Unlikely Activist

Entries from April 2008

The Problem of Wal-Mart

April 30, 2008 · 5 Comments

Terri caught me. I mentioned at Tripping Toward Lucidity that I love the garlic & parmesan kettle cooked potato chips from Wal-Mat. Sam’s Choice. Yep. I had to swing through there today to get Daisy some rawhide chips (to save our couch), and I picked up lunch while I was there (chips and a deli sandwich).

I realize that shopping at large chain retailers like the evil-doing Wal-Mart is not terribly green of me. Nor does it support my efforts to buy locally. However, I have a question…Questions? Yeah, more like.

I live in a rural area. And when I say rural I mean way more rural than the rural I lived in when I lived in Texas. In general there are no interstates connecting the towns I frequent, and Wal-Mart is usually the only significant retailer. In general, they’ve driven out the common man, the local business owner, and the entities flocking around Wally World are other large corporately owned businesses.

So, how does one buy local when there’s very little offered locally? Now, if I were a better planner and more innovative, I might buy locally grown potatoes and make my own kettle chips. Fine. But what about all the other stuff? Clothes? Housewares? What about that thing I need on the fly that I don’t have time to order from someone small somewhere else?? Food is not as big a problem as other “stuff.”

How does one balance out large corporate entities when they’ve largely killed the little guy? I’m totally open for suggestions. This is something B and I bitch about constantly in our house.

Also, feel free to mention some green businesses (even if they’re big ones) that you support.

Categories: Buy Local · Going Green(er)

Bye bye plastic bottles!

April 29, 2008 · 8 Comments

I’m so very very proud of myself. And for such a little thing, too. I am a water bottle addict. I’m one of those women walking around with a water bottle in her hand at all times. However, I’ve taken the initial steps to break the habit!

My addiction to water bottles begins at home. Our town water is horrendous. Seriously, it tastes like chlorine and dirt. All the time. It smells funny, it tastes funnier, and there’s just no way in hell I would drink it on a regular basis. As a result, B and I buy 24-packs of bottled water. Generally I take one a day to work and I might drink anywhere from 1-3 at home each day. As you might imagine, that’s a LOT of bottles. Mind you, we do recycle them all, but that’s still not as good as not using them at all.

I got the bright idea last week to invest in one of those filtering water pitchers to (hopefully) make the water more palatable. We ran across one Friday evening…a PUR brand for a reasonable price. I came home, immediately prepped the filter and filled it up.

I’m tickled to tell you that our town water is now TOTALLY DRINKABLE and delicious. No chlorine taste, no dirt taste. That little pitcher is a miracle. We still have some bottles to finish off (just bought a new case), but it looks like my average bottle use will fall from approximately 18-25 per work week down to 5ish. Until they’re all gone, that is, then I’ll just use a refillable jug–fill it up in the morning, bring it to work during the day, and wash it out at night.

Now if I could only figure out how to alleviate my Styrofoam container use. I tend to eat lunch in the cafeteria and that’s all they have available for dining in or carrying out. I think I need to visit the Tupperware website…

Categories: Going Green(er)

EcoJustice Challenge

April 28, 2008 · 3 Comments

Thanks to AndiLit I heard about the 2008 EcoJustice Challenge. Read the directions below and see my choices.

This info is cross-posted at Tripping Toward Lucidity.

The first step is for anyone who wants to participate to pass the link onto at least five other people (or even if you don’t plan to participate, if you like the idea, please pass it on). If you have a blog of your own, this can easily be accomplished merely by linking to this site in a post on your own blog. Below is a list of things you can choose to do. Once every quarter between now and April 21, 2009, I will add to this list. Your challenge is to choose something from this list, to experiment with it, and to post about it here. Or, if you’d rather not post, that’s fine. You can just choose what you want and leave comments on this blog. You can choose to implement as many or as few from the list as you would like. You can choose to stick with one (or more) for an entire quarter, or you can mix and match (one — or more — this month, a different one next month, etc.). My hope is that by the end of the year, at least one item from the whole list will have become a way of life for you and your family. And if you’re already doing some or all of these things, come up with others you want to do, share them with us, and post on them instead.

To join the blog as a posting member, please send an email to: ecojustice08 AT gmail DOT com with your user name and the email address you’d like to use for the purposes of this blog. I will add you to the list of users. Also, please post on your own blog, if you have one. That’s it. And now, here are your choices for this quarter:

1. Choose one day a week in which you will not use your car at all (barring a major emergency, like having to drive your spouse/child to the hospital for stitches). Before you immediately dismiss this one, because you have to drive to and from work every day, please think about it. Is there no one with whom you could carpool two days a week? If so, the day you’re not driving would be the perfect day not to use your car at all.

2. Choose one “black out night” per week. All lights and all electrical appliances are off by 7:30 p.m. and don’t go on again until the next morning. What will you do without lights, television, your computer? Well, the weather’s getting nice where many of us live. Sit out on the porch/deck and tell stories. Read by candle light. Write letters by candle light. Play games by candle light. You know, people did this sort of thing for thousands of years. My guess is that if you have kids, this will be an exciting and fun challenge for them.

3. Choose two days a week in which you are only going to eat organic and/or locally-grown food. Do you know that inorganic farming is one of the best examples of evolution that we’ve got going these days? All the pesticides that have been used to grow our food have helped to create “super bugs” who are becoming more and more resistant to our chemicals. We’re definitely losing this battle in more ways than one. Talk to the people at your local farmer’s markets. Many of them are growing their food organically anyway; they just aren’t certified, because it’s a difficult and expensive process to be so. Buying locally, of course, cuts down on the oil used to transport food long distances.

4. If you need to go anywhere that’s within a 2-mile round trip radius of your home, walk or bike. Where might this be? The first place that springs to mind for me is your children’s school bus stop. Perhaps the post office is close to your home. The library? For me, it’s both the post office and the bank. If you’re super lucky, maybe you have a farmer’s market that’s close by. Or maybe you don’t live close enough to anything, but you do work close by to that deli, say, where you always drive to pick up lunch.

5. Read that challenging book about the environment that you’ve been putting off reading, you know the one you don’t want to read, because it might make you a little uncomfortable (e.g. The World without Us, Diet for a Small Planet, Affluenza). Read it. Post about it. Maybe implement an idea or two based on what you’ve read.

6. Buy only those things sold in recyclable packaging and make sure you recycle that packaging.

My choices for this first quarter are 1, 3, and 5.

1. Generally I already avoid driving at least one day a week. Because I work a heinous distance from home five days a week (thank God I bought my Prius) I generally loathe driving on the weekends. I usually don’t drive at all on Saturday or Sunday.

3. I try to buy as much local/organic as I can already. Luckily for me we have several fruit and veggie stands nearby, and there’s another one on my way home from work. In addition to eating organically/locally two days a week, I also vow to eat at least two vegetarian meals per week. I’ve been researching vegetarian recipes, and I absolutely cannot wait to try some of them out.

5. There are several environmental books I’ve had my eye on, but the one that comes immediately to mind is Green, Greener, Greenest, by Lorie Bongiorno. The World Without Us, would probably make me even more uncomfortable, and I might try to interlibrary loan that one, too.

Categories: Uncategorized

In the Beginning…

April 27, 2008 · 4 Comments

For some time now I’ve been posting about my passions for environmentalism, politics, and all sorts of other impassioned topics at my book and life blog, Tripping Toward Lucidity: Estella’s Revenge. While I have a shoddy record of maintaining more than one blog at a time, I’ve decided to take the plunge and attempt it once more.

While a number of readers at Tripping Toward Lucidity share my passions for the environment and my other “causes,” I often feel as if 1) I’m preaching to the choir or 2) getting in the way of what readers really came for…books. With those reasons in mind, I will put unique material, as well as some cross-posted material about the environment, politics, and social movements here at Unlikely Activist.

Why unlikely? Well, I suppose in my younger days I wouldn’t have considered myself particularly interested in activism. I was the usual flighty teen, more interested in getting into college than making a splash by bettering the world around me. Time and a teaching career have really put the charge in me to make a difference in the world for the better, and so I hope this little corner of the web can help me do that to a greater extent.

Not only will I post about current events in my areas of interest, but I’ll also argue with myself, pass along links of interest, rant, rave, review books and documentaries, and various other posts that I hope will interest potential readers.

Thanks in advance to those who follow my efforts here, and I can only hope it will open up new avenues of discussion in a variety of areas.

Cheers!

Categories: General