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Blog: Simplify Your Life
Do You Know What Your Stuff REALLY Costs?
Someone recently introduced me to "The Story Of Stuff," a
project that illustrates the true cost behind the goods that we buy.
Simplifying is about more than controlling your own budget and cleaning
out your own clutter. It also requires that we become aware of the
global impact of American consumerism -- and this book does a great job
of getting the point across.
Spiraling Out Of Control
Why does what we buy in
America matter more than what someone in England or Brazil or Australia
buys? Because our spending has a larger impact on the rest of the world.
The United States has 5% of the world's population, but we consume 30%
of the world's resources and create 30% of the world's waste -- it's
simply out of proportion. And we've used up most of our own native
resources, so we the only way to get the materials and energy we need to
keep consuming is to rob third-world countries of theirs.
A
problem which merely started in our own back yard has now become global.
In the past 3 decades, we (as a species) have used up 1/3 of our
planet's resources in the creation of consumer goods. More importantly,
our "needs" are continuing to grow beyond the point where our
environment can support our ever-increasing levels of consumption. I
don't want to turn into an overly-preachy eco-guerrilla here (even
though I do love my Birks), but it's a basic fact of life -- there are
limits to how many trees we can cut down before we have decimated our
forests, how many fish we can catch before we bleed our oceans dry, how
much oil we can extract before there simply isn't any left. Our human
footprint has exceeded the earth's biological capacity by 25% -- that
means we need 1/4 MORE water/lumber/fuel/farmland/etc. than we have in
order to meet current demand. Any third-grader who understands fractions
can tell you that's just unsustainable!
The bigger worry is that
we keep trying to sell the American way of life to other countries,
insisting that the third-world needs to embrace capitalism and
industrialization if it ever hopes to "compete." But it's actually a
good thing that the rest of the world doesn't consume the way we do --
we would need 5 planets to support everyone! The United States has the
largest ecological footprint in the world -- more than 12 hectares per
person, compared to 7.66 in Canada, 6.29 in the U.K., 5.94 in Japan,
2.69 in Mexico,1.84 in China, and less than 1 in Ethiopia. In 1961, the
vast majority of countries had ecological surpluses (meaning more
resources available to them than they used or "renewed" in a year's
time.) But now, 81% of the world's population lives in "ecological
debtor" countries (which use more resources than they have available
within their own borders.) We are completely dependent on "biocapacity
surpluses" from the other 19% -- and each year, those resources have to
stretch farther and farther.
If that has you scared about our
future, then this will terrify you. Nearly 99% of the materials that go
into what we buy in America end up as trash. I'm talking about refuse
from the raw materials used in production, pollution from the burning
of fossil fuels, packaging and paper inserts that we throw away --
every single purchase made in America creates a greater volume of trash
than the thing you bought in the first place! Our "disposable" mindset
doesn't help either. Americans throw out more useful and functional
consumable goods than people in many countries ever see in their
lifetime. We create a tremendous amount of waste just living our normal
lives -- 4 1/2 pounds of garbage per person a day (which is twice what
we created 30 years ago.) However, for every can of consumer garbage
put out at the curb, 70 cans of upstream garbage created in producing
the trash you threw out. Every step of the consumer process creates
pollution -- harvesting raw materials, creating chemicals,
manufacturing products, transporting, and selling. Reduce/reuse/recycle
only goes so far, when so much of the waste happens before you even go
shopping!
Looking At All The Costs
Why are these facts relevant to a
discussion of how much your "stuff" costs? Because we've set up a system
that privatizes the gains related to consumerism (profit earned by
companies every time they sell a product) but socializes the costs
(which you pay for through your taxes.) Companies are not forced to take
responsibility for the damage their activities do to the environment or
to society. If they were (and passed these expenses on to you at the
checkout counter), you would pay 1/3 to 1/2 more for your consumer
goods. Instead, they shove these costs off on the public sector and
drop their prices, making you think that you're getting a bargain. But
you're not really saving any money in the long run -- you're simply
paying with your taxes what you would have paid at the store if the
bottom line reflected all the true costs of your purchase. When Dow Chemical pollutes a
river and the EPA has to come in and clean it up, that's a cost to you.
When the Forest Service sells trees on national lands to Georgia Pacific at giveaway prices to
help subsidize their manufacturing of wood and paper products (and then
has to spend millions replacing those trees with seedlings), that's a
cost to you. When Wal-Mart
fails to pay its workers enough to live off of, makes its health
insurance plan too expensive for the average employee (and those folks
have to go on welfare to be able to survive), that's a cost to you.
There is so much more that goes into the final price tag than what you
see when you pull out your credit card! A lot of Americans
function according to the belief that they "deserve" to have whatever
they want -- they worked hard, they earned the money, so why shouldn't
they go shopping? Well, as citizens of one of the richest nations in
the world, we not only have rights, but also responsibilities. We have a
responsibility to know what we are buying, as well as how and where it
is made. We have a responsibility to make sure that we only shop with
companies which engage in fair trade, are ecologically responsible, and
take care of their workers. We have a responsibility to vote with our
dollars and NOT shop with companies (like Wal-Mart) that make use of
sweatshops and child labor and are constantly breaking the law in terms
of worker's rights. And I can tell you right now that we do NOT have the
right to take advantage of third-world laborers or suck up every other
nation's resources just because we want a new television or SUV or pair
of tennis shoes. The only way to stop the insanity is to seriously
re-evaluate our levels of consumption, to simplify our material needs,
and to stop using shopping malls as our major form of entertainment in
this country!
posted on: 5/18/2010 11:30:00 AM by Ramona Creel category: General Organizing Tips
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Simplify Your Life
by Ramona Creel
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About Ramona:
I have been a Professional Organizer for more than 10 years, I am a NAPO Golden Circle member, and I was the original founder of OnlineOrganizing. I have worked one-on-one with scores of clients and have trained dozens of newbie organizers as they got started in the industry. I provide both hands-on and virtual coaching to help clients improve their organizing skills and simplify their lives. I invite you to visit my website at http://www.RamonaCreel.com, and I challenge you to find one new idea that you can put into practice in your life, to help you become better organized, starting TODAY! I am passionate about coaching folks toward a more balanced, productive, and enjoyable life -- and I firmly believe that if I can do it, so can you!
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