This week, I get to write about something that I dearly love: Hanging out the laundry. Not that I don't love any number of other things, but clothes on a clothesline brings back so many good memories, both of my childhood and of my own family times. We hung clothes to dry, my mother and I, because we enjoyed it, because it was cheap and because you just can't beat the smell of sun dried fabric.
There are other reasons, though, not the least of which is a desire to be environmentally safe.
Project Laundry List deals with this, but it also deals with something else - an ever growing policing force that thinks beauty is generic and sterile, flat lawns: straight corners and never a hint of people and their things. It also deals with dangers that come from using dryers and it deals with the heart.
The newsletter is a serious voice for these things and if you're at all interested in making this a better world, there are volunteer opportunities to do so.
Who is behind this web site? His name is Alexander Lee, a graduate of Vermont Law School and a teacher of behaviorally and emotionally challenged kids at the local public middle school.
When I asked him what inspired the project, he answered, "(I) was inspired by Helen Caldicott, MD, and my mother, a veteran hanger-outer. Helen gave a speech at Middlebury College for a peace symposium that I organized as an undergraduate. She said that if we did things like hang out our clothes we would be able to shut down the nuclear industry."
Since 1999, Project Laundry List has been sounding the trumpet call to keep on hanging out and has grown tremendously since then.
Parting wake-up call from Alexander: "Dryers are dangerous. Clothes dryer fires account for about 15,600 structure fires, 15 deaths, and 400 injuries annually."
Something to think about.
Why I like this site: It strikes close to my heart, personally speaking, but the layout and graphics are comfortable enough to make you want to stay awhile - which is good, because there are many ideas, actions, invitations and common sense thoughts to find there.
The most interesting thing I found: The little box right in the middle of the home page, where it says, "Top five reasons to hang out your clothes." That might not seem like the biggest and greatest thing on the site but that, along with a quote from a reader, sums up the entire concept neatly.
What do you think? Whether you do, or can, or even want to, hang up clothes, what do you think of this site's philosophy and purpose? I couldn't fit it all into a nutshell without leaving shreds everywhere, so it's up to you to tell the rest of the story.
P.S. There's a thread about
National Hanging Out Dayyou might want to check out, also!