Ekh
Elio Addict
Yep, I did have a good breakfast, live in a very nice home, and so use a supercomputer for graphics processing -- my living (and passion).
We also put out about 15 pounds of trash per week for the two of us, compared to 30 pounds per person. We recycle. We live in a passive solar home. My wife just told me we're going shopping for sheets (these are 25 years old). We will recycle the old ones, either for use as quilt pieces, or to Goodwill, which recycles materials they can't re-sell.
We have a cistern for water; we use no city resources that way, and we haven't had a truck load delivered in about 10 years, and yes, we have had droughts. Our average water use is WAY under the norm (you quickly learn not to waste water when you live this way).
The point is not that's we're saints-- we're not -- the point is that all of us can be a lot more conscious of how we live. We can actively THINK about what we're buying and why we're buying it. And be a lot more conscious about what we do with stuff when it IS time to unload it.
To some extent, since I'm a member of this society, I'm prone to its ills. But the older I get, the more aware I am that living intentionally is a damn good thing to do .. and worth the struggle. Even with the frequent built-in failures we all encounter.
For me, the Elio is part of that. My wife commutes in a Camry hybrid. She'll probably buy it when the lease is up (I don't think she should, but it's her choice) and then keep it another 6 or 7 years.
I figure that at my age the Elio is the last car I'll ever buy. I certainly intend for that to be the case.
We also put out about 15 pounds of trash per week for the two of us, compared to 30 pounds per person. We recycle. We live in a passive solar home. My wife just told me we're going shopping for sheets (these are 25 years old). We will recycle the old ones, either for use as quilt pieces, or to Goodwill, which recycles materials they can't re-sell.
We have a cistern for water; we use no city resources that way, and we haven't had a truck load delivered in about 10 years, and yes, we have had droughts. Our average water use is WAY under the norm (you quickly learn not to waste water when you live this way).
The point is not that's we're saints-- we're not -- the point is that all of us can be a lot more conscious of how we live. We can actively THINK about what we're buying and why we're buying it. And be a lot more conscious about what we do with stuff when it IS time to unload it.
To some extent, since I'm a member of this society, I'm prone to its ills. But the older I get, the more aware I am that living intentionally is a damn good thing to do .. and worth the struggle. Even with the frequent built-in failures we all encounter.
For me, the Elio is part of that. My wife commutes in a Camry hybrid. She'll probably buy it when the lease is up (I don't think she should, but it's her choice) and then keep it another 6 or 7 years.
I figure that at my age the Elio is the last car I'll ever buy. I certainly intend for that to be the case.