Yep, still trying to figure this one out. See if I'm expecting too much, y'all!
As I explained, our county asks us to recycle all plastic bottles, tin cans, aluminum cans and glass bottles. Also cardboard. At the collection station, there are 2 large truck containers, one for the cans and bottles, the other for cardboard, plus the compactor for garbage and general household trash.
Here at this old farmhouse we renovated, we kept its commercial 3 compartment stainless steel kitchen sink with deep well sinks and wide drainboards, as we liked the utilitarian look and it works well. For trash, we have always slid a large round plastic trash container under the left sink drainboard that takes a 55 gallon drum liner and gets pretty full, pretty quickly. With the drain piping and trap visible below the center sink, I put a 1940's vintage red cola cooler like the kind used on airplanes, just to hide the pipes. It adds charm and color against all that bare stainless steel. On either side of the red metal cola cooler, underneath the other sink compartments, there's room for a shallow plastic bucket to hold bottles or cans, and it is usually brimming over with a bag of them. If we have any cardboard boxes, we slide them underneath the right sink compartment, out of our foot traffic zone.
Yesterday, under the right side of the sink, we had a pretty big cardboard box with another smaller box stacked inside it, 4 feet away from the big trash can. I was sleeping around the corner as H said he was going up to the country store for his morning cup of coffee, sandwich and chit chat. Since our dump site is right next to that store and we were nearing overflowing trash and recyling in the kitchen, I spoke out "Could you please take the trash then?" He said he would.
When I got up a bit later and went into the kitchen, I saw the trash can liner had been pulled, the bag of bottles was gone, BUT THE CARDBOARD BOXES WERE STILL UNDER THE SINK! WAAAAA????
Now I ask you all, what is wrong with this picture? (I actually had thought "Should I go so far as to remind him about the cardboard, too?" But then I said to myself "He's a grown up. I am not somebody's Mom. I'll have to assume he understands..." Seems like it's always a no-win for me.
Is this Passive Aggression or an inability to see any wider than what is directly in front of his nose? For something he knows that we take there. Oye. I'm getting worried about cognitive decline. Is there any better explanation?