A friend recently asked
me this question:
"What is the Christian response
of someone who DOESN'T have MCS, is trying to live more chemically aware, and
is blind-sided by a purchase? I bought a
box of 40 kitchen trash bags, and didn't realize they were fragranced until my
kid opened the box and used one in our kitchen trash can last night. Do I go
ahead and "take the hit" so that others don't have to and use up the
bags? Do I give them to the struggling
young family across the street (explaining why I'm parting with them, of
course, so they can decline them if they want) and then go buy unscented bags
for myself? Do I send the remaining bags
straight to the landfill? The bag
manufacturer put a little logo on the package that I overlooked that says ‘With
Odor Block.’ Had I seen it, I would have
known that meant scented and not bought them, so I don't see blaming the
manufacturer. I'll probably send an email to let them know I didn't mean to
vote with my wallet for that product, just so they know. They're really
strongly fragranced and I don't like them one bit, but I hate being wasteful
and it seems abusive to give them to someone else."
What do you do with a
toxic product that is somehow in your possession? It's a good question. As someone with
chemical sensitivities, keeping fragranced or otherwise
problematic products in my house isn't an option, but I've wondered about
giving those sorts of items to others. One argument for doing so is the
fact that most people use those products anyway, with or without my assistance.
In the end, however, I've personally decided that I can't in good conscience
give people things that I believe to be toxic, despite the fact that they
choose to use the same or similar products themselves.
It wasn't easy at all
for me to come to that conclusion. I hate waste, believe in generosity, and
have always considered myself pretty good at re-using, recycling, and
re-purposing things. To throw something away that someone else would find useful
feels wrong on many levels. I've come to believe, though, that I need to be a
steward of the knowledge I've acquired about chemical toxicity. Whether other
people know, believe, or care that products harm them doesn't change the fact
that I do.
This issue came up at
Christmas. My college-aged son was home and opened a gift that was highly
fragranced. It immediately went into the garage, to remove it from my airspace,
and we began discussing its future fate. My son mentioned the possibility of
giving it to someone else. I try not to give my young adult kids too much
direct advice unless they ask for it, and I don't remember exactly what I said. I
do remember, though, that at one point my son asked, "You want me to just
throw it away, don't you?" Yep, I
did. He threw it out, which I know wasn't easy for a poor, struggling college
student watching every penny. I truly believe it was the right thing to do,
though, and I really appreciated his willingness to do it.
The specific issue of
trash bags has also come up in our family. My hubby unintentionally came home
with some fragranced bags once. I decided that trash bags were sort of a
special case. They were going to be thrown out anyway, so they might as well be
filled with other trash before making their trip to the landfill. We kept them
in the garage, filled them out there, and they never came inside the house.
Sometimes a problematic
product will offgass over time and can be somewhat redeemed. The process of
redeeming versus disposing of something is addressed in the Bible. In Leviticus
14:37–53, God gave the
Israelites detailed instructions on how to proceed when they found mold in a
house. The instructions included scraping walls and removing affected stones to
try to remediate the problem. If the mold continued to spread, the house was to
be torn down and taken outside of town for disposal. When throwing something
away seems like poor stewardship of resources and somehow ungodly, I remember
that passage. In God's hierarchy, people are above things, and when things
threaten human health, sometimes they just need to go away.
4 comments:
Oh, this is so true!!! Excellent passage that is relevant to this.
It does help put things in perspective, doesn't it?
This is a thoughtful post. I don't feel good giving people things I wouldn't want to receive, and especially things that might hurt them. I hereby make peace with the landfill.
Making peace with it is a good way to phrase it. I still don't always feel comfortable throwing things away, but it comes more naturally than it used to, and I'm convinced that sometimes it's the right thing to do.
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