Authors: Jr. Ed Begley
Likewise, if you’ve switched from sending letters to doing more of your correspondence by e-mail, you’ll save stamps and paper and envelopes.
Switching from disposable batteries to rechargeable ones can mean money in your pocket and fewer trips to the store, too.
You also might have noticed some other benefits if you’ve started growing your own food or buying organic meat and produce at a store or a farmers’ market. For instance, there could be an obvious difference in the quality of the meat and produce, or in the flavors—even in how long produce lasts once you’ve purchased it. You also may feel an enhanced sense of community.
This chart is a great place to record these results—and others—that you’ve noticed as you’ve made lifestyle changes. Again, I’ve filled in a few examples to get you going.
THE BOTTOM LINE
By now, I’m sure you’ve proved to yourself—and perhaps a doubting spouse or friend—that making environmentally friendly choices is good not just for the environment, it’s good for your pocketbook, too.
Acknowledgments
Sue Elliott
—Thank you for being my writing partner.
David Brower
—You are a constant source of inspiration for me.
Gavin De Becker
—Thank you for giving me confidence as an author.
Joe Brutsman
—Thank you for creating
Living with Ed.
Bud Brutsman, Jen Shields, Andy Robinson, Brooke Murdock, Kellie Weston, and the
Living with Ed
BCII Production Team
—Thank you.
Greg Glass
—Thank you for the work.
Copyright © 2008 Ed Begley, Jr., and BCII
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Clarkson
Potter/Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing
Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
Clarkson N. Potter is a trademark and Potter and colophon
are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Begley, Ed.
Living like Ed / Ed Begley, Jr.
1. Green movement. 2. Environmental responsibility.
I. Title.
GE195.7.B44 2008 333.72—dc22 2007038921
Photographs: BCII-Jennifer Shields
eISBN: 978-0-307-45197-2
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