It’s been trendy for years now to live as environmentally friendly
as possible; there are even some rather extreme green methods of green living
out there! Yet, assuming you’d like to do your part and help out the earth, you
don’t need to live a plastic-free life just to have a more green lifestyle in
college. There are a variety of simple, effective, and college-related means of
staying green.
Unplug Your Dorm
No matter if you spend plenty of time in your dorm room or go
there mainly just to sleep, many of your electronics, or devices related to
your electronics, will always remain in your dorm room. Your charger for your
cellphone and for your laptop, for example, are probably lying in some tangle
on your floor. Aside from being a tripping hazard (which is a topic for
another
day), those chargers can be doing damage if unchecked. OK, they’re not really a
safety threat, but they’re an earth-health threat. Don’t leave them plugged in
when not in use, as you’ll drain unneeded electricity. No, you don’t pay an
electrical bill for your dorm room, but since it’s so easy to just unplug those
chargers, don’t leave them needlessly plugged in. The same goes for your
electric pencil sharpener, printer, and other electronics that you might not
use often. Sucking up unneeded electricity is like pouring water down the
drain. Why waste?
Keep it in Park
While you’re on campus, you might have brought a car to school,
even if it’s your first year. Maybe you need to drive to sports practice or to
club meetings off-campus. Either way, don’t use your car when it’s not needed.
In fact, you’re likely not even adding to the convenience factor when driving
when you consider parking, gas, traffic jams, and possibly a fender bender.
Even if your campus is spread out, it’ll never be out of the question to walk,
ride a bike, or take a campus shuttle if available. You know that walking and
biking will also combat freshman-year weight gain, so it’s a win-win.
Finish Your Food
Speaking of weight gain, that all-you-can-eat school cafeteria will
be beckoning at all hours of the day and night. Usually it’s a quick swipe of
your student ID, and plates of plates of food are yours for the taking.
Hopefully it tastes good, and if it does, that smorgasbord of plates can pile
up quick on your cafeteria tray. There’s plenty to be said about healthy eating
in college, yet also consider reducing wasting food. A few bites of a sandwich
here, half a cookie there, and some spoonfuls of soup might comprise a meal,
but consider how much you just threw out. You might think uneaten food is
helping your figure, but you’re also wasting and hurting the environment with
every tossed bite. Instead, take only what you plan to consume and avoid
sending half your meal to some landfill. Some green-innovative schools collect
food scraps for compost. How about getting that started in your school?
Plenty of Paper
Along those lines, avoid tearing out 15 napkins, using two, and
then tossing the rest. To save paper further, you can look toward the
classroom. You’ll receive plenty of syllabi and paper handouts throughout your
college career, which means lots of felled trees. You probably won’t be rushing
out to plant more trees, but you can certainly recycle all those papers. (OK,
you might have to resist the urge to burn a folder from a particularly
loathsome class.) Recycling a whole course-load of papers can really add up.
And it’s not like any extra work is required—just drop it in the recycling bin
instead of the trash!
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