Let’s Pretend We’re Moving

As you might have read in the top right corner of this blog, we moved three times in four years. That was eight years ago, but the memories are still fresh….ugh! It makes me tired just thinking about it.

But there was something good to come out of it. When you move, you’re forced to go through all of your things and get rid of anything you don’t use anymore in order to reduce the number of things you’re going to have to pack, move and unpack. So you end up in new decluttered digs, and it feels good!

That said, the converse is also true. When you don’t move for a long time, it’s very easy to let the number of your belongings increase, slowly and quietly, until you start tripping on things, or you run out of room in closets, or you just start to feel kind of cramped in your home. That’s how you know it’s time to move again.

Of course, you probably like where you live and don’t want to move. No worries! What I’m talking about is pretending that you have to move. What would you take with? What would you get rid of?

Once you really get into this act of imagination, you’ll start to realize how much stuff has been building up around your home. Use the insight created by your pretend move to give up items you don’t use anymore. Then enjoy the extra space that’s created in your home.

Do this every year or so, and if or when you do actually move again, it will be a much easier experience than what we went through years ago. Just the mere memory of those days revs up my declutter meter and I start assembling boxes to donate to Goodwill.

Gifts for the Grands

It’s that time of year when many of us begin shopping for Christmas gifts for friends and family. But it’s not as simple as it used to be. Not everyone wants a physical gift anymore.

This is particularly true of some of my adult kids. I’m sure their children like opening gifts, but they don’t want more clutter in their homes. One of them suggested that I buy experiences instead of physical gifts for my grandchildren.

Of course, my mind immediately went back to when I was a child, and how much I loved finding my gifts under the Christmas tree. And it also brought back memories of how much my children enjoyed opening their many gifts each year on Christmas morning.

But my kids were at home all day and had plenty of time to play with all of their toys. Some of my grandchildren spend long days in daycare or school and afterschool care, and come home in time to have dinner and go to bed again. They have plenty of toys and no time to play with them.

The days of a child having only one or two treasured toys are long gone. Kids today have more toys than they know what to do with; sometimes they’re so busy playing games and watching movies on their parents’ phones that they don’t even think about their toys.

This is hard for me to accept but I think it’s a fact: it would be wiser for me to give them experiences instead of stuff. Their parents would prefer it, and they might actually get some enjoyment out of museum passes, zoo passes, show tickets or something similar. Their folks don’t have a money tree, so providing a gift like this for the kids is also a gift for their parents. They can enjoy a fun outing with their children without having to pay for it.

So I’ve begun to research this concept. If you have grandchildren or young nieces and nephews or all of the above, you might also want to think about doing this. Here are some examples to get you started:

Play passes

Movie passes

Museum passes (some offer the bonus benefit of getting into other museums for discounted or free admission)

Zoo and aquarium passes

Farm visits

YMCA or gym memberships

Kid-friendly restaurant gift certificates

Decluttering Wars: Mother vs. Daughter

Donna is in the midst of decluttering her entire house before she sells it and moves to a smaller house in a better climate, a big change that she promised herself she would make once her kids were on their own.

Naturally, some items are harder to get rid of than others. One category she has really struggled with is her family’s collection of movies. She estimates she has more than 200 videotapes that her children once loved (she’s afraid to count them because it might be even more than 200). The idea of giving up these tapes is very hard for her.

To Donna, these videotapes represent happy times when her kids were still home. Even though she often complained at the time about hearing the same songs and dialogue over and over again, they are now fond memories. Since her daughter Esmé is the mother of her two grandchildren, she finally made the tough decision to call Esmé and tell her that the family’s precious videotape collection would soon be hers.

The phone call ended in tears: Donna’s tears. After she made her big announcement to Esmé, she noticed that Esmé didn’t sound very excited about it. So Donna sweetened the pot by saying she would bring the videos over as soon as she could pack them up, instead of having Esmé come to get them. That’s when Esmé responded, “Well, Mom, to be honest, I don’t have the room for them, and we don’t really need them. We stream a lot of stuff for the kids, and we can always rent a movie online and the kids can watch it for three days in a row, if they want.”

Donna couldn’t believe her ears. How could Esmé be so callous about these tapes that were once so important to her? Donna ended the call and then burst into tears.

This scene is being replayed in various forms every day. Boomer parents are finally downsizing, giving up things they’ve kept for far too long, and they want to make sure everything goes where it will be appreciated. But their millennial adult children don’t always want what they’re being given. Who’s to blame? The parents or their offspring?

It’s not a matter of blame: it’s a matter of expectations. The parents value certain items because of their sentimental value, or because they’ve been considered heirlooms in their families. But their children don’t want the items because they hold no sentimental value for them. In many cases, they don’t have the room for them, either. (Donna certainly knows that hundreds of videotapes take up a lot of space!)

These conflicting desires cause trouble in families. Ironically, if the parents weren’t making the effort to downsize their lives, their children would someday have to deal with all of these items when their parents move to a nursing home or pass away. But that may be the answer for some families: the parents keep the items, and after they’re gone, their kids can throw everything in a dumpster and hope Mom and Dad aren’t spinning in their graves.

On the other hand, young adults don’t usually realize that someday they may place greater value on where they came from and the people who loved them when they were small. They may find themselves wishing for something tangible to hold on to from those loved ones. But if they succeeded in refusing all such items years earlier, they’ll be out of luck.

Donna needs to consider Esmé’s opinion of the videotapes without taking it personally, and Esmé needs to understand that the tapes remind her mother of her children’s joy when they were young. Each will have to cut the other some slack. Perhaps Donna can think of something else to give Esmé from her childhood that she still values and that Donna also treasured.

Ultimately, we must always remember that relationships are more important than things.

My Favorite Decluttering Quotes

Ever since decluttering became a popular trend, it seems like nearly everyone has jumped on the bandwagon. As a result, there are a lot of great quotes and memes floating around the Internet relating to decluttering. Here are some of my favorites, and the last one is the best:

The more things you own, the more they own you. Anonymous

Clutter is the result of delayed decisions. Anonymous

Perfectionism is often an excuse for procrastination. Paul Graham

You can’t reach for anything new if your hands are still full of yesterday’s junk. Louise Smith

Life is a balance of holding on and letting go. Anonymous

The more you have, the more you dust! Robin Bastian

Storage experts are hoarders. Marie Kondo

If you don’t love it or use it, it’s clutter. Anonymous

Your home is living space, not storage space. Francine Jay

Happiness is a place between too little and too much. Finnish proverb

“Later” is the best friend of clutter. Peter Walsh

Collect moments, not things. Anonymous

Finally, my very favorite decluttering quote, words for a declutterer to live by, is:

Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful. William Morris