little bits of green

Hi all – I’m Lacy’s friend, Cate, the minx who sent her a copy of The Omnivore’s Dilemma in order to have some company, raging at the world. A couple of weeks ago, Lacy and I had the following conversation:

Lacy: You should guest blog!
Cate: . . . about what?
Lacy: I dunno! . . . stuff!
Cate: . . . uh . . . .

And here I am!

Since I, like Lacy, am trying to go green(er) and to think more constructively about what I eat, I thought I’d keep a photo log of little things I’ve been doing to be more green:

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Green Thing #1: Supplies! I bought green supplies at the store this morning – washable dishcloths so that I can stop using paper towels, and clothes pegs so that I can hang my laundry outside. Today was the first warm day we’ve had in forever in my corner of the midwest, so I was crazy excited to hang laundry. I know, I know, the things that amuse . . .

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Green Thing #2: Biodegradable laundry detergent. Not only are there fewer bad chemicals in Method products, the detergent is concentrated, so this one bottle has lasted me three months. It’s still going strong. (Please ignore the fact that my washer is in the basement and apparently quite mucky when exposed to the light of my camera’s flash. *scrubs with all new dishcloth*)

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Green Thing #3: Air-dried laundry! As a kid I loved the smell of sheets dried in the open air, but then I grew up and discovered dryers and thought they were the greatest invention known to humankind. Now I’ve come full circle, with my washing line, my cooperative midwestern spring, and my brand new clothes pegs.

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Green Thing #4: Organic, unprocessed food, like this tasty pear and handful of walnuts . . .

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. . . eaten with plain, unsweetened yogurt. By eating organic I avoid supporting the pollution of the environment with fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides, and by eating unprocessed food, I avoid supporting industry that uses massive amounts of fossil fuel to make my snack food of choice.

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For the same reasons, I’ve taken to making a lot more of my own food. These are the raw ingredients for the muffin of the day – apple raisin. I’m slowly replacing my old groceries with organic versions, and I’m nearly all the way there – only the butter and raisins aren’t organic in this set up. Wanna see me make muffins?

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Here are all my ingredients, ready to be mixed up into:

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. . . this. Yeah, it looks a little suspect, huh? But! . . .

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. . . in the muffin cups it looks far tastier.

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And they’re tastier still when they come out of the oven. These whole twelve muffins only use 1 cup of sugar and 1 stick of butter. Compare that to how much fat and sugar you’ll find in the muffins at a chain coffeeshop – these are WAY better.

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And the last Green Thing of the Day: refilling water bottles. I used to buy water bottles by the crate (quite literally) but then realized I was being horrible wasteful, even when I recycled. So now, I refill one of my old bottles with water that’s gone through my Brita filter. Less wasteful, and a lot cheaper than buying bottles at the store.

Tidbits

  • Tried a Seeds of Change frozen entree this week––eggplant lasagna to be exact––and it was awesome.
  • Found a cool new blog––The Good Human––to add to the blogroll.
  • Got an email from the organic farm I contacted several weeks ago about their new CSA program. Is $20/week for a half-share a lot, or is that about average? More research needed.
  • Had grass-fed beef hamburgers on organic spelt buns last night with a side of Alexia sweet potato french fries––man oh man! So tasty! And one serving of the fries provides 100% of your recommended daily allowance of vitamin A.

Resources for Going Green

It’s amazing to me how much my attitude has changed in just the last few weeks about what it means to live my best life––my definition has expanded to include eating organic foods and wanting to “go green” in other areas of my life.

But I have so much still to learn!  I feel like every new thing I learn opens up six more questions.  For instance, I just recently learned that cotton is one of the biggest offenders when it comes to chemical pesticides and fertalizers––because it’s not a food crop, people dump all kinds of crap on it.

I know I can’t make all these changes at once, but sometimes it’s tough to know where to start.  That’s why I was excited to find Co-op America and their National Green Pages. There is so much information on this web site, I barely know where to begin––and I’m sure I’ve only scratched the surface––but the National Green Pages are “the nation’s only directory of screened and approved green businesses.”  Looking for an organic cotton t-shirt?  Now you know where to look.

Also?  I’m now dying to go to Co-op America’s Green Festival in Chicago at the end of April.   Anybody up for a road trip?

A Little Goes a Long Way

The Mission Organic 2010 website has one goal: get everyone in the country to commit to increasing their organic consumption to just ten percent of their diet––that means one item out of ten in your grocery cart will be organic, or one meal out of ten will be.

But how much good could that little change do? According to the statistics on the site, it would eliminate more than 2 million pounds of antibiotics, save 2 billion barrels of imported oil annually and restore more than 6 billion pounds of carbon to our soil––proof that small choices can have a big impact.

Sharpen the Saw

According to Stephen Covey’s Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, a person is like a saw:

A worn-down saw can’t do its job well––or sometimes at all––but a sharp saw can quickly and efficiently make a cut. People are the same. If we take the time to renew ourselves, we will return to our activities and responsibilities refreshed and ready to do our best.

I think it is an important part of my journey to sit down and take stock of my progress once in a while, to ask myself, am I living my best life? What can I do right now to improve, to reach my goals?

Covey defines four areas of life that need to be in balance in order to be most effective: physical, social/emotional, mental, and spiritual.

Physical

  • I’m improving my health by making better food choices, including organic and non-processed foods.
  • I can improve by adding some consistent physical activity––like yoga––to my daily and weekly routines.

Social/Emotional

  • I’m getting a lot more social interaction at my new job, meeting new people, etc.
  • I can improve by making more of an effort to be friendly and engage these new people (something that’s difficult for me!).

Mental

  • I’m learning so much from reading The Omnivore’s Dillemma!
  • I can improve by using more of the time I spend watching TV for reading interesting books like this one.

Spiritual

  • I’m spending at least 15 minutes every morning writing in a journal and time blogging.
  • I can improve by trying meditation when I add yoga to my daily practice.

I truly believe that this kind of self-inventory is key to making any kind of lasting changes.  Ask yourself today, “Am I living my best life?  What can I do today to sharpen the saw?”

Gentle Reminders for February

One of the things I like about Martha Stewart Living is the “Gentle Reminders” column at the front of each magazine which gives suggestions for periodic chores to take care of during the month –– everything from homekeeping to gardening.

Happily, the Martha Stewart Living website has begun publishing these tips monthly. So far this month, I’ve made Valentines (which were a big hit!), organized the linen closet, cleaned out my old medicines, made a list of books to read, and changed the linens on the bed. I still need to do my mending (jeez, I’ve needed to do that for ages — but if Martha says to do it, I’d better!), organize my bookshelves, and plan a vacation!

I love calendars like this that break tasks down by month. Real Simple has a great online month-by-month beauty calendar for the whole year. Which reminds me: it’s time to replace my mascara!

You Say You Want A Revolution

I’ve undergone several food revolutions in my life — periods that completely changed the way I look at, think about, and consume food. Food Revolution Number One: Slim Fast.  When I moved into my first apartment in college, I realized that I finally had complete control over the food I ate.  I knew I needed to lose weight, and so I went with Slim Fast as my diet plan.  It worked — boy, did it work!  I lost 35 pounds in about six months between the Slim Fast and taking up swimming several times a week.  For the first time in my life, I was happy with the way I looked.

But I wasn’t happy with the way I was eating.  Those Slim Fast shakes were driving me up the wall.  I convinced myself that I was ready for real food.  I went off the shakes and, lo and behold, the weight started to come back.  Thankfully, I didn’t let it get too far before I underwent Food Revolution Number Two: Weight Watchers.

Weight Watchers appealed to me because they claim to be all about real food, and after six months of chocolate milk, real food was all I craved.  Nothing is off limits, they proclaim!  And to a certain extent, that’s true.  The ideas behind WW are sound: good nutrition, moderate exercise, and keeping track of what you eat.

But counting points got to be a major drag for me after a while.  I lost ten of the pounds I had gained back after the Slim Fast and hit a wall.  No matter how hard I tried, my weight never seemed to dip much lower, and when it did manage to go down, it came right back up again.  I was beating myself (emotionally) black and blue over each little point, each bite of food, analyzing and re-analyzing and then binging when I got too depressed to care any more.  I had hit a plateau.

And I’m still there — more or less.  The more is that I’ve finally realized that I won’t lose any more weight without a) seriously starving myself or b) seriously increasing my workouts.  The less is that I find myself feeling less and less negative about the woman I see in the mirror; sure, she has a few extra pounds, but she is so much fitter and healthier than she has ever been.  I’m ready to celebrate that victory instead of bemoaning those last 5-10 pounds.

So, I think it was kismet that Michael Pollan’s article came out when it did, because I think I am finally ready for Food Revolution Number Three: Ethical Eating.

I mean two things by Ethical Eating.  First, in the more traditional sense; just in reading the first chapter of Pollan’s book, I am appalled by the condition of the American industrial food chain, and I find I’m not willing to support it any more than I have to.  I’m ready to change the kinds of foods — and thereby the policies — I support by changing what I purchase.  I may not be ready to become a complete vegetarian, but I am ready to start insisting that the chickens and eggs I consume be vegetarian fed and free range, and that the beef I consume live out its life in an open pasture, rather than a crowded feed lot.

In the second sense, I am ready to treat my body more ethically.  It is shameful how little I know and understand about the food I’m putting into my body, the food I’m asking my Husband to consume.  Is it any wonder that our bodies are rebelling with weight gain and disease when we nourish ourselves with nothing but synthetic chemicals and artificial flavors?  I thought we were eating fairly healthfully — until I started looking at the labels on the foods in our cupboards.

For me, being healthy is an important part of living a whole life.  Treating my body with respect and care is a whole new challenge for me.  I only get one body, and if I intend for my best life to be a long one, I need to start taking better care post haste.

Next: The Grocery Game