A Special Post: Jason Weighs in on the True Weight of Stuff

As I read Shed52, I am struck by how much it is less about getting rid of stuff and more about the existential meaning that we make of our stuff and the meaning our stuff suffuses into our lives.  Shedding possessions would be easy if it were simply a matter of finding things – inanimate objects – around us that clutter our lives and thereby also our thoughts.  But our thoughts are so attached to our things, not out of avarice or need, but out of a matrix of meaning in which we are ensconced.  It is difficult to shed our stuff because of the significant space it takes in our minds.

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Example 1: My car.  Today my car sputtered out and was left on the side of the road for dead.  As a mass of metal, electronics, and rubber, it holds no particular importance in my life’s priorities.  As a means of transportation, it holds somewhat high importance because it isn’t so easy to get from Brookline, where I live, to Norton, MA, where I teach, by public transportation or even Uber or Lyft.  But the car – and its treasonous transmission, or whatever it is that gave way – is symbolic in my mind of so much more than mere transportation.  I’m not talking status symbol or even American independence (which, in the popular mythology, has been constructed around our vehicles).  I’m talking survival mode.  The demise of my automobile is inextricably linked in my mind with my economic, physical, and mental deterioration.  I’m sure that this is just apocalyptical exaggeration. But am I?  Which is the lie – that it will be alright, or that it is the beginning of the end?  I waiver back-and-forth in my judgment.

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RIP you little silver beast.

Example 2: Memorabilia.  I don’t know about you, but I have a little box in which I place various items of what I affectionately call “Memorabilia.”  These items include movie ticket stubs, birthday cards, concert programs, and old driver’s licenses and school ID cards.  I find I put something in the little box about once a week.  This is frequently enough that, by the end of a year, or six months even, the little box needs to be emptied into a big box.  And after 40 some-odd years of walking this planet, those big boxes now tally in the double digits.  Why do I do this?  I don’t know.  I enjoyed the movie – or more likely the companion with whom I went to the movies.  I imagine someday I may want to recall just what pieces were performed at the concert.  I like to see what I looked like when my driver’s license was issued and compare it to the next expired license.  In those cartons is contained my life – or so it feels.  Lose that and there goes my entire past.  

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Boxes of every student ID, alumni magazine and toll receipt Jason ever had.

 

Example 3: Books.  Yes, I am a bibliophile.  Books, or “The Original Portable Information Device,” as I like to call them, have a tangibility to them that the Kindle does not.  I can feel the pages and, as I love to do with old, weathered, yellowing books, smell the pages.  We are living in a digital world and I am a material girl, to turn a phrase.  But more than that, books mean so much beyond their presentation to the senses.  They are friends from my past or, possibly friends I shall discover in the future.

There are also those books that were left to me from my father.  He didn’t have a life insurance policy.  He didn’t have money.  He didn’t have a mansion.  But he did have books – tons of books!  As someone remarked to me soon after his untimely death, “These,” she said, feeling the spines of the books on the shelves of his library, “these are your inheritance.”  She was right.  I could remember as a child, almost from before I could read, wandering among his stacks and stacks of books (before he had a library in which to house them) and seeing all the covers and dust jackets and wondering in awe what was contained within them.  Some of them I began to read over the years.

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A literary favorite and the perfect gift. Valentines Day 2016.

And then when I went to college, I would ask my father if I could “borrow” this book and that for my classes.  Never did I return any of those books.  And then, after college, when I would visit home, it became a ritual of mine to silently wander among his tightly packed shelves and pull out a book here and there that caught my eye.  His library was organized in a haphazard way – very loosely by topic.  Each time I performed the ritual, I could swear new books were appearing.  But though he occasionally bought new books, the fact wasn’t that I was finding all the new ones, but that my interests were growing ever more broad and so a book that I passed by before would now call to my rapacious curiosity.

So it was, just a few weeks ago when, putting the house that my parents lived in up for sale, I was allowed one last rite of passage through the stacks.  I carefully combed the tomes and found a number of books that I swear I had never seen before, even though my father had passed away over a decade ago.  Among them was  A Canticle for Leibowitz.  I had never heard of this novel until a couple of years ago when a quote from it caught my eye.  “You don’t have a soul. . . .  You are a soul.”  

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Since reading that quote – and I don’t recall where I came across it – I have heard more and more about this novel by Walter M. Miller.  Suddenly, there it was in my father’s wide-raging collection of low tech mobile information devices.  I took it and about thirty other volumes from the library and had to bid farewell to all the other books that made up his collection – a reflection of his mind – and accept that no longer would new titles appear as if from nowhere among that sacred space for me.  

So you see, stuff is not really just stuff.  The stuff that is just stuff is easily parted with. But the stuff that we carry with us– sometimes it sinks us, and sometimes it carries us right back.   

What’s the stuff that carries you? What do you know is so special, that you could never part with it? Tell us below and check back on the blog this week to learn where Shed52 falls in our list weekly goals!

Week 5 Recap: When Life Needs to Take a Long Walk Off a Short Pier

It’s another Sunday here at Shed52 and we can’t believe all that the universe can manage to pack into one family’s life in just 7 days. We’ve been eager to return to this amazing little community here at WordPress since Wednesday, but each day has brought a new challenge and rendered us pretty useless in the blogosphere, and mostly just trying to survive. To give you a sense of what we mean, here’s a rundown. Because who doesn’t love a good Sunday morning list?

  1. There’s this tiny little storm moving through the great state of Florida and both Jason’s mom and my parents live just north of Fort Lauderdale. They also all live in waterfront homes. Jason’s mom is on oxygen, so we were able to persuade her to get out fast and come be with us on Wednesday. Unfortunately, this cost us about $800 for a last minute flight. More unfortunate was that my folks decided to stay, and are currently hunkered down in their tiny space awaiting the worst.

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    This satellite photo accurately captures the scale of this storm, which they say is nearly the size of Jason’s book collection.
  2. The federal government officially announced plans to rescind DACA, which means that Jason, an immigration attorney, has been inundated with calls and visits from deeply worried clients who are in fear for their status and their families. We understand this as a human rights issue more than a political one, and it’s heartbreaking at the end of a week to know how many folks are suffering right now.5535C056-93C2-440F-9D4E-9555F570CDD3_cx0_cy6_cw0_w1023_r1_s.jpg
  3. The federal government also made vague, worrying and misleading comments about Title IX, the federal civil rights law that protects people on the basis of their sex and gender in educational institutions. This greatly affects my work as a sexual trauma counselor and advocate at a nearby university and needless to say, I’m fired up about continuing to effectively and appropriately respond to survivors of violence in my community. This is difficult to balance with my concurrent desire to just hide under a blanket with a bucket of pumpkin mac ‘n’ cheese, because it’s September and I’m a New Englander.il_340x270.1336049079_bez9.jpg
  4. I continue to have no idea what I’m doing in the one PhD class I was stupid enough to register for this semester (what’s a Piaget, anyway?) and would rather bake cakes all weekend than read books, so that’s what I’ve been doing to cope.
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    Peach upside down cake, baked with brown sugar & bourbon caramel. I call it “Procrastinator’s Delight.”

    Jason’s car exploded bit the dust on the highway this week and we learned it’s worth nothing and we’ll get roughly zero dollars for it. He got about 165K miles out of it, but we were disheartened to learn that you can, in fact, kill a Subaru. He just got a great deal on a preowned Prius yesterday (yay!) but we’re reeling from sticker shock of this week, and the cumulative effect of all these other matters.

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    World’s most expensive trash can, according to Jason.

We were worried that this would mean we would fail to continue to empty out our house of useless stuff, like the two kids’ bikes I hoped to sell for $29 a piece. We have’t been able to pursue the sales as persistently as we’d like, and so nothing’s sold as of yet!

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On second thought, it would have been pretty great to see Jason use this to get around instead.

However, Jason was quick to point out that, with the loss of his car likewise means the loss of all of the utter junk that was piled up in it. I frequently refer to Jason’s car as a “trash can on wheels” because it’s accumulated nearly 10 years of kids’ bubblegum wrappers, crumbs, loose change, and of course, random scraps of paper (yes, I try to clean it out frequently, but anyone with kids will know what I mean). This isn’t to mention the formidable stench of a teenage boy’s hockey equipment, which is enough to chase you out of the car and into a sewer during peak season.

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Me, every single season.

So while I’m not feeling like we’re “winning” at Shed52 these past few weeks, I have to give credence to all the obstacles we’ve been facing as a family and also give credit to the fact that we’re not giving up. This blog has definitely helped us remain accountable to ourselves in this quest to give up “stuff” and I have a renewed sense of commitment to shedding at least one item this afternoon. One stop I know I can make is to our local Goodwill with a bag of clothes to be sent to survivors of these recent Hurricanes. Right after I start this homework.

Check back tomorrow for a very special post from Jason! He’ll be sharing what Shed52 has meant to him, and reflecting on the true weight of stuff in our lives. We’ve also been procrastinating dealing with the issue directly in front of us with other writing projects, such as this piece I just published over at Medium about what Harry Potter can teach us about white supremacy. If you’re like us and in need of a little break this weekend, feel free to check it out, comment and share!

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“What White People Can Learn from harry Potter About White Supremacy” on Medium, September 10, 2017

How are you all doing with the recent happenings in the U.S. and around the world? Are you or your loved ones in the path of Hurricane Irma? How have you been coping? What’s sorts of things do you use to stay hopeful and on track with your goals when the going gets tough? We’d love to hear from you below!