Soup weather and metal spoons
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Photo by Unsplash/FreeRangeStock.com |
It's cold outside, making me crave soup. So, one day last week, I ran by the store to pick up a couple cans of hearty soup to take for my work lunch. Knowing I'd need spoons — and in spite of the potential dangers associated with plastics that I wrote about two weeks ago — I wandered over to the plasticware and contemplated buying a box of spoons. It just seems more convenient to be able to toss the spoon when I'm done.
But as I stood there, I didn't like the ones the store had for sale, and I couldn't shake the nagging feeling that if I bought them, I'd be going against what I felt I should do. After hemming and hawing over the decision, I finally left without buying them, drove across the street to Dollar General and bought a pack of three metal spoons for $1. Not only was the decision more eco-friendly, it was also cheaper. The smallest pack of plastic spoons was about $1.50.
In retrospect, I don't know why I had felt it would be easier to get disposable spoons. I have a ceramic bowl that I keep in my desk at work for days when I want soup or something like that, and I wash the bowl after every use. How much more time would it really take me to wash a spoon?
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