I recently read an article claiming that zero waste living doesn’t have to be
  expensive.
  That immediately said to an interviewed college student who said that they
  couldn’t afford a $20 zero waste made from adopted unicorn tears deodorant
  that the student just needs to change their
  attitude because they are buying better and more expensive stuff. 
  Because apparently the superior feeling of spending more money on low waste
  deodorant outweighs the reality of the starving student   having enough money for school
  books, tuition, food, and shelter I guess?
  The author also said that no one who wants to go low waste (which is a more
  accurate description than the search engine friendly term zero waste) does it
  to save money.  It really burns my cookies that when confronted with the
  reality of price, a zero waste expert ignores it and tells you to buy it
  anyway when they are claiming zero waste living doesn't have to be expensive. That's how zero and low waste living gets the (wrong) perception that
  its only for the privileged!
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  friends!
  My family is practically debt free because we don’t waste things. As we
  started switching from disposables to reusables the amount of trash we make
  plummeted and extra dollars accumulated in the bank.
For example it cost zero
  dollars to stop using plastic zipper baggies and plastic wrap for sandwiches
  and leftovers and start using the containers with lids (many repurposed) I
  already had. I had no idea how much money we wasted on that stuff until we
  didn’t need to buy it anymore - and you could see a serious dent in how much
  landfill trash it kept out of our bin.