’t tell her no! That’s just rude, and I try not to be!

Some social situations are just trashy. And, this was one I couldn’t didn’t fight for…

And, this is Trashy.

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/food/2010-10-05-sunchips05_ST_N.htm

http://www.fritolay.com/our-planet/steps-to-a-healthier-planet.html

Be excited. This post contains two trashy webcam pictures.

For this week, this is the amount of trash I have created. I feel sad about it…because…this was completely my intention. I refuse to not wear contacts, and this plastic seal was from my purchase of saline solution. So anti-climactic, I know…

But, here we are! Tomorrow, we will be at the end my 30 day minimum for this trashy project of mine. It was phenomenal, but is surely not the end. For your joy (and mine even more) I will continue to post weekly for some unknown duration. This has been such a journey, such an adventure.

On this day of near nostalgia, let me provide you with an understanding. Of how, through all the days we live in a capitalistic and consumeristic society, we are pressured into consuming. We consume and this becomes trash. I’m not proclaiming that consumption is trashy. It’s just that the way in which our products are available to us is trashy. We consume and that becomes trashy.

I chose this idea as my project because I wanted to do something. I wanted to do something which I could do. I wanted to show people that it is possible to not be trashy. It is possible to not feel like trash. And for me, I do feel less trashy. I am, have been, and will continue to be, less trashy. The way we, as a society, package products needs to change. The way we position, all alone, trash bins, with no other form of disposal nearby, needs to change. We need to change. We need to change?

This is the amount of trash I have produced during my 30 days. What you are not seeing is the amount produced from products I purchased from before my 30 days. You are not seeing the amount I have recycled. You are not seeing the amount I have composted. And thank goodness, you are not seeing the amount of toilet paper I have used…

This all took planning. As I write this today from out-of-town, I had to plan my traveling. I had to plan to not stop for food or drink packaged in single-use materials. I had to plan to take my own container for composting. I had to plan for recycling. I had to plan for not being rude. Not everyone can do everything all the time. This is why I share with you my trash. This is less, and this is doable.

And this is still Trashy.

GRAWRRR!!! I am reckless!!! I am so reckless! Do you see this nonsense?

Around 3p.m. on Friday, during my last shift at work for the week, my Tyrannosaurus strength broke the lid of a vial. You probably can’t see the massive crack in it, but trust me, it’s there… And then, that lovely, sinister ring of plastic…

It’s forcing me to confess to you an obsession I have. I like to think of it more as a love, but maybe I’m more in love. I’m in love with peanut butter. I love peanut butter! It goes with everything, and it doesn’t even have to.

I love PEANUT BUTTER.

The last time I went shopping at a large superstore, I purchased a glass jar of organic peanut butter. I thought this wasn’t trashy, but apparently it was. This ring of plastic was sneakily hiding itself, hugged between the lid and jar’s opening.

But now, I will refill this glass jar with freshly-made peanut butter. There are multiple stores in the Manhattan, KS area which offer this service. But there’s another love I have. People’s Grocery Cooperative. This member-owned grocery store operates through a democratic model, supplying only organic and locally made products. If you have not visited, I highly recommend. To me, this is a unique store which supplies many unique products.

I bring my own cloth shopping bags. This allows me to avoid plastic ones when checking out, along with the ones at the produce and other sections. I bring my own containers, which I reuse. After having them weighed at the register, I fill them with the many dry goods supplied in bulk. I purchase local eggs and milk which are packaged in returnable containers. I even scout for the cuts of meat packaged only in paper. There are also many other products offered in recyclable packaging. People’s is very helpful, and has been to me, very useful.

It’s so weird, for me, to think about eating organic. To be eating natural, to be eating local. I was not raised with these ideas. These ideas are recent in our American, western society. We associate these ideas, these eating behaviors, with an ideal – of being at a higher level of income. In the past, these eating behaviors would have been considered for the less wealthy. That if you could not afford packaged, processed foods, you were poor. Ecofeminist, activist, and author Vandana Shiva acknowledges this in her book Staying Alive. “People are perceived as poor if they eat millets (grown by women) rather than commercially produced and distributed processed foods sold by global agri-business.” These words are all about “perceived poverty.” That if somebody lives in a way different from your cultural norm, it means that they’re not living in a way which is comfortable and happy to them. No… Cultural ideals are not universal.

This is Trashy.

http://peoplesgrocery.biz/

This is Day One. This is day one of breaking it down, of how I am drastically reducing the amount of waste I produce in my everyday life.

Let’s begin, again, with work. I work for a research program associated with the Biology department. This is where my trash for the past two weeks has come from. But, not any more. I have the best supervisors and they have given me the option to use a heavier pair of gloves which can be used multiple times. And yes, I say best, not just for brownie points (mmm, brownies), but because I believe it.

The best supervisors like to celebrate their workers’ birthdays, holidays, and other days with one of my favorite things. Food. Let’s describe the typical office celebration: There are people. There are chairs. There is sitting. There is standing. There is conversation. There is beverage. There is food. (Like brownies!) To avoid the disposable materials this food and beverage is usually served on, I have placed my own reusable bottle, bowl, plate, and silverware at the office. This way, unexpected or not, I will not make use of the disposables. I do want to note that the paper-based disposables can be composted, but I don’t expect most work places compost… When bringing my lunch, I pack everything in a reusable, washable, food-storage container. And, when eating somewhere else, I am careful of what I order, and never accept disposable, plastic straws.

Oh, no! My hands are messy from being gluttonous. Better go wash them. Step, step, step…wash, wash, wash…wait. No hand dryer – only paper towels. Again, compostable, but do I really want to stuff wet paper in my bag until I get home to my own compost bin? Nope. This is why I have brought my own hand towel from home to work. Or, you can try this next part with me…

You are standing near the sink from just washing your hands. Put both your arms down, with your hands at your sides, some distance away from the rest of your body. Now alternate your hands from in front of your body, to behind your body, as fast as you can. This should be, to some lesser effect, close to that of a hand dryer. I call it the “Hand Dance.” You’re welcome.

This dance can also be fun at home! Yep, you got it, I’m again transitioning to the potty-room. But this time, let’s discuss it in the aspect of getting ready for each of my adventurous days. I usually start them by waking. I then shower. Shampoo, conditioner, face wash, body wash – they all come in plastic bottles. I have discovered most of them to be recyclable. But, I do know there are more organic cleansers and soaps which contain paper-based packaging or no packaging. I am again putting the link to Beth Terry’s “Plastic-Free Living Guide” below. This topic begins at number 41 on her list, and is a must-read.

Most hygienic products are packaged in recyclable bottles. Unfortunately, many also have a non-recyclable plastic seal around their opening, or the package is surrounded with stretches of non-recyclable plastic. I have many of these products to use up before trying other alternatives, so I don’t know if I’ll ever get a convenient chance to tell you about any changes I’ll be making. I definitely will be attempting many of the suggestions from the “Plastic-Free Living Guide” when the times come. For now, I will mention one area I am not changing. Contact lenses. I am near-sighted, and as much as I do love my glasses, I don’t like wearing them every day, especially when exercising. Am I a quitter already? I like to think not; contact lenses are a phenomenal invention, and one of those which requires sterility to produce and use.

I’m picking my battles. You’ll see the outcomes. Eyesight is a loss.

This is Trashy.

http://plasticfreeguide.com/

I work.

I work for a research program extended from the Biology department. Rather than boring you with any details, I’ll just give you the short version. I do science.

Well, I kind of do science. I’m more like another pair of hands to help with all of the plant and water samples we collect and sort, along with cleaning various laboratory materials. The latter is where I have failed this week. This is Trashy.

This is the amount of trash I have created this week that wasn’t from products from before I started this project. IknowIknowIknow, but I wanted to show you what I am doing, not what I did do… Anyway, what you are seeing are three pairs of single-use laboratory gloves. I wear them to protect my hands from strong acids while cleaning various laboratory vials and what-nots. Even though I didn’t purchase them, I had direct contact in using them, and am therefore including them as part of my trash. To me, they seem unavoidable, as this is a part of my job.

And this brings us to my first point: businesses. I am sure there are many regulatory rules and possibly laws which I am uneducated about involving certain procedures of cleanliness, or in my case, strict sterility. My thoughts may be hinting towards major food companies and manufacturers of materials which require precision to operate. These would include your staple restaurants and fields of science, both of which I speak from. My past work experience includes a solid five years with the restaurant industry. During that time, I have tossed so many “trash” bags into dumpsters, all mostly containing food waste, packaging, and single-use restroom materials.

And here we go, to point number two: potties. Yes, “potties,” because I feel a little childish when mentioning something too close to bathroom humor. When conducting my business, I opt to flush all waste, including the single-use toilet paper. Now, it is compostable, but I’m sorry. With mild justification, I am not always able to conveniently compost with the use of public restrooms. This is another step I have not taken, and most likely will not ever take. My apologies to the humorous, bathroom-savvy idealists.

I have, I think, successfully managed my first week, creating a minimal amount of trash. And still, this is Trashy.

[Explicit Vid]

I consume trash. I am trash. I am trash.

This project of mine is Trashy. For it, I will be walking my talk, living my life with the image of being waste free. Ideally, the only ends for my product consumption will be through composting and recycling. Of course, there will be situations in which I can not, or will not, be able to do so, but we can talk about those during the following weeks, when I encounter them. For now, this is just an introduction to my latest adventure.

Our American society, capitalistic and consumeristic, is far too wasteful. In 2010, according the US EPA, 54.3% of municipal solid waste, our trash, was “discarded.” The recycling rate, being 34.0%, was the highest of any year. Still, about three quarters of the materials reported as discarded are those which could be recycled – paper, food scraps, yard trimmings, metal, and glass. More so, the material I discard most, is plastic. The non-recyclable kinds I find which I consume during my everyday life, come from product packaging: that stretch you fight to get at your new AA batteries, the lining of your favorite cereal, the individual sandwich bag, and so much more.

There is so much more to plastics. I feel bad, but this project is just one step in bettering my life with the environment. I am including plastic in my life, but only those which are long-lasting, reusable, or labeled as recyclable. And even though the chasing arrows symbol represents recyclable material, I know that’s not always the case, as many of those recyclable plastics are used to create non-recyclable plastics. To this, I take my trashy lens off. I will see the symbol as recyclable, and maybe later on, I will make this next step. Someone who has made this step, and who has helped me prepare for the weeks to come, is Beth Terry. The information she presents has been very helpful and inspirational. Links below.

This is Trashy.

http://www.epa.gov/osw/nonhaz/municipal/pubs/msw_2010_factsheet.pdf

http://plasticfreeguide.com/

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