Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: April 2020

    • De Story of De Clutter

      Posted at 1:48 am by kayewer, on April 26, 2020

      Getting rid of clutter is the new workout for everybody staying at home, and whether your guidance comes from Marie Kondo or an overstuffed condo, the act of tackling a pile of stuff guarantees calorie burn and muscle flexing, not to mention new space in which to put more stuff once we start shopping in actual stores again.

      I tackled a pile of shoe boxes this week. Why was there a pile of shoe boxes? Because there are two generations in my home: one of the mind that there is a replacement for things, and the other that you never know when you’ll need a good box. When it was over, I had broken down over 20 boxes and found several feet of space, as well as an alarm clock I had considered missing in action for two years. Turns out it was hiding under boxes 12 through 14.

      Those boxes were nearly impossible to break down without taking scissors to the corners first. Whatever was done to shore them up for all-purpose handling, it must have been some super strong heavy duty kryptonite reinforced cardboard, or else I’ve become a meek milquetoast at my age. No, can’t be, since I can lug around trash bags weighing as much as the local fourth grader.  Of course, the only problem with having finished this task is I no longer have the boxes to do a second workout. The reward is the calories burned and the space obtained. Plus an extra clock.

      Along with the boxes, I found about a hundred plastic shopping bags. You never know when you might need a bag, or 100. Herding bags requires checking each one to make sure there is no receipt inside, which would give away not only what you bought, but how many years ago it was. Admittedly some of the store names are of ghosts of businesses past. I think there was a Walden books in there. At least a book wasn’t in with it.

      Of course you can’t put plastic bags out with the trash, nor can you put out shredded paper. My current dilemma involves the tissue paper which came out of those 20 shoe boxes. Is tissue paper recycled, or landfill fodder? The local website is not helping much, because the answer is hidden at the end of a video game-like quest of clicking around for a length of time I don’t normally have.

      At least I know I can bundle the shoe boxes with the newspapers and cardboard for pickup, and the local supermarket will take the plastic bags. Maybe by trash day I’ll have figured the tissue paper out. I’d reuse it the next time I need a good box, but it has the name of the shoe manufacturer on it.

      Unless I’m giving shoes as a present, in another box, it’s going out. And yes, I thanked them for their service before letting go. Marie Kondo would be proud of me.

       

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    • Captive

      Posted at 1:55 am by kayewer, on April 19, 2020

      Going out is harder these days than being home, mostly because the shutdown has extended from the entrances to stores to the collective brains of the occupants. Being home has given us the opportunity to see the flaws in the world outside, and just what it does take to keep, as Mike Rowe of Dirty Jobs so aptly put it, the civilized world work.

      The ATM forced $50 bills on me. Again. The touch screen is supposed to give you the opportunity to get fives, tens, twenties or fifties, but nothing I tried produced the result I wanted. I had to settle for an item of currency nobody likes to toy with. Hey, at least it isn’t faked as often as twenties. Some banks I use only have drive-through services today. It’s a bit odd arguing about the flaws of an ATM with somebody 100 feet away behind plate glass. Fortunately I was able to break the fifties.

      I hit five stores before I found a bottle of ammonia at Walmart. Fortunately Target obliterated its cart fort in front of the store I go to, but some places still use directional crowd control, such as at Wegman’s. I gave up the idea of going there because the line of people in the queue was about an hour’s worth of waiting at minimum.

      At least I did see toilet paper in stores, though other shelves continued to be nearly empty. I did manage to score my peanut butter and milk, too.

      Leaving the house seems lately as if we are still captive, but in a bigger bubble with limited options, but enough to get you through the week. Back at home I have supplies enough to survive until the economy gets back to normal, and I have faith that essentials will still be on hand, because dedicated workers on those essentials are still out there making sure the shelves are stocked.

      Plus, I did some cleaning, so I have empty shelves if they need more room.

       

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    • The Fickle Home Space

      Posted at 1:39 am by kayewer, on April 12, 2020

      I wouldn’t say I was a conscientious cleaner, but we have all discovered how much cleaning we need to do now that we are spending so much time at home. Within a week, I’ve run out of wipes, and I’m sure the stores are out of them, too. Fortunately the wipes for the furniture can still be handled with the original cleaner I have in the cans which I forsook when I discovered the wipes.

      We are fickle enough to go for the next big thing, but the old standbys are always there when we need them.

      Yesterday I decluttered part of my bedroom, but my efforts have caused a new problem, because it involved shredding and our trash crew won’t take shredded paper. I used to be able to take it to the office and combine it with what I shredded there, but it looks like I may not see my actual office until maybe after Memorial Day.

      The waste management crew are fickle, too, so the shredding will remain in a designated spot, unwanted by all. I also discovered that the waste collectors favor some homes over others, as I watched them bowl recycle buckets into the gutters for all houses except one, for which they returned them to the curb. Yup, they’re fickle.

      This past week I tried some new foods in the kitchen: lo mein and quinoa. They both went over well, but since I only got one of each, we won’t see them again until there is more room in the pantry.

      The african violet I brought home from the office became too top heavy and keeled over, and I discovered I don’t have any potting soil, so sometime this coming week I’ll discover the joys of curbside pickup at the local hardware store for one bag of potting soil.

      At least the plant will be happy.

      My hair is growing out like everybody else’s. Stylists are advising against home jobs because nobody will be around to fix mistakes. However, Bob Ross, the late painter of happy landscapes and teacher for the beginning artist, always talked about happy accidents, so maybe a color error will become the new trend once we’re out and about again. One thing I won’t do is cut or color my hair. I’m fickle, and am embracing the hair for my age the way it is.

      I don’t know about some parts of the country, but our local networks have been giving regular reports on hospital admissions, deaths and other statistics, and networks like ABC have a daily program about the pandemic. While I’m working from home and trying to iron out the fine lines between my work space and home space, figures coming from the television don’t penetrate the brain like the figures I report on during work. Concentrating on the immediate environment has become necessary, and it’s keeping me more grounded than any special reporting can.

      It’s not being fickle: it’s about being pragmatic about where we are and what needs to be done, one item at a time.

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    • The Marvel of Foresight

      Posted at 1:50 am by kayewer, on April 5, 2020

      We don’t need Earth Day this year to see what an effect our worldwide quarantine has been having on our planet. The web is crammed full of footage in which animals have ventured into our realm, visiting our empty suburban streets without fear. Waterways in Venice have cleared as never before in modern memory, because tourists aren’t polluting them. Nitrogen dioxide pollution has significantly decreased, as proven by satellite images. In New York City, CO2 emissions fell ten percent because of decreased vehicle traffic. Greenhouse gasses in general decrease when there are recessions.

      Last year movie fans went to see Avengers: Endgame, which in hindsight appears to be spot on in predicting what is happening to us now. The movie picked up five years after half the world (and galactic) population was wiped out by a misguided megalomaniac with an agenda to “correct” the balance of the universe. A piece of good news shared among two of the remaining Avengers was that whales were returning to oceans they had abandoned decades ago, and overall the water was more pure.

      The decrease in the active population has reduced the waste we discard voluntarily and involuntarily. By involuntary, we are talking about our hair and skin shedding into the open air, and voluntary speaks of the contemptuous way in which we handle our casual waste such as trash.

      One afternoon a few years ago, I caught sight of a young woman who had just left a Wawa and purchased a large beverage in a disposable cup. She took a big swig and then dropped the cup and remaining drink on the pavement. The contempt was enough to make my eyes burn at the sight of it, not to mention the waste of money and the lawn having to absorb foreign matter and the trash crew who need to pick up after her.

      During our lengthy stay at home, we will witness all our bad habits where we can’t hide it from anybody. Once freed, though, how likely are we to resume old habits?

      It is our ignorance of the true world around us that led us to this catastrophe. Casual disregard for how we create, use and dispose of our containers; how we purchase, prepare and discard food; what we do with our overabundance of stuff which we feel is a testament to material wealth; all will lead us to a brighter or bleaker future. It depends upon us to think about what we’ve done before, and what we can change now.

      I always wondered why we could not take our common-use plastics such as our Tide bottles back to the grocer and have the distributor pick them up and have them shipped back to the parent company–in this case, Proctor & Gamble–for cleansing and recycling.

      Why can’t we go back to wearing dress or casual gloves?

      Why can’t we design an edible container for our fast food?

      Why is spitting in public spaces tolerated in America?

      Why do people think they can leave a public space littered with their trash?

      Why does everybody say “NIMBY*” but never stops to think that trash must be taken somewhere?

      Why do we have products we can’t destroy or recycle?

      We made such a simple transition from glass and aluminum to plastics and foam. Why can’t we just go back to what worked before?

      We can return to our lives, and the whales may still come back. If we do it right.

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