July
12
  4:21:59 PM

Wasting products (and money)

I'm moving!! And as the move-date quickly approaches I've begun to realize how much stuff I have to pack up and move halfway across the country. True I've made similar half-country moves three other times in my life: Milwaukee to New York, New York to St. Louis, St. Louis to Boston. But for some reason, thanks in large part to my blog, I'm realizing that I have more things than ever before. And since I am not a hoarder by any stretch of the imagination this concerns me.

As I stood in the convenience store earlier this week, debating the various nail polish shades in front of me and trying to justify the purchase of an orange color that is oddly similar to the one I already have, I realized that instead of buying more before I leave I should be working on purging what I have. I ran out of there, went home and looked at my cosmetics and toiletry supplies. WHOA!

I have half-used bottles of various products that I tried and liked to varying degrees. I have soap I was sent to review or as a gift, I have face wash I bought and then forgot I owned. I have nearly empty perfume bottles that still have a few good sprays in them. Anyway, you get the picture. And I don't think I am alone in this matter. From the get-go we ladies use a number of products that guys never need to worry about. My average morning involves: shampoo, conditioner, body wash, face wash, foundation, eye primer, several shades of eyeshadow, eye liner, mascara, blush, perfume, sunscreen/face lotion, toothpaste, etc.. I'm a bare-bones compared to some women and that's just for the morning! We all have dozen of products we use, try, love, hate, etc... and unfortunately whether we are thrifty or not they tend to collect in the bathroom, counter top or some other surface.

With all this in mind, I've declared July and August to be the months of Good To The Last Drop. I'm going to refrain from buying new products and work on using the ones I have here, even if that means using ones I don't love but still work fine. (Things like the shampoo that doesn't lather but still cleans my hair, but weirds me out because there is no lather.) I remember being a kid and begging for Pantene Pro-V at the grocery store when we were nearing the end of the shampoo bottle. My mom gave in and got it for me, but she finished off the bottle of Suave we had at home. I asked her once why she was using the far inferior product and she gave me a little scolding about not wasting things that still work perfectly fine. It was a good lesson to learn.

I hope this project will achieve two purposes. One: It will help me save a little money for the move, which is going to be needed whether I fly and ship my things or roadtrip with friends. Two: It will cut down on the number of things I take with me in this new adventure. But beyond that, I also realized that this is a socially responsible thing to do. There is no need to fill landfills with half-used but perfectly good products. There is also no reason to spend money on things I already own. I'm sure that cash can be put to much better use.

What about you? Do you have a collection of products you don't use or haven't touched in awhile? Are they collecting dust?



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Tiger Print newsletter
rss Subscribe to Tiger Print RSS feed

 Recent Posts
Words that still matter
18 Feb 2013
No time for Valentine’s blues
17 Feb 2013
New Adult books and the message of love
1 Feb 2013
Rise of the online bully
13 Jan 2013
What’s your word for 2013?
11 Jan 2013

 MercatorNet blogs
Population issues: Demography is Destiny
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
Feb 2013 | Jan 2013 | Dec 2012 | more >>

  From MercatorNet's home page

EU shows how to do a dodgy survey
16 May 2013
The EU's largest-ever survey of hate crimes and discrimination against LGBT people claims that they labour under a terrible burden.…

How legal euthanasia changed Belgium for ever
17 May 2013
The ideology of absolute self-determination has become sacred and unquestionable.

The fallacy of a happy, productive and ageing work force
17 May 2013
Glib answers will not conjure away the hard, cold fact that workers everywhere are getting older and older.

What is parenthood?
15 May 2013
In debates about the family, some social scientists are asserting the primacy of theory over facts. Is this science?

Reason and responsibility: the Rana Plaza collapse
13 May 2013
The Rana Plaza tragedy was an outcome of a corrupt system that is rotten to the core. Who should --…


 Tags
New Year's resolutions, blogging, business, lessons, manliness, human dignity, high school, sexual abuse, gratitude, presidential candidates, university, Starbucks, euthanasia, abstinence, interview,, USA, hollywood, death, millenial, voting, men, twilight, food, football, cell phones, television, Muslim, Komen foundation, indie, England, student loan, movie, ipad, technology, music videos, democracy, princess, first lady, childlessness, generation gap, wardrobe purge, primary school, events, media bias, reality TV, mac, trend, size, blogs, designers, death penalty, commercials, games, hooking up, relationships, cyberbullying, lying, government, celebrity culture, research, chivalry, wedding, personhood, protes, freelance, wiki, silence, goals, Love and Fidelity Network, book, sports, sexism, trailer, London, graduates, teens, happiness, designer, profanity, Thanksgiving, communication, magazines, homosexuality, aging population, fitness, bars, retailer, thrift store, modesty, coffee, mail, Haiti, universities, premarital sex, texting, Freedom of speech, pants, feminism, shopping, Grammys,