"Mama, what happened to the kitchen sponge?"
Miss Ploi , my 14 year old daughter had just returned from 5 weeks away in Korea, and was about to wash the dishes.
"We don't have one anymore!" I yelled back. "Still too much toxic plastic in our world - I made some more changes while you were away."
And so it was. I had been looking at the grubby kitchen sponge some weeks back and was about to add buying a new one to the shopping list, when it struck me that I am a part of the problem in the world with all this unnecessary plastic. Mostly it's just habit.
And so I bought a pack of 3 cotton cloths and changed up the grubby, bacteria infested kitchen sponge to a washable, cotton facecloth. And we have the recyclable steel wool on standby for heavy duty cleaning.
We also have 2 little eco-friendly brushes for our reusable bamboo, metal and glass straws, and for getting into tricky corners of the juicer etc.
The upfront investment was negligible - just over USD $1 for 3 cloths.
The cloths get washed and hung out in the sun very regularly, so we're talking a lot more hygienic too. I want to say it was a pleasure to throw our disgusting sponge in the trash:
But it was tinged with some sadness at how long it will take for this sponge to break down (if ever) and how many of these I have bought and used in my 55 years on planet earth.
Are YOU still using plastic sponges in your kitchen or bathroom?
Time to make a change?
BlissednBlessed as my awareness grows. Making changes. Grateful.
Contributing to the