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The Green Suburbanite

The Green Suburbanite, Part 1

Being green is no longer synonymous with patchwork pants, a lack of hygiene, and churning your own butter.

Today, being green means choosing a fuel efficient car, perhaps installing solar panels or a solar water heater in your home, recycling your aluminum, glass, paper and toys – and being a more mindful consumer.

We at Live Green, Live Smart believe in practicing what we preach, so I am going to make myself greener. My goal is to demonstrate that being green can be done – and that it doesn’t have to interrupt your life, but can enhance it.  As a recent college graduate, I know green is the future.  Now it's my turn to take responsibility for that future.

I suppose first of all I should mention a few things that I already do on behalf of basic green-ness. I already walk or bike to work when weather permits, and I am already a vegetarian (for nearly 13 years now, in fact) who tries to eat locally and seasonally – and, since I live in wintery Minnesota, this is not as easy as it may sound to a Californian or Floridian.

But I still have to drive, since I live and work in a suburban area hemmed in by freeways.  And I still live indoors and like to be warm enough and cool enough, and I love great clothes and adore travel.  So I'm not going back to threadbare griminess and I'm not willing to never leave my suburban haven.  But I can add something more every week to my green attitude, and I am starting now.

I’m going to change three incandescent bulbs in my home to compact fluorescents.  These bulbs will cost three to four times what the cheap conventional bulbs cost when I take them through the check-out – but I will save in electrical rates, reduce the carbon my energy use tosses into the atmosphere, reduce waste because the bulbs last a year longer than the ones I’m replacing – and I will set a good example.

I feel greener already.  Now, for the real work (and fun) of getting greener.

Comments

 

Orlando said:

The suburbs is the hardest sell.  I had to tell my parents that they wouldn't have to change bulbs in high places in order to sell them on the flourescent bulbs - and now they tell their friends how smart they are.  But they weren't interested in saving carbon and didn;'t believe it would save them money - it was just making their month a little easier that finally did it.  I don't know what I can get them to do next - maybe buy a nalgene bottle instead of all those little bottled waters.

May 15, 2007 1:56 PM
 

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About kris

Kris is a Writer, Editor, and Project Manager for Live Green, Live Smart.

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