The Junk Drawer · JUNK_002
The Bag of Bags
On reusable bags, domestic folklore, and the gap between the person we imagine ourselves becoming and the person who forgot the bags again.
Published: 2026-06-06
4 min read
Then the plastic bags went away and somehow, the bags got stronger. This is the part no one prepared for. The old plastic bag was flimsy, shameful, and semi-disposable. It had a very short life. It carried yogurt, betrayed you on the driveway, maybe became a bathroom trash liner or a lunch bag. It was not noble, but it understood its place in the ecosystem.
The new reusable bag is a different beast. It has structure, stitching, personality, and it also suggests responsibility. It looks at you from the trunk like it went to graduate school for sustainability and because it seems too useful to throw away, you keep it. Then you forget it. Then you buy another one. Then one day you open a closet and discover that you are not storing bags. You are hosting a colony.
The new Bag of Bags is not one kind of bag and that misperception is a rookie mistake. The Bag of Bags is a political system. It has factions. There are the sturdy grocery bags with reinforced handles, the mysterious promotional tote bags from events you barely remember, the insulated cold bags you bought with good intentions, the collapsible bags that do not collapse correctly, and the fancy reusable bags that are too nice for raw chicken but too ugly for public life.
Every household has a different containment philosophy. Some people have a beautiful wall hook situation. These people are either deeply organized or hiding something more alarming elsewhere. Some people keep bags in the trunk, which sounds practical until the bags are in the trunk and the shopper is already inside the store, experiencing the specific moral defeat of buying more bags while owning bags.
Some people use one large bag to hold all the other bags. This is the classic model. It is simple. It is ancient. It is also how the goblin nest begins. Because the Bag of Bags always promises order. It says, "Put them here. I will contain them." That is how it gets you. At first, it is neat. Then one handle slips out. Then a corner escapes. Then a folded tote unrolls itself like a flag of surrender. Soon the whole thing is bulging in a laundry room, a pantry, a mudroom, or the back seat of a car, radiating accusation.
The accusation is not subtle. You meant to remember them. You meant to be better. You meant to become the kind of person who walks into the grocery store with clean reusable bags and a clear plan. Instead, you are buying grapes and negotiating with yourself over whether you can carry twelve items in your arms like a raccoon fleeing a deli.
This is why the Bag of Bags is not really about bags. It is about the gap between the person we imagine ourselves becoming and the person who forgot the bags again.
The policy solved one problem and revealed another: convenience does not disappear. It just migrates the friction somewhere else. It moved into the trunk, it moved into the closet. It moved into the five-second moment at checkout when you realize the cashier has started scanning and your reusable bags are at home, sitting in a pile like judgmental fabric witnesses.
This does not mean the change was wrong because the old system was ridiculous. We were drowning in disposable nonsense but modern life has a talent for turning improvement into inventory. We did not escape the bag problem, we upgraded it.
Now the bags are sturdier, more expensive, harder to throw away, and somehow more emotionally complicated. The plastic bag used to say, "I am trash pretending to be helpful." The reusable bag says, "I am a virtue you keep forgetting to perform." That is a heavier bag.
And so the Bag of Bags remains. Part storage system. Part guilt shrine. Part domestic creature. It waits patiently in the corner, stuffed with good intentions, duplicate purchases, mild environmental anxiety, and the memory of every time you said, "I should put these in the car."
You should. You will not. Not today. Today, you will fold one bag halfway, shove it into the larger bag, close the closet quickly, and pretend the nest is stable. And honestly, that is fine. Civilization is not built by people who solve every system perfectly. Civilization is built by people who create a halfway decent pile, name the problem, and try again next Saturday.
The Bag of Bags is not failure, it is evidence. Evidence that we are trying. Evidence that every solution leaves behind a shape and evidence that even responsible living needs a place to stash its weird little leftovers.
Preferably inside one very large bag.