Recycling: It's not exactly a fresh topic

Waste, and its disposal, looms large as a modern-day problem. As a society we seem to value convenience, cleanliness and the rights of the individual over the greater good. But slowly this is beginning to change, and at the very least there are those who are shining a spotlight on our societal ills and calling for reform.

Recycling initiatives are part of this trend. However, the bar is set way too low. Much of the focus is on recycling bottles, cans, plastics and paper. That’s easy. Honestly, who can’t manage that? This is not actually a rhetorical question: I’ve become aware, while talking about this issue, that some of my dearest friends don’t do even basic recycling or composting.

When push comes to shove, it seems many people don’t want to pay for the lifestyle choices they make. The Pay as You Throw proposal at the Salisbury-Sharon Transfer Station caused concern locally because residents feared it would be too expensive. And yet, aren’t we all responsible for the amount of trash we generate?

Think of the number of places that have garbage cans but not recycling containers next to them. Do you drink soda out of a can? Do you recycle it? How many of the items that you buy at the grocery store are wrapped in plastic? In the classic movie, “The Graduate,� a friend of Benjamin’s father gives Benjamin some career advice. “Plastics,� he says. He means it is the wave of the future, but in truth it has become the tsunami of our day.

It is hard to live a green, recyclable life when so many items we use every day are made to be disposable. I was using a candle lighter the other day, the kind Bic makes that allows you to light a stove or candle from a wand-like clicker. It is filled with butane, and when the supply runs out, one is forced to toss it and buy a new one. And the lighter comes encased in a hard plastic package; a double sin in my book. Time to go back to boxed matches.

Sometimes it is the littlest thing that seems emblematic of a systemic problem. My current pet peeve is against Sun-Maid prunes. There is a recent television ad campaign by Sun-Maid for individually wrapped prunes. Some clever guy in marketing came up with, “It’s just like candy,� so each prune comes wrapped in its own plastic jacket.

Heaven forbid two different hands reached into an open carton of prunes and touched one they didn’t take. Does this mean that the cocktail peanut will soon be a relic of the past as well? (I can’t really see individually wrapped peanuts — except of course in their own brilliant, natural packaging.)   

The number of household items that are disposable is on the rise. Some objects are touted as disposable as though that is a good thing. Use it and throw it away, you don’t have to clean it! Great?

The paper towel may be the biggest disposable of all. Of course, for our germ-phobic society, the paper towel seems like a godsend and indeed there are times when it comes in handy — for human and canine regurgitation, and other poisonous messes — but there are also many, many times when a dishcloth would do just as well.

My friend, Jane, who would be a model for people trying to reduce their impact on our environment, says, “Paper towels, I have given them up.  Worn out dishtowels, T-shirts and bed sheets become ‘paper towels’ in our house, and they are laundered, separately from our clothes, as needed. I keep a roll (recycled paper, of course) around for tasks like greasing a cookie sheet or handling raw meat; then it gets composted.â€�

Part of recycling is making the choice not to buy something that has a limited shelf life, is encased in layers of plastic or is replacing something perfectly serviceable but perhaps a touch outdated.

Maybe if the transfer station didn’t cart our trash away, if  “the dumpâ€� stayed around, we would have a greater appreciation of the consequences of our waste. Instead it gets whisked away to become someone else’s problem, out of sight and out of mind. We don’t have to confront the reality of our everyday choices.

You’ve all heard about the floating island of plastic trash in the Pacific Ocean? Size estimates vary from as big as double the state of Texas to as big as all of the United States. Where do you suppose that came from? From all of us, somewhere along the line.

Tara Kelly, copy editor at The Lakeville Journal, is an avid follower of social trends.

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