We certainly do have a disposable culture, don’t we? Fast food alone makes an unbelievable amount of trash. And landfills will be there for centuries once filled. What a fine use of otherwise productive land, eh?
Rather than doing feel-good things like consuming the same way everybody else does but bringing your own shopping bags, I encourage people to try to alter the disposable mindset. Weed whacker broke? Yeah the new ignition part is $60 when a brand new tool is just $100, but if it’s in otherwise good shape why junk the old one? If it’s beyond hope, perhaps find a guy who rehabs them on Craigslist, buy a working one from him and give him the old one for spare parts.
An awful lot of things that we assume we need to buy new can be had much cheaper on the used market. And with the internet, it’s never been easier to find what you need used. If you’re handy and can repair things yourself, it’s an even better way to save money and reduce our culture’s waste.
Same goes for cars. Which is better: leasing a new Prius for three years (with associated disinterested maintenance) or maintaining your old Corolla in pristine condition so it lasts 20 years reliably? The latter, hands down. Yet it’s not what you see parked at “green” conferences, is it? (In fairness, you actually do, but you see a lot more “consumer green” (i.e. Prius) vehicles there than you do in the general population).
In the end, conserving isn’t trendy or sexy. It means making do with what you have when you can. Poverty is probably really good practice for this!
You have excellent points. We need to fix and repair. I felt so bad when our printer went out and I called to have it repaired, and they said it would cost $150, strongly suggesting I buy a new one at $70 that is more advanced than the broken one. (We did the latter, but still have the old one, waiting to be recycled).
But my husband insisted on fixing the weed-whacker, which he did; and I’m ashamed to say I told him to get a new one…since the broken on had been in the garage for 6 months unrepaired, and we really really needed it. Also, repairing things is a wonderful way to feel good about oneself. I think men especially need that opportunity.
RE cars, we did wait until our 1998 Taurus clonker was leaking all over, and would cost us double or triple its worth to repair – then sold it to a guy who can repair it himself. I had been waiting for decades for my electric car (something we could plug into our wind (soon to include solar) power, so not a Prius), getting by with used cars that someone drives for the first 80,000 miles, then we drive the next 40,000 miles or so, then get another old car.
This time, however, we sprung for a Chevy Volt, as our last car. We thought it was a splurg – hubby even got the Bose sound system and I got the rearview camera and crash alert – but come to find out we are saving a lot of money on running it, and it will pay for the difference btw the car he wanted (another Taurus) within 6.5 years, and go on to save, even tho we only drive about 6,000 miles a year.
However, for those with time, there are EV clubs across America that help people do conversions. I had thought of joining the Fox Valley EV Assoc that meets at College of DuPage some 20 years ago, but never had the time. They did, however, let me drive a 1976 Corolla converted to an EV around the quad during a campus Earth Day in 1992 – it was like stepping on a sewing machine peddal

. What they do is either buy a used car with the engine blown, or sell the good engine, then do the conversion. Apparently it is not too hard. When I asked if a lady could do it, they told me that a postal worker in their club who had never held a screwdriver in his life had made a successful conversion.
The best part of EVs is the maintenance is very low and cheap – which is the main reason the auto companies were against them – so that’s another way to reduce waste
However, it is still good to take one’s own bags shopping and other small things – the little way of environmental healing – offering it up to God and His kingdom.