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Raised in the tumult of Japan’s industrial powerhouse, the 11 men and women profiled in A Different Kind of Luxury have all made the transition to sustainable, fulfilling lives. Based on Andy Couturier's popular articles in The Japan Times, this lushly designed volume has a wealth of stories about real people who have created an abundance of time for contemplation, connecting with the natural world, and contributing to their communities. In their success is a lesson for us all: live a life that matters. Read an excerpt of the book here or here. Read a review of the book here, here, or here.


Wednesday, June 15, 2011

What we don’t need



Nakamura's Kitchen
Nakamura doesn’t use any dishwashing soap.  At all, for any reason. I found it hard to believe when he first told me, but it’s true.   For those pots and plates and cups that didn’t have anything oily on them, he uses plain water.  For oily things, he mixes the water with sifted wood ash from the fire.  That’s it. 

I should mention that he washes all his dishes immediately after he finishes eating.  He uses a vegetable bristle brush.  Oh, and he doesn’t eat any meat.
           
Since I was a child, I have always washed the dishes with dishwashing soap.  If I were to calculate all the meals I’ve eaten in more than four decades, I’ve used an ocean of detergent! Think about all the supermarket aisles full of different brands, colors, fragrances ... and think also of all  the plastic bottles. 

Multiply each year you have been alive by 365, multiply each day by 3 meals, and think of each cup and plate and frying pan and bowl and each one squirted with ... with what?  What is in that stuff?
Even eco-soap is not necessary!



I once knew a truck driver, a guy who drove eighteen-wheelers.  He said the most dangerous and toxic loads he transported were the chemicals used to make dishwashing and other detergents.  He told me tales of when these trucks crash--which of course they do occasionally.  He told me of the  the poisoning of the nearby creeks and the liquid all over the road.  He also said, “You better get out of there quick if you are in the cab.  If that stuff gets on your skin, it can corrode it away. Lots of guys have died from getting those chemicals on their skin.

Toxic slop load
Now think again of the aisles in the supermarket, and all the detergent we have all used. We’ve been convinced we need this stuff to stay healthy and to be “clean.”  But, as Nakamura has shown me, we don’t need at all.

But this is just one example of something we’ve been told that we need.

Example two: When I was visiting Atsuko last year, I noticed she measured the cold water she poured into the tea kettle before boiling it.  I asked her why, and she said she didn’t want to waste the gas to boil more water than she needed. 

I think of all the times I have happhazardly filled up my tea kettle with far more than I needed for my one or two cups of tea.  I didn’t even give it a thought.  But, even though I don’t think about it, if I do that tens of thousands of times over my lifetime--heating up twice as much water as I need-- I am spewing an enormous amount of carbon into the air. 

Atsuko's Kitchen
Now think about oil and gas exploration, drilling and transport, and about all the lives lost, human and animal, from it.  And the wars: Nigeria, Iraq, the Exxon Valdeez, the Gulf of Mexico, and think of how much of it was just not necessary. 

So what to do?  First we need to know it’s possible to wash dishes without detergent, or that someone in this world measures water before they boil it.  And then we have to exercise our will to change our behavior.  And then--really important-- we have to keep it up.

I know that what I'm speaking about is more trouble sometimes.  But so is working in a cubicle for cash income.  And then there’s that thing about extinction of thousands of species from the earth, forever. 

And then what about what you’re missing out on?  The inner development of your person and spirit that comes from more conscious living, and doing it by yourself.
           
Maybe living more intentionally is not such a difficult choice after all!  

3 comments:

  1. Good idea... I had a friend who never used dish soap, just very hot water. But looking online, I see that people use baking soda, or, another popular choice is Dr. Bonner's bar soap. One person said she adds a little vinegar to the soap and water and gets a great result. Why not?

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  2. Living more intentionally. Yes. That is it. That in itself is the catalyst for a different type of luxury. I like it. Thank you. :-)

    Ken R.

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  3. I grew up in a village in India. People still use ash wooden ash to wash their utensils.

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