{"id":21601,"date":"2010-04-22T04:00:42","date_gmt":"2010-04-22T11:00:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/getrichslowly.org\/blog\/?p=21601"},"modified":"2018-11-18T16:53:26","modified_gmt":"2018-11-19T00:53:26","slug":"can-you-afford-to-go-green","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.getrichslowly.org\/can-you-afford-to-go-green\/","title":{"rendered":"Can You Afford to Go Green?"},"content":{"rendered":"

As soon as you start thinking about how to live more lightly on the earth, your eyes start opening to the myriad ways you can do that. You can eat only organic food. You can bike to work instead of driving. You can insist on high-efficiency appliances. You can line dry your clothes.<\/p>\n

Some of these lifestyle shifts will save you money. Others are expensive. Often, I hear cost used as a reason not to “go green”. In fact, environmentally damaging products and lifestyle choices are only affordable because we’re not paying the full cost of them. While you enjoy your cheap plastic toys, people in the developing world are paying the price in terms of pollution, exploitative labor, and natural resource consumption.<\/p>\n

Most of us want to do right by the environment. We’d love to have pesticide-free homes and diets. We want our spending to support small farms, local businesses, and fair wages for workers in the developing world. That doesn’t mean we necessarily have the available cash to do what our values dictate.<\/p>\n

A lot of green lifestyle changes also have a time cost, associated with them. A few weeks ago, I wrote about how easy it is to slip into Time Debt<\/a> by thoughtlessly taking on new commitments. Biking to work sounds great, but if it adds an hour to your commute time each day, you’re losing an hour at work or at home.<\/p>\n

With every green step you take, you need to consider whether or not you can truly afford it.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Here are some inexpensive steps you can take that will “green up” your bank account and<\/em> the planet:<\/p>\n