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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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We had great success paring...Submitted by jw (not verified) on November 4, 2005 - 1:58pm.
We had great success paring down before a move from Lexington, MA: all the stuff which was too nice to throw away but too [fill-in-the-blank] to be moved went on the curb. Within an hour, most of it was gone. One woman kicked her husband and son out of the car so she could fill it up with our (old) stuff. The town next to mine just made this illegal. Anything left out could be considered garbage, and due to "security concerns" (identity theft) it is now against the law to go through another person's trash. In this college town, the last day of finals was shopping day -- cruise past the rich girls' apartments and look for old TVs, VCRs, and household goods. I didn't purchase a Christmas tree for years because I used co-ed throwouts. Ah, the good old days of dumpster diving. » POSTED IN:
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