our grade 5/6′s weredoing a no impact week we would walk to school,tern off power,nood food,worm bins,no heater,lower our showers to 3 minutes,collect water from our showers,not useing electronics that much,not useing internet,no spray on deordarent,tommorw we are doing a bike ride it will be so much fun.
This post was submitted by courtney.
I go to the local farmer’s market regularly. Then I take fresh fruit and vegetables to potlucks, office parties, and small group gatherings. When you serve friends something healthy, not a bag of chips or a box of store-bought cookies, or something really fattening, it always draws attention.
Then I can share with others where I got the food, how colorful and how much fun it is to shop at farmer’s markets, how healthy the food is, and what it does to leave no impact on the environment. It’s a real joy.
This post was submitted by Kathy Eckert.
We moved from our 4 bedroom home to a 550 sq. foot condo walking distance from work.
We sold our 1996 4 cylinder car and bought a Honda Civic hybrid.
We became vegan after watching the movie “Meat the Truth”. We have both lost weight and feel great.
We disabled our 10 mpg motorhome and permanently parked it and use it as a cottage 15 miles from town. This is saving us lots of money in insurance and gasoline.
We are avoiding plastic where possible in packaging and purchases. This is difficult.
We eat local organic when available.
We shop at the farmers market.
We shop for clothes at second hand shops first and buy new only if we can’t find what we want second hand. This does not include underwear.
We plan to only buy fabrics that will compost. Organic cotton still uses lots of water so hemp is the first choice.
We carefully buy shampoo, laundry detergent and cleaning products that do not contain phosphates or petrochemical products.
We travel more by train and less by plane. Trains are much nicer than airports and planes but don’t go everywhere we need to go.
This has improved our marriage and our quality of life. It is fun to be a team and work towards a goal of leaving a good space for the children of the planet to grow and thrive. It has also been good for our finances and we have made very good like minded friends.
This post was submitted by Erin and Bill.
I am 31 years old and have never nor ever aspire to drive a vehicle, I have no intention of ever obtaining a drivers license. I use my own two legs, like a natural human.
This post was submitted by Rebecca.
Hi! I just wanted to say WOW - I am super inspired but what you have done and are continuing to do. I recently embarked on a 365-Day ‘Living With Less’ Challenge and I am also blogging about it. I can totally identify with all of the changes that you have identified as being side ‘benefits’ from such an undertaking. I am going to try to ‘rally’ some of my followers to subscribe to your one-week challenge and post their entries on my blog as well. BRAVO and keep up the amazing work!
This post was submitted by Maren Hasse.
Besides the elimination of all the toxic chemicals required of a swimming pool, there is also the lowering of electric bills where the constant running of the filters and auto-vacuums are concerned. I turned the gas-heated spa into a bio-filter and disconnected the gas line.
Not only has this saved time, effort and money, it has created a wonderful backyard habitat! The owls, herons, hawks, multiple small birds, raccoons, frogs, possum and other visitors (even a duck once!) are all so much happier with my pond that the chlorinated toxic dump we used to call a swimming pool.
One benefit I was surprised by was/is the more moderate temperatures in the back yard. On those 90+ degree FL days, my back yard is 5 degrees cool than the street! And when we get our rare freezes (as we will tonight) my yard will most likely remain warmer.
In short, more wildlife, no chemicals, more fun just watching the antics of birds and frogs, less money spent on electrical, gas heating and chemicals and way less back-breaking work! And yes, the water is crystal clear and safe for swimming!
This post was submitted by Heidi Marsh.
I have lived in collective housing situations for the last few years. This has saved me a boat load of money because collective housing is generally much cheaper. But it is also a way of conserving: the amount of energy used to heat a home is good for as many people as can fit!
It is also is really nice to have a lot of cool people around all the time and makes things fun. I learn something from my housemates everyday. And it saves me time when we organize cooking calendars because I’ll only have to cook once a week.
This post was submitted by Ethan.
The following blog entry can be found here: http://apotaday.blogspot.com/2010/01/day-8-no-impact-mans-environmental.html
It’s clear that one of the main impetuses for starting this project was my need to shit or get off the pot, as they say-to get some pottery made finally so I can launch my storefront at www.rivervalleycrafts.com, but you may be surprised to learn that the incident that pushed me over the edge, on its surface, had nothing to do with art making.
A few weeks ago, Ralph and I went to a talk by Colin Beaven and a viewing of the documentary named for his project and blog, “No Impact Man,” at NYU. I’d spottily followed his year-long project to go virtually off-grid with his family in their NYC apartment via his blog, and was more than intrigued by their sincere adventure as I’d thought of going a similar path, though had never had the inspiration to take it as far as they finally did.
Listening to Colin talk heart-fully about how he and his wife learned deeply from their year of “living without” that they gained a meaning, purpose, fullness and joy heretofore unrealized in their “successful,” high-powered professional city lives, was what moved me to do my A POT A DAY project. Being in his presence, more than watching the very worthy documentary I suggest you see, about their year, was really what cinched it for me. I felt, from my front-row seat, not more than a tall body’s length from where he stood, his passion for sharing his new-found wisdom about how we’ve gone too far astray from connections with family, friends, community and the earth, as we chase the illusory, unreachable dream that Capitalism and her gi-gondo commerce and advertising promises us.
What was most inspiring about him, was that he didn’t preach. He didn’t even consider trying to convince the callow, NYU student naysayer when she provoked him. He spoke only of his and his family’s experiences and cited objective, statistical data from studies highlighting clearly that Americans are a miserable lot relative to most populations elsewhere on the globe when they are asked to rate their happiness and life fulfillment.
And when people asked what they could realistically do to tread more lightly on the earth, to find more time and meaning, his only advice was two-fold: Volunteer at an environmental organization and beyond that, figure out what you want and can do. Sage words, I think.
Ralph and I left the screening and talk buoyed by hope and inspired to shave a few “necessities” from our lives, namely the television, as we live pretty pared down as it is. We’d not been big watchers, save for those few binges a year we each fell prey to, but most evenings we did find ourselves watching an hour or two between arriving home from work exhausted and falling into bed.
So, let me get it out here now, we still have a t.v. in our living room (behind the closed doors of a cabinet, I might add), BUT we’ve not watched but a few hours total in the past three or four weeks since our No Impact Man night. Honestly, I was afraid to just turn off the cable right away. I needed to make sure we, and I, could do it-fill our evenings with more interactive and engaging endeavors.
I’m pleased to report I will call Time Warner Cable in the next day or two to cut our subscription to the most basic level, so we just get reception and the old fashioned stations. And, as soon as I have adequate time to figure out how we can get the few shows we want online I will cut the service completely (I will update you on this). I’m a great believer in moderation and the middle path. I WILL watch the boob tube from time to time, especially news, my vice.
So, A Pot A Day owes much to Colin Beaven. It’s with the time in my days and space in my head that watching less television opened up, that the project was conceived fully and executed. I’ve also been reading more than I have in the past many years, and have purchased a very inexpensive guitar from a neighborhood vendor and have begun teaching myself to play via lessons on YouTube.
This post was submitted by Cori Morenberg.
OK… I made a list on my blog of 101 things to do to live greener. Since it’s a long list, I’ll just post the link: http://open.salon.com/blog/the_almighty_beckster/2010/01/01/101_easy_ways_to_have_a_greener_2010
And yes… I’ve done all of them!
This post was submitted by Rebecca.
Is poverty thinking synonymous with Low/No Impact Living?
The psychological effects of Low/No Impact Living deserves attention.
One of the most uncomfortable consequences of Low/No Impact Living is how it triggers negative peer pressure; drawing out defensiveness BIG time. Low/No Impact Living downright provokes a lot of people because it challenges eons of conditioning.
Raising my conscious awareness of the psychological implications of Low/No Impact Living, broadens my understanding of it.
Anat Baniel, author of “Move Into Life” said, “When we move with Attention, the brain re-maps.” I am lowering my impact by remapping my brain with conscious awareness.
This post was submitted by Eileen Balint.