I once
produced a television segment about de-cluttering your life. Actually, I pulled together four such masterpieces
– breakfast TV is a Groundhog burial site of repeated content (there’s only so
many questions you can script for a candid in-studio chat with Elmo, but the
shameless media whore keeps visiting Australia anyway).
In any case,
brekky TV was often about becoming a brief, unwilling expert in a topic I
couldn’t give two shits about – the salt content of cereal, the perfect
Valentine’s Day gift, the reasoning of climate change sceptics … the annoying
part was always the information I’d retain.
But no matter what, the rules of de-cluttering wouldn’t stick.
I’ve never
been good at throwing things out. Nothing
proved that more thoroughly than packing up my life recently to move overseas.
There was an
alarming range of inexplicable, dust-gathering crap. I’m not talking generic crap, like every
magazine I ever bought, or several large boxes of miscellaneous seashells – it was
character specific, to say the least.
I’m a jeans
girl by nature – in fact I’d say there are some people in my life who’ve only
ever seen me sporting god’s gift to trouser material. But my heart isn’t made of denim, it’s made
of dreams and aspirations (and, on a biological level, some other stuff I’m
sure), which explains why I found two separate piles of jeans labelled with
these post-its:
'Fits, but not comfy' - thanks for the heads up Past Self |
'Aspire to Fit (what the hell was I thinking?)' - now Past Self is trolling me... such a bitch |
Yes, the
piles were substantial, there were far too many pairs of pants… several of
which had never been worn. But there was
also the belief that those post-its were so important to their accurate storage
that they stayed with them when I moved inter-state two years ago.
Those weren’t
the only notes addressed to me that I held on to – I had also stored every
abusive missive anyone had ever left on my car windscreen. I don’t know why… some of them have awful
spelling, which was probably amusing at the time.
Still, I’m
glad I did, because this particular message….
...helped jog the memory regarding the mysterious can opener in my collection.
Which I now
recall purchasing in a fit of whimsy and leaving on my dashboard whenever I
parked behind that same car. Because there’s no higher former of comedy
than a prop-based gag targeted at one person you’ve never actually seen, on the
off-chance they’ll see it, remember something that pissed them off enough once
to leave an angry note… only to be charmed by this jesting response.
That’s how
my brain works sometimes.
Of course
selling my car as part of Operation Hemisphere Change meant saying farewell to
a wide array of novelty items I’d avoided throwing out for years.
I don’t know
what I’ll do without that pen from that New York bar I got wildly drunk at once
in 2007. Will the Yaris even start
without the hammer that lived under the passenger seat (in case the vehicle
veered off a bridge and into a body of water)?
And who would even bother owning a car without keeping a monkey* and a top hat in it?
Eventually,
the nostalgia of magical, but admittedly worthless objects from every moment of
adulthood gives way to a brutal rhythm. When
trying to distil your life into a single suitcase, culling gets real. The strange rat king of necklaces that has
been slowly growing for 15 years goes in the bin, along with the hand soap from
a bizarre little ghost hotel just outside of Bologna, and the yellow folder so
optimistically labelled ‘Ideas’ that has remained empty for its entire
existence.
As void of contents as the day it was made |
Then there
are the things that shouldn’t be hard to throw away at all. Yet, when it came to my leg and arm braces, I
paused. Briefly, ridiculously, I
wondered if I might still need them somehow.
At the very
least it felt like they needed a ceremony.
Or a bonfire. Instead they got a wheelie
bin.
The things
we hold on to often make so little sense.
Like the clothes worn to a funeral – bought on a frantic, blackly comic
shopping spree because I hadn’t packed anything mourning appropriate. I’d consciously chosen not to. I thought it would be bad luck. Because that’s also how my brain works
sometimes.
I know I’ll
never wear them again, and yet they were put in storage.
We accrue so
much traveling through life. Even when
you know it would be better to let it go, it can still be hard to truly leave
some of it behind. Especially when it’s
the kind of stuff that doesn’t need to be accounted for with removalists or
airline baggage limitations.
Often you
don’t even notice you’re carrying it.
Some things will be with you forever.
And sometimes it’s a broken hairbrush you’ve had for 14 years.
Don’t worry,
it’s gone to the great big Hairbrushery in the sky. Because ‘Hairbrushery’ is a word. It’s Painefull, for ‘fancy landfill’.
Painefull
Out
* = Fyi, the
monkey’s name was Jo. I know that would
have been a burning question.