Anonymous wrote:Oh I’m excited about the fabric wrapping! Is it hard to store? I also hate wrapping paper but I do think it’s nice for people to open gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:K cups. My job only has keurigs for coffee and it drives me batty.
Does Keurig offer recycling? Nespresso does.
Anonymous wrote:K cups. My job only has keurigs for coffee and it drives me batty.
Anonymous wrote:I was just thinking about the wastefulness of ugly holiday sweaters! Waste in America—where to begin?
1. The worst for me are the plastic party cups and flatware. These things are so sturdy and easy to wash/reuse but people blithely throw them in the trash. There are now compostable versions but that’s not what fills the trash bag after the holiday parties.
2. Another wasteful thing: The cleaning people at work put plastic trash can liner bags in every cubicle, and if there’s so much as a Kleenex in there they pull the bag and give you a fresh one. Not in my cubicle, they know to leave the liner in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in the process of downsizing so very tuned into the wasteful stuff in my house. The worst right now are presents that people gave us especially the little cute Knick knacks. Ceramic baby blocks, figurines, vases, it goes on and on. So hard to get rid of (no one wants them) but feel bad trashing them.
and this is why I'm a grinch and am refusing to exchange gifts with my siblings and their kids. None of us need anything and we can all buy exactly what we want. There is nothing meaningful I can buy for any of them so I'm done with it. One sibling and I have kids the same age and every year we exchanged gift cards in the exact same amount. Stupid. We also were exchanging gift baskets of food. Think about the waste there. The packaging and the fuel and resources used to move crap from one place to another is terrible.
I love Christmas but I'm over the gift portion of it.
All this. The responses to this thread surprised me because the biggest waste is obviously the gifts people give each other. I grew up celebrating x-mas so I know how hard it is to separate the commercialism from other parts, but it's really such a relief that my family now does none of it.
Though last year I did buy some lights to hang. It's was such a dreary time and they really lifted my spirits. But I use them almost daily as mood lighting so I don't really consider that a holiday purchase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oooh I love a plastic tablecloth when I do art activities with the kids. I just had friends over for cookie decorating ( yes they ate the cookies) and after we were done we just balled up the tablecloth and threw it away. I guess it’s a waste of plastic but I’m alright with it 2-4 times a year.Anonymous wrote:And stop with the plastic tablecloths! Used once and tossed.
For art activities, buy a tarp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:K cups. My job only has keurigs for coffee and it drives me batty.
And it’s gross coffee! I can’t believe people bought into that fad.
Totally agree. My work only uses k-cups and while it’s terribly annoying… my dislike of k-cups does help me cut down on what might otherwise be a terrible all-day-coffee habit!
Wrapping paper is my pet peeve. People spend $ and use resources for themed paper that is NOT EVEN REALLY LOOKED AT and just immediately winds up in the trash. We switched to fabric, Japanese-style a few years ago for our family… everyone has a color and I get a bit more after Christmas when it’s all 75% off. Much less waste and it looks super cute (esp now that I am getting a bit better at it lol).