We are constantly being bombarded with the information about our physical world these days. There is a whole lot of information available for consumers about the all the "stuff" we use in our day to day life. Not too long ago, I used the "wattzon calculator" to gestimate just how much green my life is. It was quite shocking to know that my very very mundane life was anything but green. Out of my whopping 4684 Watts foot print ( average was 2, 787 Watts) , about 1700 Watts were taken up by the "stuff" I owned. And that was even greater than the international flying I have done in the past year.
This stuff was mostly the everyday stuff I owned such as television, microwave oven, phone, laptop, luggage bags, pillows, board games, my purses, my socks, my tooth brush... the list was endless. I know I like to buy good quality products. But looking at the figures these products generated, I could not stop thinking about my ignorance. Probably most of these good products still have some traces of cheap materials, toxins, and unsustainable manufacturing methods. I really have no clue how they are made and what happens to them when I am done using them. May be they end up in an abyss of the landfills or get incinerated , release more toxins in the air, for me to breath. Until that day, as far as I was concerned, I was doing my job perfectly by purchasing good quality products, using them neatly and donating them for the re-use. And I thought I was a responsible consumer.
Wattzon calculator got me looking at my stuff in a whole different light. Would I feel better if all my stuff was made differentely?If it was made up of natural raw materials instead of some complicated plastic polymers I can't even read correctly?Sure. Would I feel safer if my stuff was free of toxins and not harmful in any way to my health?Absolutely. Would it be better for my environment if it naturally decomposed? Not a doubt.
So, consuming products which are all that can be our answer ? I am not sure.
I know every educated person thinks on the similar terms as I do when it comes to our sustainability. Today we are pushed towards choosing a "green-er" product over the conventional ones. We have counter green product for everything- ranging from a toy to a car. But has the agenda [of promoting consumerism] behind these products changed?Are we in a danger of creating a whole different pattern of consuming the products that feel ethically right to consume? Wont the "green-er" products have their share of generating a carbon foot print and may be after [many many] years we might face the same challenges such as energy consumption/ waste generation etc. with the green-er products as well? I think we have to be inspired from nature to deal with this situation. If we look around and nature and learn from the other species that co-exist with us, "Eco conservation" might be the answer to our quest and not "Eco-consumerism". That not just owing the green products, but owning them in just the right quantity might also be the key.
I have decided to be a part of this movement by owning the right amount of stuff, which is made up of right materials, those are processed in a right manner. By being honest about my necessities. At the back of my mind I can not stop thinking about the twenty pairs of socks I own. Some brought for their color, some for patterns, some for their soft material. Some of them used once, some of them never been used. Not much money spent, never given much attention to the whole socks (stuff) owning episode. I know I can not speak for everyone, but deep down everybody knows hows much is too much. I know my twenty pairs of socks are too much. I was told by another web site that if everybody lived like I did. that if everybody owned stuff as much as I do, we would need 3.5 earths to sustain, and that, most certainly is not an option.
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