5 Years Without a Dustbin: How One Mumbai Family Made Sustainability Simple

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Turning Waste into Wonder: Sonika Bhasin’s Everyday Alchemy of Sustainable Living

In the heart of bustling Mumbai, where the clang of city life rarely pauses, something quietly extraordinary unfolds every day in Sonika Bhasin’s home — not with grand gestures or bold declarations, but in the quiet rituals of routine. On her kitchen countertop, a large container waits patiently. It doesn’t hold ingredients for the next meal, but something even more vital: vegetable peels, fruit skins, and the humble ends of herbs — scraps destined not for the bin, but for rebirth.

By sunset, these kitchen castoffs find their way into an unassuming earthen pot nestled in a cozy balcony corner. Inside, beneath layers of greens and browns, a transformation is brewing. “It’s natural alchemy,” Sonika says, eyes gleaming with quiet pride. “Time, microorganisms, and balance — that’s all it takes to turn waste into nature’s black gold.”

That rich, earthy compost breathes life into her balcony garden, where basil, mint, tomatoes, lemons, and curry leaves flourish — all nourished by yesterday’s leftovers. From plate to plant and back again, her home is a living ecosystem, humming in harmony with nature.

Raising an Eco-Warrior

This isn’t just Sonika’s journey. Her son, Abir, has grown up marveling at the “compost magic,” understanding early on that waste doesn’t have to be wasted. His wide-eyed wonder turns into a quiet, intuitive responsibility — a childhood shaped by awareness, not just instruction.

5 Years Without a Dustbin: How One Mumbai Family Made Sustainability Simple

But composting is only the beginning.

Inside her home, Sonika has orchestrated a symphony of sustainable systems. A dedicated bag collects dry waste: plastic, paper, cardboard, glass, aluminum, and e-waste. Every two weeks, a local service, 5R Cycle, swings by to collect it — a practice now going strong for over five years.

And for the waste that can neither be composted nor recycled — reject waste like used sanitary products — Sonika has a simple solution: avoid creating it in the first place. She uses reusable menstrual cups and cloth napkins. Abir, as a baby, wore cloth diapers exclusively. “That was the starting point,” Sonika says. “Once you take one step, the next one always becomes easier.”

Low-Waste Living, One Choice at a Time

Shopping is intentional. Groceries come loose from local kirana stores — not packaged in plastic, but stored in cloth pouches and steel dabbas she carries from home. Household products are chosen with care: Indian sustainable brands, plastic-free packaging, and an embrace of minimalism.

5 Years Without a Dustbin: How One Mumbai Family Made Sustainability Simple

Even cleaning is reimagined. Her floors don’t gleam with chemical cleaners, but with bioenzymes she ferments herself — a simple brew of fruit peels, jaggery, and water. After a month, the resulting liquid becomes an all-purpose cleaner and pesticide, its scent bright with citrus or mango, depending on the season.

“It’s cost-effective, easy, and smells amazing. Plus, I can water my plants with it — double the magic!” she laughs.

Her garbage bin? It hasn’t seen action in over five years.

The Spark that Lit the Flame

Though Sonika had always been environmentally aware, it was the birth of her son that ignited a deeper transformation. “Becoming a mother shifted everything. Suddenly, it wasn’t just about today’s convenience — it was about tomorrow’s world. His world.”

A simple diaper choice — cloth over disposable — was the pebble that started a landslide. Realising that each disposable diaper could sit in a landfill for centuries became a catalyst. Her family’s carbon footprint shrank with every new choice, and her confidence grew.

Sonika’s home became not just a sanctuary of sustainability, but a classroom — a quiet beacon drawing in friends, neighbours, and colleagues.

Creating Ripples in the Community

Visitors quickly noticed that there was no trash bin in sight. What they expected to be a “hardcore” lifestyle turned out to be simple, joyful, and full of common sense. Playdates turned into zero-waste picnics. Birthday parties ditched balloons for biodegradable decor.

5 Years Without a Dustbin: How One Mumbai Family Made Sustainability Simple

Friend and fellow parent Sapna Melwani recalls, “At first, we were skeptical — about the smells, the effort, the inconvenience. But Sonika made it all seem so… do-able. And she was right.”

Today, Sapna’s family composts, recycles, and avoids disposables — and her children now find tissue paper “weird.”

Sonika’s colleague, Divvya Hariharan, found herself questioning long-held habits. “Just one conversation with her changes how you look at everything. Why are we still buying bottled water? Why aren’t we composting? It’s like she holds up a mirror to our wastefulness — and then gently shows us the way out.”

Even people Sonika hasn’t met in person are touched by her influence. In 2022, Eleena Sanyal Banerji from Powai stumbled across Sonika’s Instagram post warning about wet wipes. Today, she composts all her wet waste, her son uses cloth napkins at birthday parties, and the family has ditched single-use plastics.

A Life in Harmony with the Earth

Sonika doesn’t claim perfection. There are still challenges, still lessons. But she’s embraced sustainability not as a trend, nor a burden, but as a joyful and deeply rooted way of life.

“We’re living the same life — just better,” she smiles. “It’s not about giving things up. It’s about choosing better, simpler, more thoughtful ways to live.”

And in a city often defined by chaos and consumption, Sonika Bhasin stands quietly as a reminder that change doesn’t need fanfare. Sometimes, it just needs a compost pot on the balcony, a curious child, and a mother who believes that even the smallest acts, repeated daily, can reshape the world.