Share your thoughts
on our Facebook Wall!
RSS

simple steps

Don't Give a Holiday Doorstop

Share/Bookmark

Don't Give a Holiday Doorstop
By Greg Peterson

The holidays are a perfect time to start reducing, reusing and maybe we can recycle a little less. Think about it: we can reuse old newspaper into gift-wrap, use last year’s holiday cards as this year’s gift tags and every so often, we can turn unwanted holiday gifts into something useful.  Call them doorstops or snow globes, so many of the gifts we give land as dust collectors or worse yet get filed in the trash, sometimes without a second thought.

If you’re anything like me, then I am sure you have received your own fair share of “doorstops”—unwanted presents that really serve no other purpose than to hold the door open. I always appreciate the sentiment behind the gifts I receive, but I think it’s about time we start giving better gifts—gifts that won’t fill landfills, clog waterways and end up holding someone’s door open.

There is a 20-minute viral video called “The Story of Stuff” making its way around the web and it cites a scary fact: only 1% of the stuff we buy is still around after six months (Paul Hawken, Natural Capitalism, 1999). So basically 99% of even the most well-intentioned holiday gifts will wind up in the trash by summer...bummer.

But even if our gifts do manage to make it into that 1% and survive past the July benchmark, the holidays should be a prime time for giving green. This season, look for items made from recyclable and/or organic materials. Items made from metal, glass, hemp, bamboo and organic cotton are all a great place to start.

For example:


Help reduce the use and that frightening statistic of 99% of our “stuff” ending up in the trash this holiday season by giving smart and giving green. Happy Holidays!

Greg Peterson earned a masters degree in Environmental Planning grounded in sustainability studies. Greg is the creator of The Urban Farm, an environmental showcase home and education center in the heart of Phoenix, Arizona, where he has studied sustainable living for more than 20 years. He is a writer, teacher, and lecturer on issues of sustainability, a contributing writer for Phoenix Magazine and Edible Phoenix, and Smart Spaces television show co-creator.


          Copyright 2009 Smart Spaces: Inside & Out, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission from Smart Spaces: Inside & Out, LLC. This content is however available at no cost for republishing by contacting the editor at Editor@YG2G.com.

 
why buy certified green?
rss feed
© Your Guide To Green 2009     Created by STOTLANDESIGNS terms & conditions | return policy