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Reuse culture
The Hindu
Two hyperlocal WhatsApp-defined groups in Chennai are showing residents in their respective localities how to free themselves of the tyranny of underused items in a socially and environmentally responsible manner
During the pandemic, life was reduced to its barest and most essential minimum. Wardrobes could be pared down: the regular sweatshirt and nightie were haute couture. One could get by on fewer possessions with the most indispensable one being the face-hugging mask. The commute became redundant. One could be parked at home along with their fancy car, and still enter workstations parked at homes thousands of miles away. The period offered gratuitous advertisement for minimalism. The birth of these two decluttering groups seemed organically linked to this pervasive climate. These two groups — Declutter Elcot Avenue in Sholinganallur (date of birth: first half of 2020) and Marketplace @ Valmiki Nagar (DOB: November 2020) — facilitate the selling and buying of used items to promote a culture of reuse at the hyperlocal level, within communities defined by geography. These groups have gained loyal members by the dozens over the last four years while helping them “lose” underused things, thereby decluttering their spaces. Here is a peek into their inner workings. Declutter Elcot Avenue
It was formed a decluttering group. In a case of twisted irony, it needed the very solution it was offering the community.
A scrawny neonate when the pandemic crept in, this group grew into a hulk of a creature before the global health crisis was past, eventually becoming full to bursting. It was not alarming corpulence to be chipped away at, but valuable muscle that needed to be evenly distributed. Some members were “evacuated” from the primary WhatsApp group before it imploded from the pressure of its ballooning size and ushered into group two, which displays a similar growth pattern.
The numbers for both groups: Declutter Elcot Avenue 1 (it hit the ceiling on the number of members that can be in a WhatsApp group) and Declutter Elcot Avenue 2 (700). Benazir Tehrani, who started this initiative and continues to watch over it like a mother hen, can allow herself some smugness. “It is definitely really big because it has maxed out on one group, and now it is going to the other,” Benazir emphasises, adding that a telegram group existed but was struck off the list as a majority were not savvy in using it. She takes pride not so much in the size of this initiative as in its ability to galvanise the community into positive action. The initiative had an unassuming genesis: at her gated community in Elcot Avenue, Sholinganallur, she noticed items with some years still left in them being rudely carried to the burial ground, well dumping ground. It tantamount to burying someone alive.
“There were certain times, near the dustbins, I used to see huge mattresses in good condition. It did not look like there was anything wrong with them,” she recalls. Inspired by similar decluttering initiatives in other cities, Benazir decided to replicate the concept in her own community. “During COVID, we all had a lot of time on our hands. And this was a concept which I know a few complexes in Bombay had adopted; I thought, why not just start something here?”
With the group putting on massive girth, Benazir and the others (Ramasamy, Arun, Rakesh Ohri and Sujatha) managing it often come across as screaming teachers, trying to keep a massive classroom in order.
Among the instructions continually relayed to members are: “If you are part of declutter one; you cannot hope to be part of declutter two.” “Business promotions are not permitted; no real estate listings please!” “Please include detailed descriptions in your posts, such as: “Cycle, 4-5 years old, used for 1 year, selling for Rs 700.”