A Zero Waste Life: In Thirty Days
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About this ebook
- Timely entry into a successful genre. A Zero Waste Life simultaneously embraces an environmentally friendly ethos, with proven, lasting appeal shown by the continued success of Zero Waste Home (Simon & Schuster, 2013, 23,500 RTD, 4000 YTD), and a minimalization ethos, with proven, lasting appeal shown by the continued success of The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (Random House, 2014, 2.5 million RTD, 255,000 YTD).
- Proven track record and finally in North America: Penguin Random House Australia has sold more than 10,000 copies in Australia, and with this edition, the book can finally reach a North American audience, and the author has a US fan base ready and waiting for it.
- Impulse buy with gift appeal: At a small trim and affordable price point, A Zero Waste Life is a perfect impulse purchase or gift for a friend looking for a cleaner, more minimalist lifestyle.
- Unique call to action with a pragmatic 30-day plan. While it’s common to see calls for greenifying our lives and homes, A Zero Waste Life offers an easy-to-follow action plan presented in a highly readable, illustrated format.
- Author is a qualified rocket scientist, artist, and social media professional who will leverage her huge online presence to promote the book. Her popular zero-waste Instagram @Rocket-Science has over 75,000 followers from around the world.
- Publication date timed to release just before Earth Day (April 22) to support media hooks and round-ups. Annual features and articles about “spring cleaning” also guarantee relevant tie-ins.
- Highly designed in a two-color package with original illustrations throughout.
Anita Vandyke
Anita Vandyke is a qualified rocket scientist and medical doctor (with Bachelor of Engineering - Aeronautical Space, and Doctor of Medicine degrees) and, most importantly, mother to Vivian. She was born in Guangzhou, China, raised in Australia, and currently splits her time between Sydney and San Francisco. Her first book, A Zero Waste Life, won Gold at the Nautilus Book Awards in 2019 and has been translated into seven languages. Anita writes about motherhood, zero waste living, and minimalism on Instagram at @rocket_science, where she has nearly one million followers, and her website, anitavandyke.com.
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Gives insight on how to change life style to help the planet! Amazing, it is a must read !
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Book preview
A Zero Waste Life - Anita Vandyke
introduction
This book is a practical guide designed to help you reduce your waste by 80% in thirty days. It’s also a reflection on how I became an accidental environmentalist. It tells the story of how I went from being a maximalist to a minimalist, from hero
to zero—to living a zero waste
life.
I didn’t grow up with a hippie mother or a passion for the environment, I was just a person trying to find happiness in all the usual places—money, power and status. But this triumvirate of success didn’t provide me with the happiness that I expected. I was wasting my life.
But how did this journey all begin? What is living a zero waste life? I’ll start from the beginning. My aha moment
as Oprah calls it.
It all started with a simple no. Standing at the supermarket checkout, the cashier looked at me and asked, Would you like a plastic bag for that? It’ll be an extra 15 cents.
A plastic bag for 15 cents? Sounded like extortion to me. I had just quit my job the previous day and I needed to make ends meet on one income. That first no, based on economics rather than environmentalism, was over two years ago, and since that day I’ve said no to plastic bags over a thousand times. I’ve also said no to disposable coffee cups, fast fashion and excess consumerism. And in saying no to all this, I’ve actually said yes to a whole new life. That first no led me to a zero waste life.
How did I end up here? I thought, while crying at a dining table surrounded by my mother-in-law’s Royal Doulton porcelain figurines. It had been another terrible day at work and I’d come home to an evening sorting the many boxes of stuff we’d brought with us to my in-laws" house, where we had recently moved in an attempt to pay off our debt. The dam had burst and I didn’t know how to stop. All I could think was how did I end up like this?
On paper my life was the epitome of success. I was the one my parents didn’t have to worry about: the daughter who graduated high school with a near perfect UAI (the Australian equivalent of the GPA), had a well-paying corporate job and the latest Givenchy boots in my closet. It was a supposedly picture-perfect life.
My parents brought me up believing that money was essential to happiness. Poor immigrant workers who never had any money, they saw it as the solution to all their problems. So I did what many a good, first-born daughter of a Chinese-migrant family has done and worked hard, got good grades and then a high-paying job. I climbed the corporate ladder, foregoing my passions, hobbies and creativity to chase the Great Australian (and American) Dream.
By age twenty-six I was a manager in a large engineering firm, earning more money than my parents ever had. The day of the broken dam fiasco
was just another day at the office. I remember sitting in that Board Meeting on Level 6, looking at my boss, my boss’s boss and the big boss, thinking, Is this it? Is this who I will become in five, ten, fifteen years’ time? I realised then that if I kept going down this path, all my hopes of living a life that was truly mine, one that wasn’t bound by golden handcuffs, would be lost forever.
A more profound question followed: What did I want to do with my life?
These questions haunted me and when the doubt started to make me miserable, my husband looked me in the eyes and said, You have to quit your job—it’s killing you.
Of course, being the practical, money-driven person I was, I had a dozen excuses. We needed to pay the mortgage. We couldn’t afford to live on one income. We needed the money. But my husband was adamant. I knew then that if I didn’t do something about my everyday misery, I risked losing him.
I quit my job the next day.
Since that day, my life has transformed. By embracing a zero waste life, I have been able to go back to university to study full-time to become a doctor, I’ve moved out of my in-laws’ house into a 635-square-foot apartment and I’ve dedicated my life to something greater.
Working in the corporate world didn’t reflect who I was, but that doesn’t mean it’s not right for everyone: you certainly don’t have to quit your corporate job to live a more eco-friendly life. But you do have to find what works for you. Living a zero waste life means more than just a plastic-free diet—it gives you the freedom to live in alignment with your values. To live a life based around service, community and respect for the planet we live on. It has allowed me to not waste my life.
There is a stereotyped image of the quintessential environmentalist: a left-wing hippie who doesn’t wear deodorant and lives off-the-grid. But I want to introduce to you a new kind of environmentalist: the everyday activist
Being an everyday activist is about valuing small and consistent actions, the compound effect of which can not only reduce your waste but also enrich your life. I want to show you small changes can make a big cumulative difference.
Zero waste is the ultimate goal, but there’s no need to feel daunted. Quite simply, zero waste living is about leaving a gentler footprint on the planet. That’s it.
This is an interactive book that gives you the power to be an activist in your everyday life. I have chosen a thirty-day timeframe, as research has shown that it takes approximately thirty days to develop a new habit. My engineering brain has hacked
each day to make it as simple as possible. Cumulatively, the daily tasks transition you into living a zero waste life. Your journey comes in two parts, and focuses on four stages of change—think, do, reflect and review.
days 1-15: think & do
The think
stage involves an initial audit of your life: assessing your current baseline so you know your starting point, opening your eyes and being curious about living a more eco-friendly existence. The do
phase involves the delta—in engineering terms this means the change that is required. The first fifteen days ask for action; they’re about making simple changes that set you up to live a zero waste life.
days 16-30: reflect & review
These final fifteen days involve introspection, as well as an inspection of your external environments. They are about recognizing the why of change rather than the how. The last fifteen days will give you the passion to fuel long-lasting, sustainable change.
The aim of