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Dirty Bird or Resourceful Mortal? My childhood was filled with wonder and reverence for every sagging fern to every wise old tree. This is because my parents, both city kids, decided to start a family in the country. I had the privilege of growing up within walking distance from a 5,000-acre state park. My mom, who was also my Girl Scout leader, chaperoned many annual camping trips. Thus, ecology was something I always understood. Under the tutelage of my troop leader and Woodsy the Owl, who preached, “Never be a dirty bird”, I learned to tread lightly on the land, leaving no traces of my presence on the city streets or the deepest woods. As I moved towards adolescence, however, it didn’t take me long to realize that not every human being felt the same way about this. When hiking through the forest, I had begun to detect traces of other human visitors: cola cans, food waste, abandoned personal items. This made me a simultaneously sad and irate. How difficult was it for people to take their stuff with them or at least throw it in one of the several rubbish bins throughout the park? I had to do something about it, so I began taking other people’s garbage out of the park with me and putting it in its place: the trash can. This is something that I continue to do, today (with the exception of recyclables, of course). During my freshman year of college, I joined a group known as SAFE (Students Acting for the Environment). Our first field trip was to Sandy Hook Beach at the New Jersey shore. Our task was to clean up what had become a 6 mile-long ashtray. On that afternoon, after donning plastic gloves, we picked up thousands of cigarette butts, hundreds of plastic food wrappers, and dozens of soda cans and bottles. Although I felt proud of our efforts that day, I couldn’t help feeling sad for all the beaches that may never see such a clean-up. Would they continue to become piled with waste day after day? And where did all this awful trash come from? Shockingly, it was produced, directed and distributed by the most sophisticated, seemingly reasonable of all the creatures of planet Earth: human beings. While at the top of the food chain, masters of land and sea, blessed with the gifts of knowledge and reason, humans are also garbage-producing fiends. No other creature can brag of this feat. The great poet A.R. Ammons mused in his prize -winning book, Garbage: “garbage is… believable enough to get our attention, getting in the way, piling up, stinking, turning brooks brownish…” In the context of nature, the appalling presence of garbage had always grabbed my attention. More recently, however, I began to consider all the “invisible” garbage of our world: the mammoth landfills, junkyards where cars go to die, abandoned buildings brimming with discarded human “stuff” such as broken appliances, toys, clothing, bottles, cans and the like. I pondered the ways of the Native Americans; how these people resourcefully used each part of a slaughtered bison, leaving little trace of their presence while exemplifying enormous respect for the earth’s land and resources. Sadly, we have strayed quite far from the lessons of our predecessors. Thousands of tons of non-biodegradable waste sit still in each landfill; ineffectual, stagnant, interrupting ecosystems in return. Though many recycling efforts are now underway, I still see people frequently tossing unwanted or broken televisions, couches and computers in the trash. When I observe this, the old sadness mixed with anger from my youth returns. I’d like to think that some of these people simply do not know any better and are unaware of the various recycling initiatives in their own neighborhoods. If so, here is a brief list of some helpful recycling organizations and projects you can check out and share with others: Cell Hell Taking Back the TV Determining your Impact AUTHOR: Melissa Gentile TAGS: Life BOOKMARK: Digg it | Add to Del.ICIO | Add to FARK ACTIONS: Comment Save Print Register free acount |
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