Green Friendly
There are plenty of ways to choose a green-friendly lifestyle, but it all resumes to personal convictions and beliefs. People often tend to associate green-friendly products will a lack of individual comfort, and the rawest and most striking example is the ultra brands of toilet paper that feel so soft on the bum. Well, you may not know or care that the fiber used for such products comes from virgin wood fiber taken from tree pulp. Next time when you fancy yourself as a green-friendly person, think about your daily habits and see whether you really live up to your standards or simply make superficial claims of environmental concern.
The food you eat tells a lot about how green-friendly you are. Whether out of preoccupation for personal health or care for the environment, lots of people buy local food instead of the non-organic products available in hypermarkets. A vegetables garden will produce very nice food that can be kept 100% pesticide free. This could very well cover a family’s needs of tomatoes, carrots, peppers, peas or beans in a very inexpensive way. If you don’t have the possibility to grow the vegetables yourself, you can buy from local green-friendly farms.
Then, to continue the list of green-friendly lifestyle examples we come to the importance of outdoor activities. How much time does your child spend in front of the computer or watching TV? The most important thing you can do when guiding him/her in the choice of leisure activities is to give him/her a dose of nature. Walking or playing outside in a natural setting, doing sports, going hiking, cycling or climbing are just a few examples of how you can develop a green-friendly lifestyle for the entire family. If more parents thought like this, there would be fewer video-game consoles sold all over the world.
Lots of other elements define a green-friendly attitude to life. From the effort to recycle and reuse to the very building of a house according to sustainable criteria, there is so much one can do to stay in harmony with the environment. We have got so used to our comfort, to the huge number of ready made items that serve us every day that we not even think where all our litter goes once we dump it in the bin or what happens to the waste water full of household residues. We forget that the very fish we have for dinner comes from a dirty ocean and that it could carry the germs and toxins that we fed it in the first place.
