Happpy Earth Day! Here is a review of Plastic a Toxic Love Story

Yesterday my local garbage company switched out my old broken garbage can for a new one. As I started to roll it across my driveway I noticed something ironic about it; the can that I try so hard not to fill with plastic is made with the very thing I try to avoid. My shiny new can is made from hard polyethylene, in other words it is plastic.
I probably wouldn’t have noticed this had I not just finished Susan Freinkel’s new book Plastic A Toxic Love Story. Freinkel starts her book with the story of the day she decided to notice how much plastic her world included by writing down everything she touched. By the end of the day she had filled four pages in her note book.
I have a love hate relationship with plastic. I do concede plastic has saved my life. I have a pacemaker which I learned is made from a form of plastic.  Hospitals use plastic for everything from delicate equipment to blood bags for easy and safe transport.Long time readers may remember I started a drive to have plastic gift cards recycled by the companies who sell them. What bothers me most about plastic is how it has changed our society. Just 50 odd years ago our grandparents recycled, reused, made from scratch or went without. Now we are a throwaway society that is quickly filling up our landfills and oceans with discards that will take centuries to break down. Meanwhile the chemicals used to make better and tougher plastic are leaching into our bodies and groundwater and there seems to be no end in sight to the damaging effects of plastic.
Freinkel looks at our love of plastic (a generic term for the many types of different synthetic materials that make up the family of malleables we use today) by looking at 8 products that have changed our culture to give us the history of plastic. The book is not an indictment of plastics, rather it is the start of the serious talk we need to have if we are to change the way we treat the planet. The book is well written, easy enough for anyone to understand yet contains a primer on what plastic really is.
Two chapters stood out for me, the one on toys and how we got to where we are; with rows and rows of cheap plastic toys of every shape and color and the one that tells the story of Beth Terry famous for her plastic free life. We cannot all be Beth, but after reading Freinkel’s book we may want to try.

I am now a Vine member & saw the movie Paul

 Mailbox Monday?
I know I am a day late but I wanted to share this anyway. I received a self help book titled Stop Saying You’re Fine, Discovering a More Powerful You by Mel Robbins.  Now, I cannot say I am thrilled because of the book itself, no I am excited because I was finally asked to join Amazon’s Vine program.  For those of you who do not know about this (and for all I know I am the last one to know) this program is for Amazon reviewers “based on the trust they have earned in the Amazon community for writing accurate and insightful reviews”. Many of the bloggers I know have been members for years. They consistently write thoughtful reviews and post them on Amazon. And now I have posted enough to be invited. This is my first pick; I could have reviewed products, but what reader would chose to do this? What, give up a free book? For shame!
I picked this book because sometimes I think I am my own worst enemy, that often it is me who is in my way. Hopefully this book will give me the kick in the butt I need. I need to have the confidence in my writing that others have in me. I just finished writing my first real content for a business website. The client was happy with what I wrote, but I was less than thrilled. I feel I could have done better. I did cash the check, but the warm fuzzy feeling I expected to have after my first job was not there. I really have to get over my anxiety about my work.
It is my goal to be either teaching full time or working from home in five years time. If I cannot teach because of the drain on University positions, I at least want to be writing from home. I have my first idea for a nonfiction book, and would like to work on it, but between school and work I am not sure I will have time for the research. I have a goal of paying off my credit cards in three years, then saving up so maybe I can work part time while I write. Then again if I can get out of my way, more clients will want me to write content for them and I can start sooner. I just have to discover the more powerful me!
My son and I saw Paul on Sunday. It is a really cute movie with some giggles and lots of surprises. If you love Sci Fi and can recite lines from Star Wars to Aliens this is a must see movie. I was blown away by the smart writing. The writers were able to seamlessly use lines from blockbusters without being over the top about it. I read a review that called it a love letter to Steven Spielberg. I am not sure I quite agree as they reference so many good movies. I would call this a love letter to Sci Fi. If you do go see it, don’t forget the Reese’s Pieces.
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