It's not lazy. It's not worth the time. You have to buy the food, cook the food, and then spend time eating it, the good part. And then to wash dishes for how long after that? Ditto on reusing things. You can reuse cooking pots or even the paper/plastic stuff a few times before throwing it out. A used paper plate can become the lower paper plate when they're too thin for whatever's in them.
That's extremely true,
Betty Bob Crocker. Absolutely. You can easily cook meats in the microwave (I don't like the microwave, but it can be used!) and extra paper plates can be both splatter-shields and grease spouts, perhaps with a few holes cut in them.
It absolutely works, and for regular comestibles, of course you can reuse disposable plates. Plastic utensils as well.
Chopsticks! Just give them a good wipe on your shirt and they're good to go!
And you can give them to some girl or whatever you're sweet on and say, "I'll always thought you'd look sexy using chopsticks to hold up your hair in back!"
That's a winner! It's a man's secret! She'll never has to know where those chopsticks have been. A woman's touch takes a man's secret.
I suppose disposable gloves too. If you don't want to have your hands need better cleaning, throw on a pair of throwaway gloves. Wear, do, toss. Hands stay the same pretty much.
Why not? As said by someone else above, they have gloves that come up to your elbow and beyond! Unimaginable, but it's true!
There are actually chemists, and chemical engineers who use similar PPE on a daily basis! And they're not using anything as caustic or inflammatory as housewives' Palmolive neither. I'm pretty sure PPE can be obtained for cheap, in bulk, for people who have sensitive hands.
Or you could just take up playing the drums, if the housewives' and chemists' solutions aren't good enough.
It may be that the life of a professional dishwasher is not in the cards for the OP, though.
It's not for everybody, after all.
And then to wash dishes for how long after that?
Yeah, it may be the voice of experience, but it takes me no longer to wash one plate/bowl/utensil than thirty seconds, at most. If one is worried about dysentery or whatever, a soak in a dilute bleach solution is a boon.
Cookingware? Yes, cast-iron pans and stainless steel-clad pots and pans need some attention from time to time, but bringing water to boil in a salt solution is somewhat effective, in addition to letting them soak.
I think diluted bleach is the only hope for this case. Trust in bleach. Love the bleach. Admire the bleach. Trust the bleach. Rub it into your scalp. Welcome the bleach into your heart. Touch it! Touch the bleach! It's a good compound, and as long as one isn't dim-witted, you really don't have to splash it all over your clothes. That last part is optional: some people like the "distressed clothing" look.
Bleach. Hell, I drink the stuff! Love it.
If I'd listened to blood relatives, I never would have gone through with drilling that hole in my skull, and I've never felt better. Why would you listen to some random blood relatives? If getting your hands wet makes you turn into a Gremlin, you should probably consult a knowledgeable person.
ETA, and, how could I forget? Just wash the dishes in the shower or bath! You're there anyway, every once in a while. Eat the remnants of the floor, if still hungry. Install a garbage disposal!
EETA Here's one for the younger audience, "I thought you were Dale!" Yankee old commercial for dishsoap.