Recycling Visit a Landfill
For 43 years I've been someone who never really finished the
thought; when I throw something away it goes...
I've given myself a great gift this year; call it a field
trip, if you like, but I took myself to my town's landfill and
had my eyes opened for the first time. Maybe the concept of
someone reaching their 40s and still not being contientious of
recycling is one that sounds far-fetched, well, it's the truth.
I didn't grow up imagining the Earth covered in over-flowing
landfills, piles and piles of garbage as high as the tallest
building that was not my experience. But because the idea of
leaving too much waste for the Earth to handle is a bitter
reality today, I've begun to educate myself.
I guess I've always thought of using credit cards as not
being real money, that's the same way I viewed trash. I know
I've read about landfills becoming, well, full and how that
will cause a problem but until I took myself out to the site
itself, I still had this childish idea that once I put
something into the trash can, it just went - away.
Seeing, with my own eyes, the area designated for my
community's left overs was like a big slap of reality. I was
finally able to comprehend the thought; "if I'm not the only
one throwing things away carelessly, and if others are doing it
too, this space will not last too long."
I was surprised at some of the items I saw at the town's
landfill, too. There were pieces of furniture that, being
someone creative, I could see would make nice
trash-to-treasures pieces. Maybe these refurbished items could
be the one piece that brought the feel of a room together, that
completed what the room is to feel like and express. Instead,
someone tossed them out and they were taking up (a whole lot)
of space in a limited area and would cause stress, not
happiness.
I'm fortunate because my children, who are early teens, have
been taught about the importance of recycling and the
importance of what we need to do to keep the world from being
buried in useless trash. They have been paying attention to the
lessons that have come their way, where as, I had to see it for
myself before I could be motivated to change the way I do
things.
The good news is, it only took one quick trip to the
landfill, for me to come to my senses and make changes about
the way I do things and about the way I think. If we are not
thinking globally when it comes to waste, and what we're
leaving behind, we're not being smart.
Grab some kids, or some forty-somethings and take yourself
on a field trip that may very well, do for you what it did for
me; make the changes necessary for me to see what the reality
of our situation is and change the way I do things.
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