The Verdict -- Robert Gardner
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Pack rats are a well-recognized branch of the rat family. They earn
their names by their habit of picking up each and every item they can
carry and taking them back to their homes. Obviously, their homes look
much like small piles of brush, weeds, twigs and junk.
In the human race, there is a clearly defined group also known as pack
rats. Now, I want to make one thing perfectly clear. A pack rat is not a
thief. He or she just picks up things that have no present owner capable
of fighting off the pack rat.
It has been my fortune, good or bad, to have among my friends a pack
rat. He is a nice guy -- honest, faithful, caring, thoughtful, wouldn’t
lie under torture. He would never think of stealing anything, but he
cannot resist picking up every single castoff item he comes across, no
matter how worthless. That would not be of any concern to me, except as
luck would have it, he thinks of my garage as his nest.
I will not have seen him for some time, but I’ll know he’s back in
town when I walk out to my garage and find a piece of wood painted green
or pink or chartreuse. Then I know my pack rat friend has visited. He was
walking down the street, minding his own business and there sticking out
of a trash can was this piece of wood. So what does he do? Does he walk
by like any normal person would? No way. He stops, picks up this
perfectly worthless piece of wood, walks several blocks or miles and
deposits it in my garage.
After he’s been around a few weeks, my garage begins to look like a
pack rat’s nest. Among the items he’s left over the years are a variety
of lamps, a desk, several television sets, a large glass tabletop,
surfboards, the sword off a swordfish, various pieces of lumber, shower
rods, bricks and enough clothes to stock a small department store.
He never uses any of the stuff, so it accumulates and, eventually,
when I find it difficult to walk through my garage, I call the Salvation
Army or Goodwill and have them take what they want, then I sneak the rest
out to the trash. I have to sneak it because if I left it out there
openly, he might walk by and it would end up right back in my garage.
I’ve tried dissuading him. He nods and smiles -- and the next day, my
garage contains a new treasure. I’ve locked the garage, but things still
appear. I wish I could explain all this. Perhaps a psychiatrist could. I
can’t.
He’s harmless -- not a wife beater or anything like that. Just a pack
rat who has made my garage his nest.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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