Friday, February 24, 2012

Consuming Ourselves

First off I really just want to see if anyone remembers this commercial. It pertains to this class and it is one of my favorite commercials of all time. I really wish more people would be like this guy.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KvpYnEB7F4

I can remember, even as a kid on the playground, I would get mad at my friends if they threw their trash on the ground. Even at the age of about 12 I would either pick it up and throw it in the trash myself or sneak it in their backpacks with reminders to throw away their trash. I come from a really small town in southeastern Oklahoma where no one really worries about their environmental impact or about making sure they throw thier trash away. What does it matter to them if their are ditches full of trash. My family, on the other hand, taught me and my older sister from a very early age that polluting the environment was a very bad thing and that we should keep as much trash off the ground as possible. As I have grown older I have started to realize that trash on the ground is only the surface of the problems that have come to face our environment. The production processes of textiles, apparel, and other goods; carbon emissions and high quantity consumption ; chemical spills, pesticides, and other runoffs are even bigger problems and they are problems most people do not think about.


I think that one of the biggest threats to the environment that can be helped easier than most other problems is consumption and packaging. According to the article on limiting consumption, we throw away 462 pounds of packaging each year per person. This is because most of what we buy is placed in packaging that we just throw away after we get it home. TV dinners, cameras, hard candies, and most kitchenware are all unnecessarily packaged. I know they want to protect the products to make sure they don't break, but there is usually more packaging than necessary. 


According to the reading over Visioning, it is not enough to just vision a change to make it so. You have to manage those wants and set goals for yourself so that you can actually make that vision a reality. Once you start making sustainable decisions, it will be easier to turn those decisions into habits. More and more people are becoming aware of the impacts we have had on the planet, but many do not do anything to try and reverse the damage. The more people who make it a habit to be sustainable will raise more awareness for how and what can be done to erase some of the environmental footprints humans and our way of life has left on the earth. 


I think that what all of us can do is change our mindset to making sustainable choices. If we make good decisions in the products we buy and places we support than corporations will have to make the shifts to more sustainable practices so they can appeal to the consumers. If we choose to not buy harmful products than companies will be forced to stop making them. We as consumers have this power and things will not change unless we do as Lombardo says in the Thinking Ahead article, and change our mindsets and become more optimistic. The simple truth is that we cannot just wish to be more sustainable, we have to act on those visions and make shopping decisions that reflect our wants and needs. Shopping for things you want and need that have less packaging and less to throw away when you get home is only one of the many things that we can do to help the impact humans have had on the Earth. 

6 comments:

  1. Hi, Laura!
    Love that commercial! What a great tie into your story! I see you have developed a couple characteristics of YOUR vision of a sustainable future: a different type of consumption, and perhaps, a different way to distribute products. Your blog is generally unsupported by the course materials, so ensure, as you go into the mid-term paper, that you are utilizing your chosen book, class sources, as well as the other required sources to describe and support these characteristics and the mental modes that may ensure implementation.

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  3. Hey Laura,
    Yes, I think it was a marvelous idea to add a commericial in the mix! I really like how you constantly personalize how sustainability and environmental-friendly practices have influenced your life (i.e. story about throwing away trash on playground). I do wish you were more specific on which sources you were discussing. I got confused by which readings you were suggesting. For your mid-term paper, will you explain packaging alternatives for protecting items, while limiting unnecessary trash?

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  4. first off, I am not sure why my lettering is different this week, that is really strange and threw me off a little. I will try to go fix that. That commercial is one of my all time favorites and I was thinking about it and thought it would give everyone a laugh. I thought I integrated the readings with titles but I do not think I put the full title on it. I will try to be more careful with that in the future.

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  5. Hi Laura,

    I loved the commercial! I wish more people were like that guy. I really liked that you touched on the issue of companies over packaging their products. I cannot wait to see what you will say about it in your paper! I also like how you talked about consumers and the power they have with making companies change what they are doing. I agree with Dr. Armstrong and Jasmine about making your citing more clear.

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  6. Thanks Kelsey, there really should be more people like that guy. I really do feel that companies only get away with what we let them get away with. If we demand change and act on our demands than they will have to change. I am going to start citing my sources more clearly, I seem to do that a lot.

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