SS3300 Plastic-Free Blog
Day One: Monday, December 9th, 2013
Today is
my first day. I’m excited to try out
this project. I’m also a little scared
to find out how bad of a plastic polluter I actually am. I will be eating breakfast at home this
morning, as I do every day. Because I
eat breakfast at home, I rarely have plastic garbage. The typical breakfast plastics for me are
bacon packages, or wrappers from a pack of bagels; however I only run into
these every few days. For lunch, I am
using a plastic zip-lock baggie for my sandwich. I carry a Nalgene water bottle everyday
instead of wasting one use bottles. Interestingly,
my Nalgene is old enough that it is one of the “toxic” bottles. It is awesome though, never had any issues
and it is almost ten years old. Consider
that my plug for “Made in America” products; let the royalty checks start
rolling.
Lunch
time. I had a sweet tooth, so I grabbed
a Snapple from the MUB. I love Snapple
because I enjoy tea and their products come in glass bottles. There are plenty of good places on campus to
recycle, and campus’ takes fairly good advantage of high-traffic areas. I usually go home for dinner, which I eat
with a number of my fraternity brothers.
We go through lots of everything. So we do our best with proper
recycling practices. We had some plastic
from the dinner meal.
Morning
of day two. It is the second day of the
two day period in which I am studying my own habits. This project has already enlightened me to be
much more cautious when purchasing plastic products. For breakfast, I again managed to use no
plastic! Feels good! I used a Tupperware container for my lunch, so I could
just wash it at home. I refiled my water
bottle, and off to school. I bought some
new sponges and some paper towels before class.
They did however come in a plastic wrapper, which I threw away. I also bought a Red Bull Energy drink, which
comes in a returnable can, so I was also able to recycle that. On the drive home, I stopped at the gas
station and picked up a pack of smokes.
Cigarettes come with a cellophane wrapper on them, and many people
inadvertently litter with these.
For
dinner, there were lots of different wrappers from the foods we used. There
were also a couple of empty milk jugs. At
my home we get all of our food in paper bags, no plastic. We then later use the paper bags to start our
wood-burning fireplace. From this day
forward I will try my best to use fewer plastic products, and to think responsibly
when it comes to even the simplest of choices in life.
Way to go plastic free! Once you begin to pay attention to what products you are using it can really open your eyes. -Rebecca Helppi
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