By Eilene Lyon
About a year ago, we were in London just before returning home from a three-week vacation, mostly in northeastern France and Belgium. We went from our hotel via subway to the Westminster stop, because we had a trip on the Thames to Kew Gardens arranged.
We admired the Parliament building, Westminster Cathedral, and Big Ben (all from the exterior). There are also a number of memorial statues near the cathedral of historic figures from British history and around the world.
As we headed toward the river, I spied this protestor across the street, standing on a corner near Parliament. Crossing over, I decided to chat with the man (whose name I did not get), and get his photo, with his permission.
It is really mind-boggling how dependent humans have become on plastic. Such a pollution problem of our time.
I asked the protestor a few questions about his effort. He said he comes to the corner nearly every day, and has for many years. Did he think it made much difference? Not really, he candidly admitted. But he is compelled to have his say in a visible manner. I wished him well.
Though he is a lone man on a busy street corner in the government district, he has many like-minded compatriots around the world. People are doing their best to buy and use less plastic, reuse the plastic they have, and clean up the plastic (and other) trash they see.
I am making my own effort, though I know it falls short. We have a local business, run by a friend of mine, called We Fill. They sell many bulk liquid products and will refill containers customers bring in. I buy hand lotion, white vinegar, and soap this way. She also sells many reusable and biodegradable products intended to reduce our reliance on plastic.
Much of what I buy on a regular basis—food, beverages, personal care products—tends to involve plastic. When I can, I get paper, cardboard, aluminum packaging instead. I bring my own bags when shopping. We reuse plastic ziploc bags, seemingly forever. But I still seem to have too much plastic, some of which can’t go in the recycling bin.
Then there is this notion of recycling. I’m not so naïve that I believe everything I take to the recycling center actually gets recycled. Sadly, plastic really doesn’t recycle all that well. Some industries find ways to repurpose it into other products, including fleece clothing. But it never goes away.
Pill and vitamin bottles. Cottage cheese and yogurt containers. Milk bottles. These items seem to be the hardest to avoid. I should probably quit eating the kind of over-processed snack foods that come in plastic, both for my health and to avoid the packaging winding up in the trash.
If you have any other good suggestions on dealing with this ubiquitous problem, please share!

A great post! Plastic is certainly one of the worst pollutants we’re adding to a long list of contaminants. I’m hoping some brilliant scientists will discover (or create) microbes that digest it, but a better solution is to stop making plastic containers, as you point out. Recycling doesn’t take care of all of it, for sure.
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Thanks, Sue. Maybe in several million years it will all become oil again. Ha.
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It feels like we never make any progress and it’s really discouraging Eilene. I look at the things that I try to do and I know my efforts make no difference in the big picture but I keep trying anyway.
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It can be discouraging for sure. But I do believe every effort does get us moving in the right direction. Laws banning plastic bags have surely had an impact. I see way fewer bags along the roadsides than I used to.
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Small steps are important, but I tend to be impatient and it will definitely take a huge reversal in thinking by very large numbers of people to see real change. It’s hard to visualize that happening given where we are right now.
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I remain hopeful. We really can’t predict the future, but more and more people are seeing the devastating effects of what we’ve done to the planet.
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I think the only way is to do what you are doing and avoid plastic as much as possible. I need to get better at that. We can put aside almost all our plastic for “recycling” but I read recently that about 70% of it is still burnt.
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I do think more and more people are coming around to this. I’ve seen progress over the past decade or two, so there is hope!
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I know what you mean – I have similar thoughts about plastic. We too reuse Ziplocs forever, buy as little in plastic as possible etc., but it’s still hard to avoid. I have a prescription I take daily and the pharmacist can’t reuse the container, so it has to be recyled every three months. Same with the drugs our cat takes.
I’ve looked into making our own yogurt and it’s just not something I can take on right now. We eat plain Greek yogurt (for probiotics and protein) so have resigned ourselves to that plastic container.
That protester is brave and if he makes people at least think about reducing their plastic consumption, he’s done his job.
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Yeah, I’ve considered homemade yogurt, but it’s just a bit much for me, and besides, I’d have to buy the milk to make it and that comes in a container too!
If I had all the time, I’m still not sure I’d ever dedicate myself to doing a protest like he is. That is an impressive commitment he’s chosen to make.
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I admire the lone protestor. I’m in the Bay Area with my kids right now, post my daughter’s shoulder surgery. They are so much more conscious of everything they use and avoid plastic and synthetic fabrics, chemicals, etc.
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I think that more and more people, often younger generations are moving the needle in the right direction.
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👍🏼
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Amen about plastics! (You were very close to the Lorraine American Cemetery, St. Avold, France, where one of my young uncles is buried.)
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We did stop at a number of war cemeteries, but they were all from WWI.
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It is hard to avoid plastic. I’m thinking what I bought today….foundation…plastic tube. Chicken. In plastic. Two lotions for my husband, both plastic.
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Very difficult to avoid. I like that I can get bulk refill for unscented lotion. I’m not ready to become a vegetarian, either. I bought chicken today, too. Food packaging is about the hardest to avoid. I suppose I could get all my meat wrapped in butcher paper. A bit less convenient, and probably more expensive.
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My issue is I buy meat at markets without on site butchers sometimes. And we’ve reduced butchers in some of the markets
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We still have butchers, but the prices can be eye-popping!
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We have a butcher down the street. Stupid prices. And my whole foods still has a butcher but I don’t go that often
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Yeah, it’s not quite so bad at our regular grocery store.
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Applause to this gentleman. I went to the recycling center this morning. I go at least once sometimes twice a week. A friend told me I go there more than anyone she knows. I took that as a compliment. 🙂 We have a local company that sells the products you referenced as refills for your bottles. And, you are not alone in washing plastic bags. I don’t wash the sandwich ones, but I wash all the quart and larger ones, dry them, and reuse. We’re in good company there also because included in President Carter’s eulogy by his grandson was a comment about how they both washed and reused plastic bags. 🙂
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I probably use the sandwich size the most, so we wash those, too!
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I wish I had some answers. I try to minimize our use of plastic, but it just so difficult. I recycle as much as I can. I store food in glass storage containers. But nevertheless, I use too much.
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We use glass containers for leftovers a lot. I use canning jars to freeze soups and stews, bone broth, diced tomatoes, etc. I don’t do any actual canning (I really don’t care for canned vegetables–only fresh or frozen). I had an aunt who canned fresh-caught tuna when she lived on the Oregon coast. THAT was awesome stuff.
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Eilene, just reading through some of the comments- see many wash and reuse baggie type plastic bags. A suggestion since you asked in the post- you can actually buy sets of silicone “baggies” that can be washed, dried and reused over and over for fairly inexpensive cost when you realize they literally never wear out. They also make great storage for the freezer and I often put frozen veg in them to store- sadly I’ve bought the frozen veg in plastic first which ends up in the landfill but maybe if our garden takes off I can cut down on some of that plastic next summer.
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The We Fill store sells those sorts of things. But right now I have enough ziploc bags in the house to last me years! I do dice and freeze fresh zucchini and tomatoes from the farm markets. I use them for soups and stews.
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It’s hard to avoid plastic all together, as I have also learned! What I did to try and help is really educated myself on recycling in my area – what they actually take, how it actually needs to be recycled (does it need rinsed first, entirely cleaned, etc). It makes me hopeful that at least more of what I put in the bin is actually getting recycled.
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I think recycling as much as possible is the best we can do for the items we can’t seem to avoid. I’ve studied the local chart for what goes in and it’s always clean.
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I wonder how practicable it would be to return to glass containers for some things. I remember when pills, milk, shampoo, and many cleaning products all came in glass bottles.
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I’ve wondered that, too. I think it makes sense. The reusable ones had to be sterilized, but much of it could be recycled.
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I rarely if ever buy plastic water bottles anymore. Last time I bought a case of them was back in early spring and that was it. It wasn’t so much a mindful effort but it counts I guess.
I think the guy’s protest is great. It’s about what each individual does and believes and he’s doing his part.
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I quit bottled water long ago. We have great-tasting well water and I keep a metal beverage container and a jug of home water in my vehicle. But thanks for making a step in the right direction, intentional or not!
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It’s something, I guess.
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We recycle whatever we can and avoid plastic if possible… but it sometimes feels a bit hopeless. Like you’ I’ve read that most plastic “recycling” really isn’t. Feel-good Kabuki theater, mostly. Good for that man to do what he can to raise awareness.
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It’s astonishing what a mess we humans can make in just a few generations, isn’t it?
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This problem with plastics is growing out of control and it’s not only the plastics that end up in landfills, but the plastics that contaminate our bodies. It seems there are endless stories daily about how plastic containers are bad for us or that microplastics endanger our health and it really makes you stop and think. For years, most people just heated up leftovers in microwavable containers, or even the take-out containers you might get at the restaurant. This was long before the concept of “non-BPA” products was touted. We didn’t know and I’m sure we’ll find more about the dangers of plastics as we get older.
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That’s an excellent point you bring up, Linda. It’s horrifying what we’re blindly doing to our bodies by interacting with plastic and other substances that have unknown health consequences down the road. Not just humans are affected by these things, either. Scary stuff, indeed.
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Yes, some plastic use can be avoided Eilene, as you are doing and your friend’s business is very good, but sadly not all of it can be avoided and if we don’t eat or drink microplastics, we wear them too.
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All true, Linda.
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I read a column a while back by an environmental activist who decided to go a day without plastic and could barely get herself dressed. Even the lightbulb in her closet contained plastic. They sometimes use a light plastic coating inside tin cans and it’s in many fabrics. Adam won’t buy his favorite tea bags anymore because they contain microplastics. The list is comprehensive and terrifying. The plastic industry has done well for itself. Johnna and I were just taking last night about the evils of plastic and why bamboo isn’t a more prominently used material.
Also, good on that man. I admire his efforts!
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Yes, plastic is completely ubiquitous at this point. I can never get the image out of my head of the scene in “The Graduate” where the father-of-the-bride tells Dustin Hoffman “Plastics, my boy! Mark my words.” (or something to that effect).
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Haha. I forgot about that.
Yeah. It’s ridiculous.
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I wish more of us could take a stand like the man in your picture. We need people who care about this world of ours. But the truth is most of us find it much easier to do nothing.
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That is sadly true. I used to write letters (to editors, representatives) or go to protests, but at best, nothing changed. At worst, my words would be twisted and altered to mean something other than what I said. It tends to breed cynicism.
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You’re right about so many things not actually being recycled, but the places where I have seen an over abundance of plastic garbage strewn in nature, it is water bottles.
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I decline bottled water whenever it is offered.
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Good for you for doing that! I used to drink out of plastic water bottles. Now they creep me out. I must be so full of plastic! Today’s good deed was rescuing a lost balloon and bringing it home to kill it so it doesn’t kill a bird!
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I remember when I worked in the remote parts of the Mojave Desert of Nevada. Balloons were a given thing on nearly every transect we walked, both Mylar and latex. Sad to see this trash in such beautiful places that can’t really handle it.
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So sad. But then I remember that when I was a little girl our Michigan roads (old fashioned highways) were lined with litter 6″ deep. It was awful.
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