25 October 2010

"Cardboard box" men and women

There is an occupation or informal kind of work in Hong Kong that I haven’t seen in other cities of the developed world. Older men and women who do this work are self-employed. They work both outdoors (on the streets) and indoors (in shopping malls). They have flexible working hours but most work at the beginning and end of a business day. They deal with material and not people.

These are the men and women who pick up cardboard boxes. Hong Kong is a highly commercialized city, so the turnover of material goods is huge. We make, import and dispose of staggering quantities of cardboard boxes. Seniors who want to make a few dollars go around collecting cardboard boxes from shops, if the shopkeepers let them. Then, they take the folded boxes to the recycling dealers and sell them for a meager sum of money.

I think of these seniors as highly industrious, but I have seen with my own eyes some sneaky ones who sprayed the boxes with water, making them heavier when placed on the scales. I have also read about heartless dealers who cheat with their scales so they can pay less.


Of course, there is no such thing as a perfectly honest occupation. Nevertheless, I am impressed by the industrious spirit of these seniors. They don’t want to idly waste their time away; they are doing something useful and making a few dollars at the same time. I am particularly impressed by the old lady who, although both of her lower limbs are amputated above the knee, drives her motorized wheelchair around to visit stalls and collect cardboard boxes. I admire her spirit.



For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International.

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