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Mark Morford on de-cluttering (and the SF reuse culture)
Merlin Mann | Nov 4 2005
The always-enjoyable Mark Morford has a cure for the clutter in your life that doesn't involve gnashing of teeth or the intervention of a TV show. He calls it getting rid of stuff.
San Francisco's culture of "urban recycling" is real and it's very cool. Obviously, stuff left on the street gets picked up, but don't delude yourself Sister Suburb: it's not just hobos, methheads, and The Sand People snatching up your goodies. We all pick stuff up off the street. Madeline and I know people whose whole (fancy overpriced) house was mostly furnished by "junk" from someone's curb. And the beauty part is, when you tire of it, you just stick it on your own curb, and the music goes round. You lose your clutter, gain some space, and make some anonymous Citizen a little happier. I suspect there's a reason Craig's List started in San Francisco; it's a social city that's just not afraid to deal with other people's junk. (Sure, you can read that several ways; my pleasure.) 29 Comments
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I grew up in Alexandria,...Submitted by Mary (not verified) on November 4, 2005 - 1:20pm.
I grew up in Alexandria, VA, which had a great of dealing with "large trash." They only picked it up twice a year, on a Saturday. Well, people started cruising the stuff left out. I even knew of potluck dinner parties held on the Friday night, with folks splitting up where they were going to look, and getting a hold of other people's want lists. Finds were brought back to the house, and if not wanted, left there for the trashmen to take. I swear it cut way down on how much trash the city had to haul away, because so much of it was taken in by other people. As for yard sales - the only successful ones I've been involved in are when you get together with several neighbors and all have a sale on a given Saturday. The freaks are easier to deal with when you know you'll be have a beer with friends and gossiping about them later. Also the putting up signs, ads, getting change, etc. can be split up between the households. And if you want to shut down early, the people who show up will have somewhere to go. » POSTED IN:
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