perhaps there’s something more to the absurdity of plant theft. after all, what makes someone arm themselves with a shovel or scissors, plant themselves in someone’s garden — front garden! — in view of cameras and nosy neighbours and take what’s clearly not theirs?
certainly there is a degree of thrill that comes with the potential of getting caught. terrence shulman, a therapist and founder of the shulman center for compulsive stealing, spending and hoarding, told abc news that stealing provides some people with “a rush of naughtiness.”
but maybe — similar to running off with hotel slippers and taking handfuls of restaurant after-dinner candies, activities that shulman refers to as “grey area behaviours” — there’s also a sense that a clipped stem of an herb or a couple of daisies (roots included) won’t be missed, or is not that big of a deal. or worse, that the property owners, living in a fairly comfortable neighbourhood, can afford to lose a petal or two. still doesn’t matter, though, ariel kaminer, who used to write an ethics advice column for the new york times, also told abc news: taking something that’s not yours is stealing.
plant pilfering is a slippery slope
those being pilfered agree, saying that no matter how meaningless you think it is, the practice of stealing plants is hurtful, “atrocious” as one facebook user put it, and leads to no good.