Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Getting older, one garbage can at a time

- By Jeff Edelstein

thrilled. They lived just a few streets down, and were happy for the offer. I drove the minivan across the street, they loaded the chairs in, and then I followed them to their home.

And then like a gazer turning to stone after sneaking a peak at Medusa, I turned into an old man when I saw the status of the guys’ garbage.

It was out front, for all passers-by to see. Not on the curb for pickup, mind you, but in their driveway. Their town-issued garbage can was overflowin­g. Scattered around the garbage can was trash piled up.

I noted it and felt the change happen immediatel­y.

As it turns out, the fellas were two of six college students renting the house. Very nice young men. Even offered me a few bucks for my help.

And when that occurred, when the wallet came out and the money was proffered, it happened. My wrinkles got deeper, my eyes got squintier, my ass got flatter, and this is what I said: “I don’t want your money. What I do want is for you guys to go out and buy a few garbage cans so you don’t have trash everywhere. Neighbors don’t care for that type of thing. Besides, you don’t want to play into the ‘college kid stereotype.’”

The kids must have saw it. They must’ve saw the wrinkles wrinkle, the eyes squint, the ass flatten, because one of them immediatel­y launched into a “yes sir, we’ll take care of it immediatel­y sir thank you sir.”

I saddled back up in the minivan and rumbled home. I felt good.

And I felt even better when I drove by a few days later and saw three more garbage cans and not a Taco Bell wrapper in sight outside the gents’ house.

I was so happy, when I got home I treated myself to a warm cup of tea and turned on the VCR to watch the latest episode of “60 Minutes” while eating a bowl of farina with a black-and-red checkered blanket across my lap and a small tray set up next to my lounge chair in the TV room. Delightful.

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