I’ll be honest. I really want to be that person who only buys ethical brands, checks fabric labels like a detective, and talks about carbon footprints at brunch. But then I open my favorite shopping app, see a cute top for 399 rupees, and suddenly my environmental values feel… flexible.
That’s kind of the problem with sustainable fashion. On paper, it sounds simple. Buy less. Buy better. Support ethical brands. Avoid fast fashion giants like Shein or even the super popular Zara. But in real life? It’s messy. Confusing. Expensive. And honestly, sometimes exhausting.
We all saw the documentaries like The True Cost and for a few days everyone on Instagram was suddenly an activist. Stories were full of “stop fast fashion” posts. Then a sale drops and… yeah. Back to cart.
The Price Tag That Hurts More Than the Truth
Let’s talk money because that’s where things get real. Sustainable brands are expensive. Not slightly expensive. Proper expensive.
I once found this beautiful organic cotton shirt from a small ethical brand. It cost almost the same as my monthly electricity bill. And I just stood there thinking, do I want to save the planet or keep my lights on?
It’s easy for influencers to say “invest in quality over quantity.” And they’re not wrong. But when you’re on a budget, buying one 4,000 rupee shirt instead of four 1,000 rupee ones feels risky. What if you spill coffee on it? What if the trend changes? What if you just get bored?
Financially, sustainable fashion works like long-term investing. Think of it like buying shares in Tesla when it was still doubted. You pay more upfront hoping it pays off later. Fast fashion is like buying cheap street food every day. Feels affordable in the moment, but over time it costs more than you think. The difference is, with clothes, the “cost” also includes environmental damage, underpaid workers, and insane textile waste.
Still, when your bank balance is low, big-picture thinking becomes… optional.
Greenwashing Is Everywhere and It’s Confusing
Another thing that makes sustainable fashion hard is not knowing who to trust. Every brand suddenly claims they are “eco-friendly.” “Conscious collection.” “Green line.” Even big names like H&M have sustainability sections.
But if you scroll Twitter or Reddit, people are constantly calling out greenwashing. Basically brands using eco-words as marketing decoration. It’s like putting a salad next to a burger and calling the whole meal healthy.
I remember reading somewhere that a huge percentage of sustainability claims in fashion are either exaggerated or vague. And once you realize that, you start doubting everything. Is recycled polyester actually better? Is organic cotton always ethical? Why does every tag suddenly say “responsibly sourced”?
It feels like you need a degree in environmental science just to buy a pair of jeans.
Convenience Always Wins (Unfortunately)
Here’s something nobody wants to admit. Fast fashion is easy. It’s fast for a reason.
You see something trending on TikTok. Next day it’s in your cart. Three days later it’s at your door. Platforms like Amazon made us addicted to instant everything. Sustainable fashion? Not so much.
Ethical brands often have limited stock. Slower shipping. Higher costs. Fewer size options sometimes. And when you’re used to instant dopamine from new clothes, slow fashion feels like waiting for dial-up internet in a 5G world.
I once tried doing a “no fast fashion for 3 months” challenge. The first month I was proud. Second month I was annoyed. By the third month I was googling discount codes at midnight. So yeah, discipline sounds cool online but real life is different.
Trends Move Faster Than Our Values
Another problem is trends don’t slow down just because we want sustainability. Micro-trends are insane right now. One week it’s cottagecore. Next week it’s clean girl aesthetic. Then suddenly everyone wants early 2000s outfits.
Sustainable fashion encourages building a timeless wardrobe. Neutral colors. Classic cuts. Pieces that last years. But social media constantly whispers, “you’re outdated.”
I’ve noticed that people online praise minimal wardrobes but secretly still love new hauls. Even if they don’t admit it. The algorithm rewards novelty, not repetition. So repeating outfits, which is technically the most sustainable thing ever, doesn’t get the same hype.
It’s weird. We want sustainability but we also want attention.
The Emotional Side No One Talks About
There’s also guilt. A lot of guilt.
Every time I buy something cheap, I lowkey feel bad. I imagine factories, landfill mountains, all that. But then I also feel annoyed. Because why is the responsibility mostly on us as consumers?
Big corporations produce millions of garments a year. The fashion industry is responsible for a huge chunk of global carbon emissions. And yet the conversation online often feels like, “If you buy one cheap top, you are the problem.”
That pressure makes people either hyper-aware or totally numb. Some try extremely hard to be perfect. Others give up completely and say nothing matters anyway.
And honestly, perfection is impossible. Even sustainable brands use shipping, packaging, factories. The system itself is complicated.
So Why Is It Still Worth Trying?
Even with all the confusion and contradictions, I don’t think the answer is to ignore it. Small changes still count. Buying less. Repeating outfits. Thrifting sometimes. Repairing instead of throwing away.
I started simple. If I really want something, I wait two weeks. If I still want it after that, maybe it’s not just impulse. That one rule alone saved me more money than any budgeting app ever did.
Sustainable fashion isn’t hard because people don’t care. It’s hard because it clashes with how modern shopping works. It’s slower in a fast world. It’s thoughtful in a swipe culture.
Maybe we don’t need to be perfect eco-warriors. Maybe just being slightly more conscious is enough. Not dramatic. Not extreme. Just a little better than yesterday.
And yeah, I still sometimes buy from fast fashion brands. I’m not proud of it. But I try to wear those clothes again and again instead of treating them like disposable trends.
That’s probably the most realistic version of sustainability most of us can handle.