I started this blog to share my own evolution and journey from being a frenzied shopaholic corporate lawyer to a writer, spiritual teacher, and fan of second hand clothes. Does this mean I don’t appreciate fashion? No, it’s quite the opposite. I still love and appreciate fashion. It just means that I’m far more conscious about the choices I make and how and where I purchase things and how often I shop.
Continue readingWhy Buying Second Hand (and Local) is a Must- Acheter Seconde Main & Local
I have to admit that yes, I’ve come a long way…
In a previous life, I purchased huge amounts of fast fashion and all kinds of nonsense. I’ve already written about this, it was to fill an existential void caused by not doing what I truly love. In the last year, 98 % of the clothes I’ve purchased have been second hand in vintage or thrift shops, except for a fun pair of pants from Maisons Simons made with recycled water bottles, a tennis dress found on sale by Stella McCartney, one of eco-fashion’s main pioneers and a few T-shirts to wear to my yoga class.
Continue readingParley For The Oceans Collaborates with Big Names in Fashion
According to Avaaz, the international non-profit organization, by 2050, there will be more plastic than fish in the world’s oceans.
This should give us all pause for concern. Major pause. Major concern. And a desire for immediate action.
This week, Stella McCartney announced a partnership with Parley for the Oceans, an organization committed to fighting marine plastic pollution. McCartney will use Parley materials in lieu of recycled polyester.
I have long admired Stella McCartney and her strong desire to protect the environment and the world’s animals as well as her non-use of leather materials to create her line of vegan accessories. This fresh collaboration is in line with her committment to protect the planet and I look forward to tlaunchuch of this new collection in July 2017.
Healing Myself and the Planet
Once upon a time, I believed happiness came from buying things. Shiny, designer things; expensive or not so expensive things. I bought into the old notion of “she who dies with the most toys wins.” I even had a T-shirt with that inscription on it back in the 80s. I thought owning stuff gave me a sense of importance and self-esteem.
I shopped till I dropped, and although I did feel that sense of exhilaration when walking out of the stores with tons of bags, that high soon dissipated and left me feeling empty. This led to a painful cycle and downward spiral of always wanting to buy more. I even chose a career path ( corporate law) that in some ways enabled me to become a compulsive shopper. The harder I worked, the more clothes and shoes I could stuff into my closet. I was living like Robin Sharma before he became the Monk who sold his Ferrari.