I live in one of the oldest neighborhoods in Boston, where there are picturesque streets and elegant townhouses. I imagined it would be a quiet, reserved place, having been the former bastion of New England Aristocracy. Much to my surprise, there is an increasing undergraduate student population who attend a University adjacent to the neighborhood. With Mommy and Daddy paying the rent, Junior and Juniorette pursue higher education, seemingly through independent study of drunkenness, vomit, and making public spectacles. They tend to populate the South slope of the neighborhood, where there are more rental units and landlords willing to rent to undergraduates.
On September 1st, the majority of leases in the city start anew, leading to a large chunk of the population moving from one side of town to another, into new apartments from out of town, or welcoming new roommates. It also leads to a shameful amount of trash – from which I and many other city dwellers pull perfectly usable items. That night I took a walk around the South slope, mattresses and sofas and bags of crap blocking the narrow sidewalks, and in my 14 years here I have never been so disgusted – kitchen sets and shelving units bought new 1 year ago were thrown out, clothes and mattresses and shoes pulled out of a U-Haul and tossed into the street.
With talk of the increasingly indebted American, rising college costs and cheap imported goods being the ruin of the middle class, I had to stop and think how much of this was reflected right there in the trash heap. I'm sure Mom and Dad plunked down plastic for 98% of the refuse, insisting on buying new when I'm sure they knew it would be flung out in short order. Was buying second hand, scouring Grandma's attic for household items even considered? Did Daddy sit Junior down and say, “Listen kid, these household items are going to have to make it through your undergrad – you break it, you replace it.” Tuition costs may rise, but I wonder if part of soaring college costs are these huge outlays at the beginning of every school year, on things that any rational person would expect to last a long time.
On the subject of cheap goods, there has been much debate already, and while I find that items are far less durable than in the past - I'm in my early 30s, so it's not that long ago – with even a little bit of respect for one's belongings, they can be made to last for years. For what it's worth, most of the tossed crap bore “Made In China” labels; the coffeemakers, microwaves, and the particleboard nightmare furniture. No wonder we have a Titanic trade deficit! What a wasteful nation we have become – spending is necessary for an economy to remain healthy, but what I see in the street here indicates ruin on so many levels – economic, social, spiritual even.
It may sound melodramatic, but the lack of consideration shown by the people tossing out these items indicates a few disturbing tendencies:
Flagrantly spendthrift attitudes
Entitlement to new items when perfectly good wares are tossed
Lack of foresight – If you are going to dispense with these items, you can Freecycle, eBay, CraigsList them, or give your parents the tax deduction and send it to Goodwill
No consideration for the energy spent/sacrifices made by their parents to provide all of these things. This ties into the entitlement previously mentioned – and of course the parents shoulder part of the blame for raising such selfish children.
Who benefits from all of this waste? The frugal-minded and adventuresome, that's who. While surveying the trash, I saw housecleaners, neighborhood adults, taxi drivers, sanitation workers and a smart few college-aged folk – which gives me some hope. Many of my fellow shoppers at Stupid Spoiled Brat Mart (my new name for the heaps of trash) were immigrants. If you have any question as to how thousands of people are able - and I will assume they are here legally and not working under the table- to move from poverty to a measure of affluence within a decade of arriving on these shores, take note: furnishing your home with trash finds frees up lots of capital for investing in things like homes, businesses, quality education for your children, et cetera. I'm willing to bet some of my Mart booty that the immigrant cabbie putting a microwave in his trunk isn't paying Ethan Allen every month for a spankin' new sectional.
I'll end my rant now, as I have to go look over my loot, and decide what I'll keep, what I'll sell at 100% profit at a yard sale in another neighborhood(and to other students) and what is eBay- worthy. Never fear, if you missed shopping at Stupid Spoiled Brat Mart, it'll open again in May, when the Spring semester ends with bargains galore for everybody.

Hey, thanks for the post...I found it through Frugal Upstate. I work at a college, which I used to attend, and while it isn't quite as wasteful (some of us were/are here on super financial aid) it is great for scavenging. Though professor I had once asked my where I got my jacket and scarf, and when I told her I garbage-picked them, she recoiled a bit (without reason, i did wash them!)
Posted by: Natalie | September 08, 2006 at 10:34 AM
When I was still in college, my Mom and I went (on Mother's Day) dumpster diving at the fraternities and sororities on campus after the students had left for the summer. We were astounded at the incredible amounts of things that those spoiled kids had thrown out. I thought that part of the point of belonging to a fraternity or sorority was community service. Donating the usable items that they had thrown away would have helped others and would have kept the landfill a little less full. Guess it's easier not to practice what one preaches. It's been 6 or 7 years since that Mother's Day but my Mom and I still smile when we use something that we rescued from the trash. And she says it was the best Mother's Day ever!
Posted by: JR | September 08, 2006 at 04:06 PM