On Dumpster Diving LARS EIGHNER Lars Eighner was born in Corpus Christi‚ Texas‚ in 1946‚ and he later studied at the University of Texas. He worked as an attendant and ward worker in a mental institution from 1980 to 1987 before finding himself homeless for three years. Travels with Lizbeth (1993)‚ the book that includes “On Dumpster Diving‚” recounts these years. It began as letters to friends explaining his circumstances and evolved into a series of essays on equipment that he had found in the
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On Dumpster Diving In the essay “On Dumpster Diving” author Lars Eighner narrates his experiences of scavenging. This well-known author‚ though being incredibly talented‚ had to work as a counselor at a drug crisis center in Austin‚ to earn a living. After losing his job‚he unfortunately had to move out of his home and live the hard life on the streets. The essay talks about the author’s survival on the streets and expresses his ethical dilemma. The author was surprised by the large amount of
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Rachel Smith 1-14-13 On Dumpster Diving Lars Eighner Although people have different backgrounds‚ human nature runs in patterns. Dumpster divers were afraid at the beginning to be seen scrounging around dumpsters. They were disgusted at the thought of getting dirty by jumping to the bottom of a dumpster. People are always trying to cover up their imperfections. They don’t want people to see that they don’t have it all together all the time. The dumpster divers were ashamed of being who they were
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In the essay “On Dumpster Diving” by Lars Eighner‚ one of the themes I believe is portrayed through the text is‚ even in the world of dumpster diving there are ethics. Eighner shows he has personal ethics in several parts of the essay. He can recognize the value of items that are more important then others. “The necessities of daily life I began to extract from dumpsters” shows that he has the willpower to keep pushing and not give up (Eighner 162). “Occasionally a find tells a story” Eighner explains
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On Dumpster Diving” Who throws away the best stuff? Is dumpster diving really necessary to people living on the streets? In the text book‚ Lars Eighner‚ “On Dumpster Diving”‚ tells about when he was homeless out on the streets. He told that students usually had the best things because they threw out whatever they did not want because they have their parents to buy everything for them. He had two rules while living out on the street. Rule number one was‚ take only what is of use. The second rule
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"On Dumpster Diving" is about a man‚ Lars Eighner‚ and his dog‚ Lizbeth‚ informing us of how they went from living in a house with everything they needed to having to suddenly live on the street getting everything they need to survive out of dumpsters. He explained the difference between foraging‚ which is to look for something like berries and nuts‚ and scavenging‚ what dumpster diving really is‚ as opposed to foraging. He explains to us‚ "What is safe to eat‚" the different stages of a scavenger
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"My Daily Dives in the Dumpster" Lars Eighner is a very resourceful and intelligent man who recounts his 5-year experience as a homeless man drifting between Austin and Hollywood in "My Daily Dives in the Dumpster". He decides the American consumer life is more comfortable than the life of a scavenger. "Although‚ if I could I would naturally prefer to live the comfortable consumer life‚ perhaps-- and only perhaps-- as a slightly less wasteful consumer owing to what I have learned as a scavenger
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Pg 714 comp q’s 1. Dumpster diving to me means going to any public dumpster‚ hopping inside and scavenging for food or any other necessity the scrounger may need. 2. Eighner’s answers to the question as to “Why was this discarded?” goes to line 8 where he gives an example about how people throw out food once it has gone bad or they trust the expiration date. He also throws a sarcastic comment about how people have a “regular supply of groceries” which he implies that many people are just simply
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Dumpster Diving Lars Eighner called himself a scavenger‚ rather than someone who simply picked everything and anything out of the dumpster.. As his savings started running out‚ he had to use his intermittent income to cover his rent and depend on the dumpsters for his other necessities including food‚ toilet paper‚ medicine‚ books‚ furnishings‚ etc. Along with his dog ‚Lizbeth ‚ he would rummage through the dumpsters to find these items. Although he would rather spend a "comfortable consumer life
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that blonde girls are dumb or Asians are bad drivers. In the two articles “On Dumpster Diving” by Lars Eighner and “The Lady in Red” by Richard Lemieux‚ Eighner provides for himself free of cost by dumpster diving‚ but Lemieux is simply at what most people would call “rock bottom” of his life at the time‚ so he resorts to begging people for money. These two men are not your typical drunk bums hanging out behind a dumpster‚ they are honest people just trying to survive. It’s wrong to look at every homeless
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