Checking out at the store,
the young cashier suggested to the much older lady that
she should bring her own grocery bags, because plastic
bags are not good for the environment.
The woman apologized to the
young
girl and explained, "We didn't have this 'green thing'
back in my earlier
days."
The young clerk responded, "That's
our problem today. Your generation did not care enough to
save our environment for future
generations."
The older lady said that she was
right -- our generation didn't have the "green thing" in
its day. The older lady went on to
explain:
Back then, we returned milk
bottles, soda bottles and beer bottles to the store. The
store sent them back to the plant to be washed and
sterilized and refilled, so it could use the same bottles
over and over. So they really were recycled.
Grocery stores bagged our
groceries in brown paper bags that we reused for numerous
things. Most memorable besides household garbage bags was
the use of brown paper bags as book covers for our
school books. This was to ensure that public property (the
books provided for our use by the school) was not defaced
by our scribbling's. Then we were able to personalize our
books on the brown paper bags.
We walked up stairs because we
didn't have an escalator in every store and office
building. We walked to the grocery store and didn't climb
into a 300-horsepower machine every time we had to go two
blocks.
Back then we washed the baby's
diapers because we didn't have the throw away kind. We
dried clothes on a line, not in an energy-gobbling machine
burning up 220volts. Wind and solar power really did dry
our clothes back in our early days. Kids got
hand-me-down clothes from their brothers or sisters, not
always brand-new
clothing.
Back then we had one TV, or radio,
in the house -- not a TV in every room. And the TV had a
small screen the size of a handkerchief(remember them?),
not a screen the size of the state of Montana. In the
kitchen we blended and stirred by hand because we
didn't have electric machines to do everything for us.
When we packaged a fragile item to send in the mail, we
used wadded up oldnewspapers to cushion it, not styrofoam
or plastic bubble wrap. Back then, we didn't fire up an
engine and burn gasoline just to cut the lawn. We
used a push mower that ran on human power. We exercised by
working so we didn't need to go to a health club to run on
treadmills that operate on
electricity.
We drank from a fountain when we
were thirsty instead of using a cup or a plastic bottle
every time we had a drink of water. We refilled writing
pens with ink instead of buying a new pen, and we replaced
the razor blade in a r azor instead of throwing away the
whole razor just because the blade got
dull.
Back then, people took the
streetcar or a bus and kids rode their bikes to school or
walked instead of turning their moms into a 24-hour taxi
service in the family's $45,000 SUV or van, which cost
what a whole house did before the"green thing." We
had one electrical outlet in a room, not an entire bank of
sockets to power a dozen appliances. And we didn't need a
computerized gadget to receive a signal beamed from
satellites 23,000 miles out in space in order to find the
nearest burger
joint.
But isn't it sad the current
generation laments how wasteful we old folks were just
because we didn't have the "green thing" back
then?
Please forward this on to another
selfish old person who needs a lesson in conservation from
a smart ass young
person.
We don't like being old in the
first place, so it doesn't take much to piss us off...
especially from a tattooed, multiple pierced smartass who
can't make change without the cash register telling them
how
much.
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