Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Stuff

A parent dies; a child moves out. Time passes and we accumulate things, usually at a faster pace than we rid ourselves of them. And one day we look around and realize we have a problem. In many ways it’s a problem of good fortune, but it’s a problem nonetheless.

The problem is stuff. Well, I take that back. The problem isn’t stuff. It’s what stuff does to our mental and physical spaces. Stuff is in our way.

What spurs you to finally get rid of stuff? A change in circumstances, such as a move, an addition or absence of a family member in the household? A look around in disgust or frustration? How much time do you spend moving things, cleaning around things, pushing through things? How much stuff do you need?  

In my prior career, I worked with trust officers in a large bank, which often served as executor or administrator for estates. In that capacity, or as trustee for some of our clients who could no longer take care of their own affairs, the trust officers cleaned out homes. They didn’t physically do the cleaning, but they needed to fully assess the assets and determine where things should go. It could take many days immersed in other people’s stuff. Then they would wash their hands, go home, and get rid of things in their own homes.

A lot of us have dealt with the belongings of parents after their death or move to a nursing home. A lot of us understand the emotions of making those decisions, and the tangles of decisions when multiple family members are involved. In some ways, the trust officers’ job is easy, because they have the luxury of objectivity.

I’m not very nostalgic for things. Scrapbooking, photo albums, boxes full of sentimental items – that’s just not me. Maybe it’s because I’m the youngest of five children born in quick succession. Most of my clothes and toys when I was a kid were hand-me-downs. By the time I was done using it, it was used up and went away. And mostly I didn’t have a sense of anything being just mine, so I’m not very possessive that way. It makes it easy to get rid of things.

As a quilter, I do have fabric. Some quilters have rooms full of fabric, garages, basements, extra sheds, full of fabric. Compared to many quilters I know, I don’t have a lot. All of it fits in the top of one TV armoire, neatly separated into plastic bins by color. When bins are overflowing, when there is too much fabric to fit, I feel uneasy, as if I need to get busy, sew more, use more, justify the possession of such wealth. I do use it, but I can’t shake the feeling that my inflow of new fabrics shouldn’t be more, on average, than what I use.

I do not want to die with a room full of fabric that should have been quilts instead. I’ve heard too many stories of women who die, whose relatives end up taking all that cloth to the dump. That’s not just a waste of money – at $10 a yard or so, quilting fabric is expensive! It’s also a waste of opportunity.

But fabric isn’t the only issue, is it? As you look around, what do you see that would baffle your heirs? Is it the secret stash of plastic grocery bags, more than enough to cover your city in plastic? The glass jars with lids, which are never used again? The books falling from every surface, ones you’re no longer attached to for the content, but just can’t seem to part with? A closet full of clothes that no one will wear again? The full contents of your parents’ house?

Stuff. Everyone has it. No one knows what to do with it.

Generally, there are three things to do with stuff, besides just keep it. Throw it away, give it away, or sell it. That sounds simple, yes? Of course it isn’t always.

Books

Most of us can’t throw away books, but you can give them away, and sometimes you can sell them. To give them away, consider: stand-bys like Goodwill, local prisons, domestic violence shelters. To sell, there are consignment shops, used book stores, and online outlets.

Arts/crafts materials

As with books, these can go to charity resale stores, prisons, and shelters. Schools are often interested in material for the minimal art programs now in place.

Household goods

Charity resale stores and transitional housing groups make good use of your kitchenware, dishes, vacuum cleaners, and small appliances. If it is electric and doesn’t work, don’t try to donate it without checking first. Things like that end in their dumpsters, making extra cost for them, not benefit.

Furniture

Similar to household goods, these can often be donated through resale stores and transitional housing groups. Your community may have other venues, as well. In our community, there is an annual day to move stuff from one home to another. People bring usable furniture to a local parking ramp and leave it. Someone who needs it can take it. It keeps a lot out of the dump that otherwise would have ended there. Freecycle, mentioned again below, is another choice. Nicer items can be sold, often through a Craigslist listing.

Clothing

Worn socks and underwear should be thrown away. Almost anything else can be given away, or possibly resold. Infant and children’s clothing is especially popular in consignment shops. But your old wedding dress, unless exquisite and in excellent condition, might not sell.

Toiletries/grooming items

Old make-up should be thrown out. Hair dryers that have died, and other small electrical devices that no longer work, should be pitched, too. Otherwise check with the shelter to see if these will be useful to them. Hotel and sample bottles of body wash, shampoo, and conditioner, especially, can be helpful.

Tools/equipment

Depending on the item, these can be quite attractive for resale. Craigslist is a good outlet.

Musical instruments

Donations of musical instruments are always appreciated. Check with your schools and your senior center to see if they would like your unused clarinet. Freecycle can get your instrument to someone with a specific interest and need. And Craigslist is always available for sales. Also check with your local music shops to see if they will do resales. Many will.

When donating to a non-profit organization, your donation may have value for your taxes. There is an IRS publication for determining value of donated property. Remember, if you are giving an item to an individual instead, there is no tax value.

Above I mention the Freecycle Network. According to their website,

The Freecycle Network™ is made up of 5,085 groups with 9,338,005 members around the world. It’s a grassroots and entirely nonprofit movement of people who are giving (and getting) stuff for free in their own towns. It’s all about reuse and keeping good stuff out of landfills. Each local group is moderated by local volunteers (them’s good people). Membership is free.

We have given a lot of things away through Freecycle, including a used elliptical trainer, a small refrigerator, and a swinging bench for outdoors.

What do you do with stuff? Have you found great ways to deal with specific types of items? What frustrations have you had with your own “wealth” of possessions, or that of a loved one? How do you feel when you get rid of stuff? Is it freeing or difficult?

No diary on Stuff would be complete without George Carlin’s take. Note: there may be blue language, and there may be an ad.


35 comments

  1. iriti

    Don’t need much stuff. Trs and Kidlet are both stuff accumulators (not to a problem extent, just at the accumulator end of the normal folks spectrum). We do stuff banishment a couple times a year because our home is small.

    My Mom has been something of a problem; she lives with my Sister and they have moved 4 times in the last 18 years (apartment to house, sell house and get temporary apartment for a year then to new house). Each time, Sis has encouraged Mom to downsize a little. It seems to be easier to get it done gradually. Things she resisted getting rid of the 1st move she let go of more willingly the last. Partly because she was getting used to the idea of not keeping everything.

    Great topic, Melanie.

  2. He’s been living out of a duffel bag with his fiancee in MS for the last few weeks, abandoning his apartment and all that’s in it for the sake of being with her.

    It’s only a one-room apartment, but the lease is up at the end of March, so it had to be emptied. And where did it all go? Our basement.

    There are 2 bags of clothes he said should go to Goodwill (after we check through it.) And he freely admits there’s a lot of other stuff that could go away, things he’ll never use again. But he wasn’t able to put the time in to make those decisions yet.

    Fortunately we have the space to help.  

  3. slksfca

    It wasn’t intentional, but after living in the same apartment for nearly 20 years I’ve grown ginormous barnacles of stuff. Long past time to scrape the hull. And this past year when I’ve been unable to keep up with normal housework has only made things worse, because on top of the stuff I have actual trash, like the cardboard boxes piled in my living room that held Christmas gifts. I haven’t been able to break them down and then schlepp them downstairs to the recycling bin.

    Just before going into the hospital, and with the help of an old friend, I was able to deal with the worst of the problem (enough to make it possible to get around the apartment on crutches), but there’s a long road of divestment ahead. My books alone, which are overflowing the shelves into piles on the floor, are an enormous problem because I HATE the thought of getting rid of a book. Like I have some kind of responsibility as Repository For The World’s Knowledge or something. 😉

  4. JG in MD

    I’ve sold books on eBay and managed book donations at a thrift shop. I know whereof I speak.

    Don’t overglamorize books. Tear the covers off a few hardbacks and drop the pages into the recycling just to see you won’t be struck by lightning. Then throw three entire books into your kitchen garbage can. That ought to take away the horror.

    This is what I would advise regarding book donations to Friends of the Library and thrift stores.

    Go to the library or thrift shop and look at what they have tons of. When you see the same things in your own give-away box, don’t donate. Give to friends if they want them (they probably won’t) or trash/recycle. Don’t donate a damaged book. They will throw it away, sighing, after you leave.

    Don’t sell books unless you’re starving. Check the shelves of the store you want to sell to. The same rule applies: if they have two, they don’t want a third.

    Never try to sell a damaged book.

    Your boxes of books will be picked through and if you’re lucky, you will be offered 50¢ each for three hardbacks in perfect shape. Your favorite coffee table book that you hate to get rid of might, just might, fetch $1.00.

    Never get your books appraised. Just never.

  5. JG in MD

    I know you can’t just run down to the thrift shop to reconnoiter. My advice was general. Sorry if I sound flip.

    I wish you were closer. I can be both sensitive and brutal when it comes to helping people cull the shelves.

  6. blue jersey mom

    I was pretty much a minimalist throughout college and grad school. I now have a lot of professional books. Mike (Son 1)has agreed to take all our professional books when we go to the great beyond, since he works in a closely related field. I do have some other things that I really like–a set of English bone china that I accumulated over the years, my great grandmother’s tea set, some nice jewelry, and a lot of pottery that I have collected on my travels abroad. My kids are welcome to do whatever they want with it when I am gone.

    I do try to purge the trash–old receipts, tax returns from the Reagan years… that was the stuff that my mom kept that took me weeks to clean out when I sold her condo. I will not leave all that crap for my kids. I also try to get rid of the old clothes. I take the really worn-out stuff with me to the field, and then I throw it out when I leave. As you note, no one wants worn out socks and underwear.  

  7. JG in MD

    Most of my walls are lined with shelves, but they’re not all full. Too many purses, but they’re small. For some reason I own more than a dozen pillows, not counting the ones on my bed. A second-generation digital camera circa 1994, my father’s (grandfather’s?) ivory handled razor, a kaleidoscope, etc., in shoe boxes on the closet shelf. Control is more important than quantity, IMO.

    My life has been lived on paper and online more than in meatspace, it seems. I tried to curate my old poetry and jottings a couple of years ago, but the project sagged. I channeled a spirit in the 1980s. Did he predict the future? Too many different emotions arise.

    I have three bankers boxes containing personal and business documents from my years of (mostly) self-employment, 1968-1990, and personal documents and souvenirs from 1990 to 2013. I have calendars going back to college. There’s no one else who remembers, so I keep these papers and my journals so my life won’t disappear.

    Everything has been culled thoroughly and the boxes take up a minimum of space. Periodically I go through it again and pull out blank-backed scratch paper. I love seeing a report I wrote in 1978 come out of the printer with new information on the other side.

    I often think about the time when my nieces and nephews will come in clear out. Will they care about any of it? Who will read my journals? What will they think?

  8. wordsinthewind

    until I decided it wasn’t healthy and started shedding. That was a good decision that I’m still working through. There was seriously a lot of stuff, residue of three different estates we settled between us in just five years. There were too many decisions to make at once and there was an empty house and garage out here we weren’t using. When we decided to move back out here it was much easier to make those decisions so it only took a few months to clear most of it out. Like most people we could still thin out, that’s been more of an on-going project this year with some succes.  

  9. lauraquilter

    My hubby has containers of stuff for every year of our kids age until they moved. My son is now 30 and daughter 27. Ok, gotta share, he even kept their wisdom teeth! We had a family discussion and he needs to get rid of ’em. I think there’s an emotional attachment for him to the kids as kids, but he will be getting rid of ’em when we move outta here if not sooner. He’s not crazy, he’s a civil engineer for goodness sakes – very linear.    

    I will be inheriting a lot of my mom’s stuff; fabric, buttons, etc. But I keep encouraging her to use her stuff NOW. I have enough of my own and figure, like Melanie, I don’t know if I have enough time in my lifetime to use all my fabric. I just donated 200 yards of fabric to our quilt guild to be used on community quilts. I still have too much!  

    I’ll be having a yard sale soon full of chotskies. I do not like STUFF and I hate to have to dust stuff too!

  10. Mnemosyne

    that are in decent shape, they could go to the rez.

    Okiciyap Food Pantry

    c/o Cindy Taylor

    Box 172

    Isabel, South Dakota

    57633

    where they are poorest of the poor, and kids all wear hand-me-downs and apparently don’t have enough to keep them warm while they wait for the school bus in Dakota winters.

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