ITotD: Freecycling / Finding your stuff a new home, painlessly | ![]() |
Freecycling / Finding your stuff a new home, painlessly Posted: 11 Feb 2015 12:00 AM PST In a couple of months, Morgen and I are going to be moving. Naturally, we’ve got a million details to worry about, but one of the biggest is what to do with all our stuff. The usual answer is simply to pile it all in a moving van and unload it at the next place—or, if your new home is too small, put the extra stuff in storage. We’ve done this numerous times before, and frankly, we’re tired of moving so much stuff around. Sure, we’ll take some things, sell some things, and store some things, but there’ll still be a lot left over that we don’t know what to do with. So this time we’re going to try something different: freecycling, or free recycling. As middle-class Americans go, we’re not very good consumers. We rarely buy things we don’t actually need, and we haven’t accumulated anywhere near the volume of possessions that most of our peers have. But still: we have too much stuff. Stuff that’s perfectly good, but which we simply no longer need. Random small appliances and electronic gadgets. Lots of books we’ve read and won’t read again. Years worth of National Geographic magazine. A tire pump. Tools. Plastic coat hangers. The list goes on. These kinds of things would be too much bother to sell on eBay, and they’d make little or no money at a garage sale. But we don’t want to simply throw them away, either, because they could be useful to someone. But who needs these things? Freecycling, the latest fad in ownership transfer, has the answer. Yours for the Asking Freecycling began in Tucson, Arizona in May 2003 as a way to help reduce the quantity of waste sent to landfills. Since then, it has spread to thousands of local groups in more than 50 countries. From what I’ve read, though, it sounds like most participants aren’t doing it for the environment. They’re doing it because it’s a convenient and free way to get rid of things you don’t need or acquire things you do. If it happens to keep landfills from overflowing too, hey, that’s a lovely bonus. Free As in Beer, Not As in Speech The Freecycle Network has not only enforced these regulations somewhat heavy-handedly, but has taken legal action against groups that were not officially part of the network and used some variation of the word “freecycle” in their names. In going out of their way to protect their trademark, they’ve limited the spread of a valuable public service simply to exercise a right that should not, given the organization’s nonprofit status, result in any profit anyway. Another result has been the creation of several other free recycling networks that perform virtually the same function but are separate simply to avoid having to conform to rules that are perceived as excessively strict and unreasonable. All of this makes the process more confusing for the people who want to use it. It’s a pity—and a great irony—that a notion built on the free exchange of stuff for the benefit of the environment is hampered by needlessly self-imposed legal restrictions. Growing Freely Increasingly, too, I’ve been seeing a backlash against consumerism and its associated clutter, as people begin to realize that they’re actually happier with less stuff than with more. Even though I don’t buy a lot of merchandise, I am a bit of a pack rat, which is why moving can be so painful. As I look around at any room in my home, I realize that I’ve only used, or even thought about, maybe 10 percent of its contents in the last year. Do I really need the other 90 percent? Knowing that I’m going to have to pack and carry every one of my belongings I wish to keep, moving time makes me think long and hard about how much sense it makes to continue owning so many items that don’t actually enrich my life in any way. So instead, I’ll let them enrich someone else’s life. —Joe Kissell Permalink • Email this Article • Categories: Clever Ideas, Society & Culture More Information about Freecycling...The official site of The Freecycle Network is at Freecycle.org. You can read about The Freecycle Network (including the trademark issue and several other controversies) in the Wikipedia; there’s also an article there about Freecycling generally. Other articles about Freecycling include:
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