How many do I need?

Plastic and paper bags – those disposable bags that we had very few of prior to quarantine. Once California went into lock down a year ago, if you shopped, you could not use your own bags. Most stores are still not allowing you to use your own bags but with a decrease in COVID numbers, I’m hoping we can use our own bags again soon.

They pantry had reached the level of madness. I decluttered 60 of the cheapest, tears after you look at them plastic bags and 20 paper bags. I put another 250 plastic bags into bags of 25 or 50 (you know, those you can actually reuse). Why am I keeping them? Who knows! I even decluttered all the bags from the trunk of the car!

While I was dealing with the bags, kiddo #2 decluttered the rest of the pantry, consolidating open containers from when she moved in and just straightening up the shelves. Another 20 items gone.

100 items removed from the pantry!!

Plastic is everywhere!

I guess we shouldn’t be surprised but I always am when we find evidence of  the damages plastics are doing to the environment.  They are impossible to avoid (heck, my keyboard is plastic!) but we need to make more conscious decisions about their use.

Below are an interesting set of articles published over the last couple of days by The Guardian about the discovery of plastics found in sea salt, tap water, and the unknown relationship to our health.  The articles also contain many links to others about the same or related topics.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/08/sea-salt-around-world-contaminated-by-plastic-studies

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/06/we-are-living-on-a-plastic-planet-what-does-it-mean-for-our-health

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/06/plastic-fibres-found-tap-water-around-world-study-reveals

 

“Plastic: A Toxic Love Story” book review and thoughts

 Can we ever really be plastic-free???

Plastic: A Toxic Love Story
 
I recently read the book “Plastic: A Toxic Love Story” by Susan Frienkel.  Overall I would give it a 3 out of 5.  Here are some thoughts/quotes from the book.
  • She hooks me immediately with an experiment – not touching anything plastic for an entire day.  She realizes that she is unable to use the toilet since the seat is made of plastic.  What ever is she to do???  She decides to change to documenting the items she touches during the day.  I don’t know about you, but I would have thought a little more about it before I started my experiment OR this is just a creative hook.  As I thought about my “day”, even my flooring is “plastic” and I would have to stay in bed all day!
  • It is interesting to be forced into the realization that so much of our everyday life is plastic.  Building supplies, transportation, etc.  She spends too much time on the history of plastics and their manufacture for my liking.
  • One study she mentions looked at the effect on organisms in the Great Lakes region by Colburn.  It basically found that adult organisms were OK with the toxins but their offspring were not.  Reproductive/developmental/growth issues were becoming more common and extreme.
  • Even if we go plastic-free, the toxins from the manufacturing processes are and will be released into the environment.  Big question should be – how do we reduce this??
  • A study by the Environmental Working Group found an average of 200 industrial chemicals and pollutants in the umbilical cords of newborns (pg 103)  What effects will we see long-term in the offspring??  Learning disabilities? reproductive failure? autoimmune disorders?
  •   Many plastics were made for durability for military uses.  After WWII, plastic companies needed to continue to sell these items.  Now we have styrofoam  containers when this plastic was originally made for life rafts.
  • Ads generated a new consumable/disposable life for objects.  Why clean something you can just toss??  We now see the same thing but with “eco” twists.  “Use this and be environmental.”  Many don’t think about the object once it hits the trash bin.
  • 1970 the average American generated 3.25 pounds of trash with 3.0 pounds going to landfill (92%).  In 2008, the average American generated 4.5 pounds of trash with 2.4 pounds going to landfill (53%)  pg 194   Yes we send a smaller percent to landfills but 3.5 to 2.4 pounds isn’t really that great of an accomplishment.  
  • We are consuming more and recycling hasn’t increased much in 40 years.  

As I sit in my plastic armed chair, looking at a plastic covered monitor, typing on a plastic keyboard, one needs to ask – how easy it will be to remove plastic from your life?  At what level are you willing to be plastic-free??

 

Random Thoughts about Medical Offices and Plastic

by Barb

This morning I was laying still at the hospital during my tests in radiology.  I had a few random thoughts about plastic based on a my observations and inability to move for 40 minutes.

  • The hospital uses a lot of plastic and nothing seems to be recycled.
    • the medical ID card I needed at check-in
    • the “bracelet” they put on you
    • the IV tubing and syringes to inject the chemicals for my test
    • how much of the plastic chemicals were leached from the tubing and syringe before injection into my body??
    • the EKG leads
    • shouldn’t the medical industry figure out a way to repurpose/recycle some of these “disposable” items??
    • Are they worried about disease transmission if they recycle?  If I remember correctly, to “melt” the plastics requires a much higher temperature than anything could live.
  • The scanning machine was basically all plastic.  I’m sure there was some metal in there somewhere but I couldn’t see it.
  • Food and Beverages
    • The mandatory cookies I had to eat were wrapped in plastic
    • The plastic beverage cup I purchased to wash down the cookies was plastic.
    • Not sure which annoyed me more – being told to eat cookies for breakfast or having to pay for a beverage to go with it.  There wasn’t a drinking fountain anywhere to be seen!
    • Did drinking fountains become obsolete in public?  I have many at my work site, but rarely look for them elsewhere.
    • Have the hospitals eliminated them to prevent the spread of diseases??
    • My required water just before the test was in a large (maybe 32 oz) styrofoam.  They filled it about a quarter of the way up.  I just added it to the iced tea I purchased at the coffee corner.
    • I thought styrofoam was worse than other plastics – guess I need to do some research.
  • Papers – now here is the irony!
    • They had me read the required warnings in a plastic wrapped paper.
    • I signed on a small pad connected to the computer
    • I wasn’t given a copy.  When I asked for one “we are trying to cut down on our paper usage to save the environment.”
    • So they won’t give me a copy for “environmental” reasons but they don’t recycle the plastics???

OK rant over!