FRESH
YARN presents:
Plastic
Crap
By Phil
West
There are
handcuffs hanging from the inside of my car.
No, I don't
drive a 1978 Camaro that cranks Bad Company and Kiss from its car stereo
at stoplights. I drive an unassuming gray Volkswagen Jetta with a booster
seat in the back. The handcuffs are plastic, and are hanging from the
handle on the door next to the booster seat. My three-year-old son put
them there. The handcuffs are part of a package my father-in-law picked
up for him at the dollar store. The package is, and this is really just
too good to make up, a Homeland Security Kit.
The Homeland
Security Kit also features a plastic police badge, some giant '70s-styled
plastic-framed sunglasses that scream not-so-undercover undercover cop,
and a plastic gun that shoots suction cup darts. One evening, upon coming
home from my part-time teaching gig, my son shot me in the face with one
of the plastic darts, presumably another episode in a Worldwide Make-Believe
War on Terror, with me in the role of the stealth Al-Qaeda operative.
I, of course,
was horrified. I was hoping to avoid the whole boys-with-guns rite of
passage for at least a few more years, but when your father-in-law is
a Marine who fought in World War II and Korea, that's probably too much
to ask for.
And, perhaps
more significantly, I was also hoping to not add to the mountain of plastic
crap piling up in my son's room, but in this day and age, it's unavoidable.
We have a
menagerie of plastic animals and a plastic natural history museum's worth
of plastic dinosaurs. We recently acquired two light sabers over the holidays,
and I see us moving to a point on the timeline where my son will use his
$15 Target-bought talking Yoda light saber to break the dollar-store light
saber knockoff, dubbed a "light sword" because they couldn't
get the necessary copyright clearances from Lucasfilms. We have several
plastic infant-sized riding vehicles that our son has outgrown but can't
bear for us to donate to charity. There are also toy cars and bats and
bath toys, all fashioned from molds that originated overseas and will
eventually end up clogging an unmistakably American landfill.
Every time
we buy a McDonald's Happy Meal, which my son would have for every meal
if he could, we become the proud new owners of yet another piece of plastic
crap. There's usually some insidious movie marketing behind whatever treasure
we pull from the bottom of the bag, and though we've judiciously thrown
some of them out within hours of receiving them, some of them end up at
the bottom of plastic toy bins underneath plastic items we've actually
purchased. From the exhausted eye of a parent who has spent hours picking
up a toddler's room, the individual toys merge together into one indistinguishable
tangled mass of plastic. It has the resilience of a hydra: pull one piece
out of the mix, and several pieces magically appear in its place. Or,
at least, that's how it seems.
I can't imagine
that I'm alone in all this. Spend enough time in this great country of
ours, and it'll happen to you too. Having a small child accelerates the
intimacy with plastic, but the love affair happens to all of us.
A quick visit
to the American Plastics Council website tells you more than you have
probably ever need to know about how plastic came into your life. In 1862,
Alexander Parkes debuted a moldable form of cellulose at that year's Great
International Exhibition in London, and it was christened Parkesine. But
Parkesine does not roll effortlessly off the tongue, so Parkesine begat
celluloid, begat Bakelite, begat vinyl, begat polyethylene -- eras in
plastic strata somewhat analogous to Jurassic and Mesozoic and all the
other dinosaur ages that bore the countless species of nigh-impossible
names that my son, who is perhaps a budding paleontologist (assuming the
rock and roll career doesn't pan out), is perfectly capable of rattling
off.
And really,
how did we come so far without plastic? It manages to be all around us
without us ever really seeing how it is made. It pervades every aspect
of our day-to-day: the snooze button we slap on the alarm clock, the toothbrush,
parts of the car, numerous items at work, on workout equipment at the
gym. Avoid anything plastic in your life, and you will be avoiding lots
and lots of life.
At
the San Antonio Zoo, which is about a fifteen-minute walk from our house,
if your child happens to demand it, you can feed a dollar into a giant
black machine, which feels directly transported from an early 1960s time
machine, and you can make a plastic mold of an elephant and a giraffe.
Liquefied plastic comes out of the inner workings of the machine and is
poured into an animal-shaped mold. The plastic animal comes out still
warm, a burned chemical scent clinging to it long after it has hardened
in the air. It is at once foreign and familiar. If plastic is akin to
buying meat in the supermarket, this is akin to hunting for plastic in
the wild.
Most of us
do not hunt, but manage to consume on the efforts of those who do the
dirty work, and it's much the same with plastics. Live in this land long
enough, and you find yourself, more and more, becoming a plastics connoisseur.
There are low-grade plastics that you feel sorry for, and more sturdy
varieties that confuse you -- they're too disposable to be utilitarian,
but too utilitarian to be entirely disposable either.
Santa's elves
in the workshop are often depicted, in their fictional craft, fashioning
little train cars out of wood. How terribly, terribly quaint. Today, it
would be giant vats of polyethylene and elves shaping molds out of whatever
flickered across TV screens: from American minds to Korean animation houses
to whatever cable company had exclusive rights to the North Pole.
My son excitedly
comes to me, now that Christmas and its bounty of Star Wars toys has come
and gone, and is asking for Power Rangers. They're all the rage in his
preschool class. He holds up a Power Ranger action figure that he got
God only knows where, and I inspect. It's plastic and paint, and a series
of small metal screws positioned to make it somewhat limber, though, to
be fair, it moves with all the grace of a 7-foot basketball player from
Slovenia that more agile players find to be particularly enticing to dunk
on. He has instructed me that he wants more just like this one. Lots more.
Watching
an episode of Power Rangers on TV is confounding. To me, it seems
like a show explicitly engineered for the selling of toys. There are fights
with stereotypical villains. The Power Rangers seem to change shapes and
randomly shoot bolts of energy from their wrists. One day, when my wife
picked up my son from an especially grubby day at preschool, one of his
classmates told her, "What you should do is give him a bath and put
him in his PJs and let him watch Power Rangers." My wife regarded
him for a moment, and then said, "Well, thank you for the parenting
advice."
Alexander
Parkes had no idea. The revolution that ended up not bearing his name
was a revolution of comfort and innovation, and assembling a phalanx of
things we probably don't need. It all starts as a goopy mess of chemicals
in a factory pressed together and left to cool. What can be the housing
for a hyper-efficient computer can be melted and reconfigured into the
leering face of some comic book creature, or a cup, or any number of other
items that we assign some arbitrary value to and seek out.
Plastics
are so pervasive that it's pointless to be pro-plastic or anti-plastic.
It's sort of like being pro-air or anti-air -- hating it won't make it
go away, and trying to do without it dooms you to a bleak, cabin-in-the-woods
Unabomber existence. Even bleaker, probably. I'm guessing that even the
Unabomber didn't whittle Tupperware and ball-point pens from wood.
Toddlers
don't think about things like this. Most of us, most of the time, don't
think of things like this. And as much plastic crap as my son seems to
accumulate, at least they're more than just toys. At some point, most
of the items my son has assembled in his room have been touchstones for
the imagination. The cars have driven across imaginary landscapes, the
animals have walked forests and meadows only he envisions, and though
I'm still pretty unsettled about the Homeland Security handcuffs, even
those are figuring into a worldview that, for the children of the 21st
century, is getting more complicated all the time: harder to fit into
a mold and refashion than it maybe ever was.
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