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The Pandemic Versus The Planet

The Pandemic Versus The Planet

Why is it that, in times of fear, society reverts back to relying on single-use disposables?

COVID-19 will have lasting effects on the environmental movement. While some of such effects—like embracing forced slowness, for example—took cars off the road and reduced worldwide carbon emissions in the short-term, our propensity toward fear-based buying over the past year has littered the planet. Indeed, communities that fought long and hard to ban single-use items embraced them during the pandemic; there’s the plastics problem, too: currently, the fossil fuels industry is doubling down on creating virgin plastic in hopes of staying relevant (and rich). 

On this week’s show I speak with Sanikind co-founders Miles Pepper and Martica Wakeman, a *refillable* hand sanitizer dispenser made from recycled plastic. Miles and Martica believe it’s entirely possible to stay healthy without single-use products, and they’re on the show to teach us how.

 

Here’s a preview of this week’s episode:

[7:30] Is it possible to make sanitary products (like hand sanitizer) circular? Here’s how

[15:45] Fear-based buying: 5 ways in which the pandemic has increased consumer reliance on single-use waste

[22:00] How excessive stress on a certain demographic (ahem … women) negatively impacts the environmental moment

[24:00] How (and why) the fossil fuels industry has accelerated the creation of virgin plastic (and what it means for the rest of us)

 

Resources mentioned in the episode:

 

* Thank you to Outrage + Optimism for sponsoring this episode! Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts for new episodes every Thursday.

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Why is it that, in times of fear, society reverts to its reliance on single-use disposables made of plastic? COVID-19 will have lasting effects on the environmental movement, and our propensity toward fear-based buying has littered the planet. On this episode of The Sustainable Minimalists podcast: how to stay healthy without single-use disposables.

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Beyond the Beige

We’ve all seen the images. The stark white rooms, the single designer chair, the perfectly curated capsule wardrobe. We’re told that if we just clear the clutter, we’ll find peace. 

But if we’re not careful, the minimalist aesthetic can become just another thing to buy, another thing to consume. 

On today’s show, Melora Johnson deconstructs the modern minimalist movement so that each of us can move from the clutter-free, beige-everything  minimalist aesthetic to a deeper, more sustainable practice rooted in intentionality.

Here’s a preview: 

[7:30] Feeling that donation high? Here’s why decluttering and donating feels so good in the moment but often fails to stop the cycle of re-accumulation

[11:30] Can authentic minimalism exist in a consumerist culture?

[16:00] Candid thoughts on how and why minimalism has been commercialized

[25:00] How to tell if your minimalism is driving more shopping or actually shrinking your ecological footprint

[28:30] Listen to your whispers! 

Resources mentioned: 

 

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Hello there, I’m Stephanie. I live a crazy, beautiful life as a full-time wife, blogger + mother to two spirited daughters. I’m on a mission to simplify eco-friendly living so as to greater enjoy life’s sweeter moments.

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