Mom and I remain proud co-recyclers, filling our kitchen recycling bin with cans and bottles and newspapers, and emptying the bin into the two giant green street cans sitting in the garage. Stepping down the two stairs into the garage is getting harder for Mom, even with the railing and grab bar. Instead of carrying a 12-pack Coke Zero box to the green cans, or a shoe box, or a cereal box (which don’t fit well in the kitchen bin), she merely throws the box toward the green cans, where the boxes sit on the garage floor waiting for someone—I can’t imagine who—to pick up. “Mom,” I remonstrated, “just put the box on the kitchen counter, and I’ll take it out. Don’t just toss it into the garage.” She apologized sheepishly, explaining that she just “got lazy.” I do acknowledge the sheer carefree liberation of tossing a box toward the can, released from the effort and duty of depositing the box in the can, and the moral certainly that someone will place the box in its proper place for street curb pickup and saving the rainforest.
Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay
