Or Cleared for Landing
By Jody
Worsham
All rights
reserved for “Raiders of the Last Crap-o-la”
It must be in
the air or I'm just getting older or because spring was late this year, but I
have been de-crapping room by room for the past month. I started with our
walk-in closet which I can now actually walk in. Some very skinny people
now have some barely worn out of style clothes to wear. Then it spread to
each kid's room. For some reason it is easier to get rid of their
“collections” than mine.
I organized
and labeled all my craft and sewing items in the upstairs craft room. I
really thought I had painted the floor three years ago, but once it was
cleared, I realized I had not.
I organized
the linen closet. I see no reason to keep waterbed sheets these days, do
you? I donated them.
The hall
walk-in storage closet was next. Once I removed the computer towers, the
monitors with the green screen, the box of mystery cords, connectors and floppy
discs, three boxes of assorted picture frames, and the curtain rods not used
since mini-blinds were invented, there was room for the vacuum (which had been
living in the hall for the past year) and the carpet shampooer which I didn't
know I had. We will also be cooler this summer (found three fans) and
warmer this winter (found two portable electric heaters.)
The guest
room was an easy fix once I rehung all the pictures I had taken down two
summers ago when I painted the room and made up the bed. I also tackled
the guest closet. I gave up on Nehru jackets and Madras pants every
coming back in style and donated those items to a traveling circus that came through
town.
While I was
at it, I emptied the freezer. I violated the unwritten law of frozen
food: "If the label has initials, a date that does not end in B.C.,
a solid covering of ice at least three inches thick, and no power outages of
more than two weeks, it is good." I tossed 80% of the contents. The raccoons, possums, and other night creatures
ate well that evening even if their lips and tongue turned blue and they were
shivering from internal frost bite.
And you
know what? I won't need to buy hot dogs for the 4th of July picnic next
year.
Yesterday I
emptied four desks. I mean really, how many shoe boxes of map colors do I
need? I also discovered that I will not need to buy school supplies for
the next two years and art gum erasers NEVER dry up no matter how many years
they have been in the back of the desk drawer; however, sticky notes will dry
up in less than a week. I sharpened all the pencils I found and returned
27 pencils to each desk. I had enough pencils left to supply the entire third
grade at my child's school. I found ball point pens that were still
writing even though the companies they were advertising had gone out of
business years before and a drawer full of Magic Markers that had all lost
their magic.
I have saved
our bedroom for last, the Mount Everest of scrap paper with semi-formed ideas,
the Adriana Trench of necessary but unknown computer stuff, the Atlantis of the
lost and forgotten, the Antarctica of solid minutia, the Sahara of forgotten
wrappers and cans … Ok that last is mostly the kids hiding their contraband
under the bed when I suddenly enter the room.
Four filing drawers later and two Wal-Mart sacks of unknown wires,
chargers, and forgotten passwords plus three trashcans of, well trash, I found
my I-Pad, my digital camera, and a Valentine I forgot to mail…with a 28 cent
stamp. I was making progress.
I would like
to think all this purging was leading to a more simplified, organized, and
calming home, but I think I was just making more room for me to move through
the house with the extra pounds I have gained.
Either way, there’s more room for all of me to get down the hallway and
now the freezer has room for Blue Bell Ice Cream.
\
Tip:
When tidying up, carry a laundry basket with you to collect "orphans"
(items that don't belong in that particular room). As you progress from room to room the orphans
will find their home and you won't be running your legs off.
5 comments:
Jody, this is one of my favorites because I SO relate. As a military family who moves a lot, I de-crap every couple years, but somehow it's never easy. Hot dogs procreate in freezers and electronics cords never match any electronics. Great read! (And loved "Raiders of the Last Crapola! ")
I've been doing something similar due to a leak in the attic which lead to all the coats being put in the guest bedroom which led to all that junk being moved to the office which lead to...oh heck. I'm a hoarder and I admit it.
Too much work!!
I attempt decluttering every year. "Attempt" is the operative word here.
I inoculate against the spring cleaning bug well before each season, unless we have to move. This year we did just that, from house to apartment, after twelve years of creative hoarding. The process was simple: Hold every item you own in your hand, and appreciate fully the value, utility, and store of memories associated with each piece. Then you throw it away.
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