It's trash day. I am awakened at 4:00a.m. by the piercing
screech of metal grinding on metal. I don't need to look out the window. I know
that the sound emanates from the rickety metal cart used by the wizened old man
who roams the cul-de-sacs of my neighborhood every Monday night, gleaning treasure from the trash
of others. Black trash bags, stuffed to capacity, hang off the sides of his
cart like tumors on a skinny dog.
I rise, let my own well-fed dog out into the backyard, feed
the cats, then wander out front to turn on the sprinkler. By now the little
man, who does not quite reach five feet in stature, has made it around the
cul-de-sac, and I wave to him as he crab walks past, dragging the heavy cart
behind him. I never put my trash cans out at the curb until he is gone. It's
not that I begrudge him my recyclables. I have witnessed him on many occasions
tear open the kitchen trash bags in my neighbors' garbage cans, sifting through
god-knows-what in search of an aluminum can, a plastic bottle, any small thing with
re-sale value. I am not willing to share that level of intimacy with him.
And anyway, I save my plastic one-liter Evian bottles
separately. (Yes, I spend the money for Evian. No, it doesn't taste the same as
filtered tap water and no, water is not water. Ask a hydro-geologist. Don't get
me started.) When I moved in a year and a half ago, Grumpy Bob next door asked
me to save my plastic bottles for him after I caught him rifling through my
trash cans. I told him I certainly would. And I have.
But this morning, I give them away. There is another
scavenger who comes through the neighborhood on trash day. This one is a woman,
as small and wrinkled as the old man. I want to say that she is old but when I
see her up close, I realize we are probably about the same age. I am a vibrant,
athletic sixty-year-old who will later walk her pampered dog around these
cul-de-sacs at a brisk pace. Although the physical maladies are starting to
pile up, I am confident that I will live another twenty or thirty years quite
comfortably, thanks to the good health care provided by my good job which I obtained
with my good education.
I wonder at the longevity of this woman, though, as I see
her, like the little old man, tear open trash bags with her bare hands,
scrounging through toxic waste to eke out a living. Some would find her labor
disgusting. I find it humbling.
As I note the full apron she wears which covers the front of
her shirt and her pants down to the knees, its floral pattern edged with old
fashioned rick-rack, I am reminded of my grandmother whose first job upon
coming to Los Angeles was as a dishwasher in a bar. Holding my Trader Joe's
stamped paper bag filled with empty plastic bottles, I shuffle quickly across
the street in the gray dawn light. I tell her good morning, offering the bag
and asking, "Are you looking for bottles?" though I well know the
answer.
"Sì," she says in Spanish, taking the bag.
"Thank you!" in English, and her entire face glows with the
brightness of her straight, white teeth. Her voice is warm with gratitude, and
it resonates with me as I walk back across the street to enjoy another cup of
tea before heading out to walk the dog.
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