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The joy of taking out the trash

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    You might not know this
    just from looking at me,
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    but you might guess it from smelling me.
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    One of my favorite things to do
    is take out the trash.
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    It's the laziest way to technically
    pare down your possessions,
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    because the one thing
    you can never do enough of
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    in a small New York City
    apartment like mine
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    is get rid of stuff.
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    The stuff that our modern consumerist
    carbon-powered culture
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    makes us buy endlessly
    and often for no reason.
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    Getting rid of people never hurts either.
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    Roommates, family members,
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    that old lady who's been
    in your living room for weeks.
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    Who is she anyway?
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    No squatters allowed.
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    I don't care if you're a ghost.
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    Also, not to brag,
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    but I've been micro-decluttering
    since before Marie Kondo got big.
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    In fact, I've cut out her step
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    of picking things up and figuring out
    whether they spark joy in me
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    because I already know
    what sparks joy in me,
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    throwing out trash.
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    What kind of trash?
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    Well, I'll give you a clue.
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    It starts with H and it ends with air.
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    That's right, it's a lot of hair.
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    Don't try and picture how much;
    you'll feel sick.
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    And if you don't feel sick,
    you haven't pictured enough.
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    I shed like an Instagram
    influencer sheep dog
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    who's decided fur is the only
    thing holding her career back.
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    We're all trying to reduce
    our carbon footprints and consumption.
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    So by throwing out trash,
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    I also naturally mean
    recycling and composting.
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    I try to do both.
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    In fact, I once carried a takeout
    container across half the city
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    just to put it in the right bin.
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    Where's my inspiring biopic?
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    But then I learned recycling
    frequently isn't working.
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    Even if we all separate out
    glass, cans and cardboard,
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    a lot of stuff doesn't neatly
    fit into those categories.
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    Paper envelopes lined
    with bubble wrap can't be recycled.
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    Pizza boxes with grease
    stains can't be recycled.
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    That memory from seventh grade when I ...
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    Ah, who am I kidding?
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    All of seventh grade can't be recycled.
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    There's even a term for it:
    aspirational recycling.
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    At first, I thought that's
    if you went to spin class last week,
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    so it should count for this week too.
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    China used to import
    a lot of the US's recyclables,
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    but they stopped accepting
    foreign garbage in 2018
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    as part of a pollution ban.
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    Whatever happened to one country's trash
    is another country's treasure?
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    Now, a lot of US recycling
    goes straight to landfills.
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    The EPA says that only 10 percent
    of plastic has ever been recycled.
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    Not that this is about me,
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    but this balloons my anxiety the size
    of the giant Pacific garbage patch
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    way out in the ocean
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    where we'll all eventually go
    for our next destination wedding.
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    So, if you're American,
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    hound your political representatives
    to work on this recycling issue,
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    and try to create less waste
    overall by reusing materials.
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    Here's stuff I've been reusing in my life:
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    plastic bags, salsa jars
    and old fights with my boyfriend.
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    Now, the next time
    I have to throw out the trash,
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    I can confidently ask:
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    Hey, can I reuse
    this loose ball of hair again?
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    And you know what? I probably can.
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    In fact, I'm going to give it to that old
    ghost lady as a going away present.
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    Thank you.
Title:
The joy of taking out the trash
Speaker:
Aparna Nancherla
Description:

Comedian Aparna Nancherla loves to take out the trash. In this funny and sharp meditation on garbage -- "the stuff that our modern, consumerist, carbon-powered culture makes us buy endlessly, and often for no reason" -- she shares thoughts on how to use less in a world that's choking on ever-larger piles of waste.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
03:14

English subtitles

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