calimac: (puzzle)
[personal profile] calimac
Today is trash pick-up day in our little townhouse community. I put out our garbage and recycling bins last night. This morning I go out to bring in the newspaper at 7:30 and what should I find but a neighbor woman engaged in the heavy exertion of trying to stuff cardboard boxes into my recycle bin. Judging from the way they're overflowing already, compared to how much I'd put in last night, that must have been a lot of boxes.

She's caught. She says something about just trying to get them in there. "Well, as long as they fit," I say dubiously, since the way she's going on, they're not going to fit. "Don't you have your own recycling bin?" No, she says, she doesn't. (I don't know why: the city distributed the current generation of bins just a couple years ago, and there were enough for everyone in the complex.) You could call the city and get one, I say. Yeah, she says, she should probably do that. And considering how many boxes she has, she definitely should. "Please do so," I say, and go back inside.

Should I have gotten angry at this usurpation of my God- and municipal-government-given recycling capacity? I suppose I could discover this morning that there was a bunch of stuff that I forgot to put in the bin last night, and feel rather put out that I'd have to wait till next week to recycle them. But I did put my stuff out last night: it's not as if she were occupying my designated parking space, which wouldn't allow me to use it at all until whenever she decided to leave. (Room is cramped on the inside of the complex, and all of us living inside have reserved spaces. There's plenty of extra space outside on the street.) It does feel inchoately as if my privacy is being violated, but I'm not sure if I could defend that feeling.

I suppose the worst that could happen is that some hypothetical garbage snooper comes to false conclusions about my trash. In an earlier era, we had a separate bin for aluminum cans and glass bottles. We used so few of these that I only put the bin out once every few months, at which time it looked as if we'd just had a big, but actually imaginary, party.

Date: 2010-12-16 05:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Don't tell anyone, but I myself almost always put my trash in someone else's bin. Not the recycling, I'm scrupulous about that: but because I recycle and/or compost almost everything, I produce so little trash it never seems worth the effort to drag out the wheelie-bin just for the sake of one wee bag. Not when all my neighbours have room in theirs, and it's just garbage, for heaven's sake, and all the bins technically belong to the council anyway. And they all leave their bins out in the alley all week rather than taking 'em in like they're supposed to, and...

And, and, and. My arguments are well-rehearsed, in anticipation of being caught. I feel for your neighbour, exceedingly. (But I wouldn't be squashing an excess of stuff into someone else's bin; for that I'd wheel my own out, as I do with the recycling when it's full. It seems impertinent, to use up all of someone else's space and then some.)

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