The Shopping Cart Personality Test
Let’s talk about parking lots.
If you’ve ever visited or lived in the United State, you’ll know that the parking lots are not small or quaint. They are not modest little rectangles tucked politely beside a shop. They are asphalt kingdoms. Or, if you will, barren asphalt deserts.
Because they are so large, most grocery stores and big box stores don’t expect you to walk your cart all the way back to the entrance when you’re finished. Instead, they place little metal pens throughout the lot — cart corrals — so you can return your cart without hiking across half a football field.[1] It’s convenient and thoughtful. Moreover, it’s nice.
And yet.
Some people still leave the cart sitting diagonally between parking spaces. Or worse, drifting freely like a rogue shopping vessel waiting to ding someone’s door in the next strong wind. There are also the chaotically evil who push their carts towards the far end of the lot with the intention of making the poor baggers job of retrieving them more painful.
Which brings us to what I like to call “The Shopping Cart Personality Test”.
Yes, I really do think about this kind of stuff.
The Premise
The idea behind this test is simple.
There is no law requiring you to return your shopping cart. There is no fine. No enforcement. No punishment. There really isn’t even any shame, since most people are too busy with their own lives to notice or care.
Returning the cart offers no tangible reward. You gain nothing material. No one applauds you. No employee runs out and pins a medal on your chest. Maybe they should — in fact, that would be pretty sweet — but they don’t. (Yet!)
You return the cart purely because it is the right thing to do. Or… you don’t. Because you are a soulless void of a human being.
In theory, it’s the ultimate low-stakes moral decision. A tiny moment of voluntary coöperation in a society that functions only because millions of small, invisible acts like this happen every day.[2]
The Half-Serious Part
Now, I’m not naïve. I know life is complicated. Maybe someone has an injured knee. Maybe a mother has three screaming children strapped into car seats. Maybe it’s pouring rain and she’s already at her limit. Context matters.
But most of the time? Most of the time it’s just… laziness. Or indifference. Or that quiet little internal voice that says, “Eh, someone else will handle it.” Or pure evil. It always could be that.
And that voice is interesting. Because civilization is built on people resisting that voice. We stand in line instead of cutting. We use turn signals. We say “thank you”. We don’t blast music at 2am. Well, I mean, most of us don’t, at least after we pass the university years and start to act like human beings.
These are not heroic acts. They are tiny acts of friction — small personal inconveniences that smooth life for everyone else.
Returning the cart is one of those, and maybe the best example.
The Playful Part
Spend any time watching a US parking lot and you will start to see some distinct personality times. (Don’t be creepy.) Call it observational anthropology or parking lot sociology.
The Efficient Returner
Walks briskly. Slides the cart neatly into place. Probably folds their laundry immediately after it comes out of the dryer. In D&D terms, this is Lawful Good. The paladin of the parking lot. Order must be maintained. They might even grab other carts nearby to put in the corral.
The Strategic Parker
Leaves the cart balanced perfectly on a curb so it won’t roll. Technically not in the corral. Technically not chaos. A moral compromise artist. True Neutral, possibly leaning toward Chaotic Neutral on windy days.
The Cart Abandoner
Pushes it vaguely toward a shrub and hopes for the best. Believes entropy is someone else’s problem. This is classic Chaotic Neutral. Not malicious. Just vibing. If the cart rolls into a BMW, that’s between the universe and the BMW.
The Parent Under Siege
Operates with military precision. Loads kids, locks doors, returns cart at near-jog speed before anyone can unbuckle themselves. This is Neutral Good. Doing the right thing under pressure. Slightly frazzled. Heroic in a very tired way. The Han Solo of the parking lot: grumbling the whole time, but still saving the galaxy.
The Cart Launcher
The one who deliberately pushes the cart toward the far edge of the lot so some poor bagger has to hike across three zip codes to retrieve it. This is unapologetic Chaotic Evil. No backstory needed. Straight to alignment chart jail.
The Reluctant Returner
Starts to walk away. Stops. Sighs. Turns back. Returns it. This is Lawful Neutral. Not motivated by goodness. Motivated by an internal rulebook. “This is what one does.” Or possibly: “People might be watching me; I better do what’s right”.
I sometimes wonder: if aliens landed and wanted to understand human society, would they study our laws? Our constitutions? Our grand speeches? Or would they just sit in a Walmart parking lot for an afternoon?
What It Actually Reveals
Here’s what I think it really shows. Not whether someone is good or bad or diabolical. That’s too dramatic.
It shows whether a person sees themselves as part of a shared system. I’m tempted to put this in political terms, but I’ll resist!
When you return the cart, you are acknowledging that:
- The lot is shared space.
- Other drivers matter.
- Small inconveniences compound.
- Order doesn’t maintain itself.
You’re saying, in a quiet, boring, utterly unglamorous way, “I am part of this.”
And when you don’t return it? Maybe you’re tired. Maybe you’re rushed. Maybe you just don’t care. Maybe you’re a nihilistic asshole. But at the least in that moment, you’re opting out of the shared effort.
The Twist
The funny thing is, this “test” only works because it’s trivial.
If returning the cart required a 10-minute walk back to the store entrance, it wouldn’t mean much. That would be a serious burden. But when the corral is ten steps away? Then it becomes revealing.
It’s like holding a door open for someone behind you. The cost is minimal. The signal is large. And I find that fascinating.
My Own Confession
In Japan this isn’t really a thing, but when I was in the US and when I visit now, I always return my cart. Not because I’m a saint. Nor because I want moral points. (Tho if someone up there is keeping score, I won’t refuse.) But because I like living in a world where people return their carts.
And the only way to get that world is to be one of those people.
Small things, right? I’d prefer a world where people are nice, so I’ll be nice. To lead by example? I don’t know. In Zen, we do zazen simply to do zazen, not with the expectation of enlightenment. I kind of think the same way here.
So now I’m curious. (Be honest.) When no one is watching… Do you return the cart?
❦
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David is an American teacher and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku. He blogs here and at laspina.org. Write him on Bluesky. |

I only return the cart if the shopping area has the cart port or area. Some shopping arcades do not have it here, in that case I will have the cart in the corner or in the walk way so the other car can park their car without bothered by some empty card in the area.
and many people just left the cart and make the new incoming car has to stop and move the cart first.
so that makes me a reluctant returner?
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Positioning it in the walkway is a good compromise, I suppose. Much better than people who just leave them free floating in the middle of the lot.
I typically will return the cart. If it’s raining out it’s 50/50. But mostly I return them.
Good man!
!PIMP
Always returning the cart, no other way. 🙂
You are a scholar and a gentleman!
Personally I don't return the cart, or trolley as we call them in UK, but hubby does it. UK car parks are smaller than the ones in America, it's just common sense so they don't roll into people's car.
I think the other similar test, is do you clear the table after eating at McDonalds? The number of times I've had to clear other people's tray before getting a table is pretty frequent especially during busy times
You go to Mc Donald's???
The kids in the family like it, and their fillet o fish is nice 😄
I have to say I do occasionally get a craving for a fillet of fish...🥰
Ah so you make him do it! Nice 😜
I hadn't thought of that clear the table thing, since clearing the table is just the default here and it's somewhat unthinkable otherwise. But yeah, I remember in the States I was one of the few who did that. I don't really understand not clearing it... is it really that hard?
You got me. Last week I was at the shops and my hip hurt THAT FUCKING MUCH that I could not give two shits that the trolley guy would have to walk across the carpark and get my trolley. Okay I gave half a shit - I felt guilty. But here you pay either a coin or a token to release the trolley so you have to take it back if you want your coin back. This trolley didn't have a coin so the financial incentive just wasn't there, and not was it worth the agony of the walk. Judge me all you like. But know this - when finished lunch and or coffees at a cafe, I cleary own table and take it to the counter to save the wait staff the task.
haha I did say context matters. In your situation, I might do the same.
Clearing the table after eating... now that's another good test! Here in Japan that's the default. But yeah, I remember in the States I was always the odd man out for doing that.
The poor shopping trolley - I do get sad when I see them abandoned in the canal or river. I have to admit as busy mum I have taken them to the far reach of the car park as I don't have a car and have to carry all my shopping to the bus stop. But I do usually try to return it to the port, just like being a good neighbour to me. Serendiptiy - my poem today is about a shopping trolley
Good timing! I'll go check out your poem.
We pretty much always return our cart to one of the corrals once we are finished. That being said, we don't really do much grocery shopping like that anymore. We basically just pick up our groceries and someone in the store does the shopping for us. For a while we were having them delivered too, but that got expensive.
That sounds pretty sweet. We don't have that in Japan yet. I'd be afraid though of the clerk picking all the bruised fruit and boxes/cans with dents on them. Hmm... I have teenage trust issues, maybe.
They tend to do a bit better than you would think. When they deliver even more so because they get tips. When you just pick them up at the store, they aren't allowed to receive tips. Which is really nice these days!
Hehehehe, this is an interesting topic to discuss... Here in Spain, we have 2 types of supermarkets... In bigger ones, where the parking lot is like you described, you DO GET REWARD when you return your shopping cart, or better said, you get back the 1 EUR that you had to put in the thing to get it "released"... So, when you put it back, you get your money back...
The second type is those a bit smaller, but still with a big parking lot... The same as people parking at the entrance (where there is no parking lot), just because they think they can... the same, there are people who leave carts all over the place...
Personally, I do clean my table when I finish eating in a restaurant, and put back my chair in place 😂, so returning the shopping cart isn't a big deal... 😃 I suppose it's more my OCD than being polite... 😂
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I think a few places in the US do have that pay for a cart/get it back thing, but since the largest common US coin is only .25, it's not really much of an incentive.
haha well, we can thank your OCD for making you a good person 😃
With my health the way it is now.
I use it almost like an Able-walker.
Ah, I don't return the cart, ever. But that's because I don't have a car, and never use a cart to begin with. I only shop for what fits in the little hand held baskets at the grocery store, which I do return on to the stack I grabbed them from on the way out the door. Even though the employees look at me like I'm trying to sneak an unpaid item in there, to grab out after I restack the basket.
I return the cart to the corral. Gotta make sure that filly is safe, like any good cowgirl would do. 😁