A book entirely about eliminating plastic from your life could be boring, or it could be really guilt inducing. I found this book to be neither. The author was honest about her own struggles, which helped me feel less guilty about my own, but also straightforward about the problems with plastic - for our world and for our own health. I found the book at once distressing, infuriating, enlightening, and empowering. I wish my brain were able to hold all of the information I got from it, and all the ideas and action plans. Every time I put it down, I thought, "I'm gonna do that. I can totally do that," but then the next chapter had so many more ideas I wanted to try, so I couldn't hold everything in! Luckily, Ms. Terry also includes a list of action steps at the end of each chapter to help organize all the thoughts you have while you read, and the information and ideas and resources (and there are TONS) that she gives are really well organized. I pretty much wanted to highlight the whole thing, but since it is so well organized, I didn't have to.
I read this book in preparation for my church's Lenten series on simplicity. At first I was doubtful that it would be very helpful, that it would mostly be a gratifying read for this NorCal hippie and fuel what efforts I already make at living lightly in the world. But I found plenty of material. My big take-away (which she actually covers in the final chapter) is that as soon as you start to notice and then eliminate plastic in your life, you realize that most things that come in plastic are unnecessary or downright unhealthy. The author had to learn how to cook real food, for example, because she could no longer rely on frozen and processed food. She had to learn how to make her own cleaning supplies, and buy whole foods in bulk. She learned how to make and fix things herself, which not only saved money and waste, but also gave her a sense of pride, ownership, and joy for her things, rather than being totally detached from them and thus willing to throw them in the garbage. These are exactly the goals of simply living: to appreciate more what you have (and not view it as disposable and worthless), to avoid waste, to go back to basics (why is there is a different cleaner for every part of your bathroom, when all you really need is water, vinegar, and baking soda?) Consumer society has convinced us we need more stuff, and more complex stuff, but we just don't. Support the economy, but support your local economy, your local community, or small businesses that are committed to ethical practices, and that will respond to your requests (like asking for plastic-free packaging when something is shipped to you!). It is good for the environment, good for your community, good for your physical and emotional health, good for your relationships... Why not go for it?