Born To Shop To Pollute


Nourishment is breakfast, lunch and dinner, with an illegal snack thrown in for good measure. What is the difference between supper and dinner? We’ll archive that for another blog.

With shopping, it is the box, auction and thrash can. Great excitement when we bring the box home. Assembling what is in the box might be fun, unless it’s an Ikea item and their unique nails. Males and females at home sometimes end up fighting when a table wobbles after the assembly, or somebody holds up a panel: Where is this supposed to go

After the box, comes auction. We no longer like the treadmill we got two years ago because we bought the latest one, which will make us taut and tight like those men and women in the ad. What do we do with our ex-treadmill? Put it up for auction. If we are lucky, one of our social media followers might buy it.

As we said initially, shopping is the box, auction and thrash can. If we can’t get rid of it through auction, it ends up in the thrash can. We tend to associate auction with cars, motorbikes and big farm equipment like tractors, but they also auction smaller items.

Therefore, if we can’t auction the treadmill, it goes to the backyard near the blue boxes the city generously provides. It can’t go in there, so we leave it next to discarded printers, armchairs, mattresses, toasters and other items that were in the box, but could not be auctioned.

Nonqaba waka Msimang

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