green resolutions Archives - Big Green Purse https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/tag/green-resolutions/ The expert help you need to live the greener, healthier life you want. Wed, 25 Nov 2020 21:25:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 My Green Goals for 2013: Less Bathroom Plastic, More Home-Made Yogurt, Better Compost https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/my-green-goals-for-2013-less-bathroom-plastic-more-home-made-yogurt-better-compost/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/my-green-goals-for-2013-less-bathroom-plastic-more-home-made-yogurt-better-compost/#comments Thu, 03 Jan 2013 15:01:36 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/my-green-goals-for-2013-less-bathroom-plastic-more-home-made-yogurt-better-compost/ I learned a long time ago not to make New Year’s resolutions per se. They could be so general and vague, they could also be frustratingly easy to abandon. Without accountability to anyone but myself, it didn’t really seem to matter if what I resolved to do oozed away after a month or two (if …

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kitchen plasticI learned a long time ago not to make New Year’s resolutions per se. They could be so general and vague, they could also be frustratingly easy to abandon. Without accountability to anyone but myself, it didn’t really seem to matter if what I resolved to do oozed away after a month or two (if I even made it that long!). And the “pay back” or reward for keeping my resolutions seemed hard to measure. Sure, I might have resolved to save more energy or use less water, but without actually measuring what I used or what I saved, there wasn’t much incentive to use less or save more.

This year is going to be different. I’m not making resolutions, I’m setting goals – specific goals that will have real environmental benefits and that I can measure with real “before” and “after” statistics.

Though I hope I’ll reduce my environmental footprint in all sorts of ways this year, I’m only setting three specific goals in the hopes that a narrower focus will lead to broader achievements.

GOAL #1 – MAKE MY OWN YOGURT

I eat two cups of yogurt every single day – plain, non-fat, usually Greek-style yogurt that serves as the delicious base for whatever fresh fruit happens to be in season. It’s a healthy and mostly eco-friendly breakfast – marred only by the fact that I buy the yogurt in big plastic throwaway tubs. When I was in college, I had an electric yogurt maker and made my own yogurt every week. I also made yogurt by mixing milk and yogurt starter in a bowl, then keeping it in a warm oven for several hours until the whole mixture became yogurt-like. Over the years as I was busy raising kids, running a business and writing books, I’ve gotten away from making my own yogurt. But I’m appalled at how many plastic yogurt tubs I throw away every week. If I made my own yogurt using milk I can buy in glass bottles from my local food coop, I would go from three or four plastic tubs a week to zero. So one goal for 2013 is to start making my own yogurt.

Do you make your own yogurt? If you have a recipe you love, please share it!

GOAL #2 – USE NO MORE THAN THREE PRODUCTS BOTTLED IN PLASTIC IN MY BATHROOM

 

In my bathroom right now, I have various cosmetics, body lotion, hand cream, face cream, make-up remover, shampoo, conditioner, body soap, shaving gel, toothpaste, curl definer, hair straightener, nail polish remover, and hair color – and they’re all in plastic bottles or jars. My kids use different products, so they have almost the same number of products that I have in their own bottles! Beth Terry at My Plastic Free Life has written a great book about ways to reduce the amount of plastic we use in our day-to-day lives. Her personal example has inspired me to figure out how to cut down the number of plastic bottles I use in my bathroom to no more than three. Right away, I can replace the shaving gel and body soap with bar soaps that come wrapped in paper or with no wrapping paper at all. I can buy much larger sizes of products so that I’m using fewer bottles overall. But I’d like to set an even more ambitious goal and figure out how to make my own body lotion, shampoo, hair conditioner, and face cream, for starters. Do you make your own? What do you make, and how do you make it? I can really use your advice!

GOAL #3 – IMPROVE MY COMPOST

My compost is not the best. I use a composting barrel, and ten  months out of the year (March – December), I just collect my kitchen scraps and throw them in the barrel. Then I flip the barrel around a few times and hope the stuff decomposes. Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesn’t. I’ve never been very scientific about adding the right proportions of dry and wet material to it so that the compost heats up the way it is supposed to and turns all that food waste into the black organic gold that would make my garden thrive. Right now, the kitchen scraps from the last several months are all lying frozen in the bottom of my barrel. But as soon as the spring thaw hits, I’m going to empty out that barrel and start from scratch. Do you compost? Do you use a barrel? Please let me know what works best for you. I can easily compost 100% of my kitchen scraps, apart from the occasional fish or chicken remains I have. But what I’d really like to aim for is somewhere between two and three big barrels full of rich organic compost to add to my garden by the end of 2013.

So there you have it: use less plastic by making my own yogurt and personal care products, and enrich my garden by creating better compost. Please share your own goals and resolutions for 2013, and come back often to help me overcome the obstacles I find as I pursue my own.

RELATED POSTS

New Year’s Goal – Shift Spending to Eco-Friendly Products and Services

Environmental Resolution: Do Less, Do It Better

 

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Do You Have a BHAGG for 2012? https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/do-you-have-a-bhagg-for-2012/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/do-you-have-a-bhagg-for-2012/#comments Mon, 02 Jan 2012 19:27:56 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/do-you-have-a-bhagg-for-2012/ You can’t buy it. You can’t make it. And you probably shouldn’t eat it – unless it’s organic. You can, however, achieve it – because it’s a goal… a Big Hairy Audacious Green Goal, exactly the kind of goal we need if we’re serious about protecting the planet, our health, and the health and safety …

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You can’t buy it. You can’t make it. And you probably shouldn’t eat it – unless it’s organic.

You can, however, achieve it – because it’s a goal… a Big Hairy Audacious Green Goal, exactly the kind of goal we need if we’re serious about protecting the planet, our health, and the health and safety of our families.

You notice a BHAGG is not a “resolution,” as in the well-meaning but easy-to-break promise you might make to yourself in the new year. Nope, a BHAGG is a specific challenge you strive to achieve, knowing full well it may not be easy to reach – but when you get there, it will make a real difference.

For example, an eco-resolution might be, “save energy in 2012.” A BHAGG would be “reduce the amount of energy I use to heat my home by 20%, as measured by a 20% reduction in my heating and cooling bills.”
A resolution might be, “eat more locally grown food.” A BHAGG would be, “80% of the food I eat will be grown within 100 (or 200 at most) miles of where I live.”
A resolution might be, “drive less.” A BHAGG would be, “walk or bicycle distances of less than a mile.”
Precise, measureable, and meaningful: those are the keys to a BHAGG that will have an impact.

The original term Big Hairy Audacious Goal, or BHAG, was coined by James Collins and Jerry Porras in their 1994 best-seller, Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies. They discovered that successful companies set goals that were not only visionary, but very specific, such as “achieve a 10% revenue growth rate in the next three months.”

“A true BHAG is clear and compelling, serves as a unifying focal point of effort, and acts as a clear catalyst for team spirit,” they wrote. “It has a clear finish line, so the organization can know when it has achieved the goal…” I added an extra “G” to the original BHAG idea, to include Green in the equation.
At Big Green Purse,  we’ve encouraged folks to set a goal of shifting $1,000 of their annual household spending to greener goods and services, as part of our One in a Million campaign to mobilize consumer clout to improve manufacturing. You can read about some of the people who achieved — and exceeded – that goal here.
So… what’s your BHAGG for 2012? If you want to join those who are shifting $1,000 or more, you can sign up here. If you have other goals, please share them with us so we can be inspired by your example.
Personally, I have two BHAGGs for 2012: to shift an additional $1,000 of my consumer spending to greener goods and services; and to reduce my home heating and cooling use by 20%. Stay tuned for future posts as I figure out how to do that!
Happy New Year!

 

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