I didn't need this stuff and I
couldn't take it with me, I remember thinking, as I gathered my UK
life into numerous black bin bags and poorly formed cardboard boxes.
This 'stuff' would shortly be
sold at a local market in town. A hoarder by nature, I didn't exactly
want to dispose of my early childhood possessions and used household
goods but the upcoming journey overseas dictated that I travel with
the bare minimum - and I was in no position to bring along any of this
excess stuff. My stuff would therefore become someone else's stuff.
On a grey and overcast
morning, I farewelled what I believed was a large part of my
English identity steadily accumulated through the years of life on
this island of mine but which, in reality, was not far off being junk.
I detached myself from the process
and proceeded to de-clutter my very self. The riddance of these familiar
items was a blow to my parents and one in a series of events that
crystallised the harsh reality of us leaving on a one-way voyage
overseas. Inwardly, I'm sure my parents grieved for the loss of these
'things' that represented my established life in England. Outwardly, they put on a
brave face and watched silently as my worldly goods sold for mere pounds
and pence in a nondescript school playground in an
indistinctive southern town.
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| Photo credit: scottchan / FreeDigitalPhotos.net |
I have no doubt that I left a part
of me behind on that day in that playground.
I sold broken
bookshelves, faulty cabinets and wonky chairs, as I moved
forward with my life taking a brave step into the unknown. In my mind,
I was not simply giving up physical belongings, but unnecessary
baggage. The part of me left behind at that marketplace was the part
that refused to let go, that wanted to remain in a safe place, that needed
to sit tight in its comfort zone. I left the market
emotionally fatigued but all the lighter for releasing myself of this
stuff. Because that was all it was.
Just stuff.
In time, I grew better at purging
myself of these seemingly unnecessary things. In fact, I became almost
obsessed. In the lead-up to a big move, I would become maniacal in my
efforts to clear every room of any effects that could hold up progress or
add expense to the upcoming journey. I would discard these
obstructive annoyances with relish and a lack of regard for their
worth or significance, only to be reigned in by my wife when the cupboards lay
bare and the packing boxes still empty.
There was one treasured
possession that I could not face parting with, that I clung to with
the stubbornness of a spoilt child. When the flat pack boxes arrived and we
had armed ourselves with brown tape and bold marker pens, I
would head straight for my beloved collection of 12-inch
records. This army of battered vinyl warriors, this organised mass of
plastic and paper and memories waited patiently for a touch or a
dust down, as perfect in my eyes as the day they were made.
My records were meticulously lined
up in rows on the shelves of my spare bedroom. I would carefully take
one by its spine, smell the damp and musty aroma as it came free, feel the
well-worn edges and dog-eared corners, and flip the delicate ageing cover
over in my hands as I remembered the beat, the tempo, the vocals, that
baseline, the last time I'd soaked up its precious musical cargo.
This thing, mere stuff, had a
bewitching power over me.
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| Photo credit: FreeDigitalPhotos.net |
I could suddenly
be transported from my Sydney bungalow to a
time and place in the past when this record revolved on a dimly lit turntable,
in a darkened booth, in the corner of a dingy club, in front of a die hard
crowd. The record's sounds, this most beautiful of stuff, would be
lapped up by the gathered crowd, whistling and clapping, moving as one
pulsating, electrified mass to the rhythm of the tune, always hungry for
more. The atmosphere heightened as the song reached its climax.
People thumping on the floor, jumping up on benches, cheering and
revelling in the heady atmosphere. The ever-present baseline reverberating
around the club's walls, pulsing through the sofas and stools, shaking
exit doors and jolting mammoth speakers. I soaked up the atmosphere, sky
high on the energy, electrified by the reaction to this record, this
thing, this stuff.
My collection of records is so
dear to me. My records are my prize, my trophy.
They are more than just grooved
discs, more than a family of sounds. They are a point in time when I studied
hard by day and DJ-ed harder through the night. They were my escape from
the monotony of reports and essays, of lectures and exams. They
note a day, a week, a month when life was carefree, when responsibility was
shirked.
Although I've tried to move
on, I allow myself these brief moments to reminisce, a knowing
smile stretching my face and a shoe tap tapping the floor. My
battered and grimy records remind me of what was, but could never really
continue to be. And this stuff has weighed heavily on the purse,
being shipped from one city to the next at maddening expense. I
have often caught my wife gazing out over the tightly packed
boxes waiting expectantly to be carried away to our new home in some
exotic locale. She will shake her head, let out a small sigh,
and turn to other more pressing matters.
When moving to Sydney, I hauled more
than fifteen over-sized boxes of my perfect records into
the storage space beneath the house. It was a mistake of epic
proportions. When a storm hit the city not long after, the accompanying
downpour broke free of the overwhelmed drains to deposit soil
and water in my records' new home. My beloved collection, my stuff,
wallowed waist deep in muddy water until discovered several days later. I
spent days and weeks in the garage peeling soggy covers
from exposed vinyl backs, wiping slime off vulnerable
torsos, carefully placing bruised bodies into clean paper
cases.
My wife watched me one day and gave
another almost imperceptible shake of the head.
I sometimes wonder if she realises
that this stuff is so much more than just stuff.
What stuff have you brought with
you or left behind? Was it worth the effort or do you miss it?
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Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Russell Ward


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20 comments:
I've never been attached to furniture, no favourite armchair or Grannie's antiques, just here today, gone tomorrow IKEA stuff. I was lucky enough to sell the whole lot to the man who bought my house. We sold most of our books and CDs on Ebay and gave the rest to my sister who sold them at a car boot sale. What we brought over to Turkey were personal items that mattered most to us. These tended to be gifts that friends had bought us down the years. They're probably worth less than the cost of transporting them but we didn't care. Interestingly, my old vinyls languished unplayed in the loft for years. I gave them to an old friend who has a massive LP library so I knew they were going to a good home.
I totally understand the 'stuff' debate. I have accumulated a lot of stuff which my poor Mum is storing in her attic. Nothing like being miles away to make you realise how little significance most stuff really has. It's a project for next time I visit!
Oh please tell me you were able to save most of your collection... This was wonderful Russell. Beautifully written.
@Liv - I hope your Mum looks after it all! It's true. You don't need most of it.
Every time we've moved, we've de-cluttered and sold so many things. It gets expensive buying from scratch everytime you resettle but you also learn what to get rid of and just what to hold on to in this nomadic life of ours.
@linda@adventuresinexpatland.com - In the end, I only lost a few records, which I was so grateful for. The covers were ruined and the labels peeled off so I replaced them all with little plastic sleeves and gave the little fellers a good rub down and a bit of a polish. Now they seem okay!
Only issue is that it makes for a bit of a nightmare when I want to find a trusty tune because they all look the bloody same but at least I still have them.
Thanks for your lovely comment. Always much appreciated by me :)
@Jack Scott - Hi Jack, I envy your lack of attachment. I've grown better over the years but it was a bit of a wrench in those early moves, after building up my possessions only to wave goodbye to them for a couple of quid at the car boot sale.
Interestingly enough, as time has passed, I grow more reluctant to purchase large or more permanent pieces of furniture because I fear that one day I might be back at a market trying to sell it all again. I, like you, try to focus on personal items, knick knacks, and local delights. These things will always move (or stay) with us.
I am also very pleased to hear that your vinyls found a good home (we could almost be talking about cats or dogs!). All good stuff!
Completely relate to this. We did carboot sales and sold anything and everything except CDs and cookery books. The CDs were brought over to us in dribs and drabs in friends' suitcases.
As for the cookery books, we went back to England one time, packed them all in two suitcases and then for reasons known to no one, decided to backpack through Eastern Europe for a fortnight on our way back to Turkey. We had a LOT of strange looks as we trudged through streets and hostels with 2 VERY heavy suitcases as well as rucksacks.
There's a great sense of attachment and satisfaction when I look up at the shelf and see our long lines of cookery books now though. Those books have travelled! :)
Great piece! It took me back to the days when I'd just been chucked out of home and sold most of my possessions at a car-boot sale (guitars, acoustic & electric with custom artwork cover and my parents original vinyl Red & Blue Beatles albums, worth a packet I NOW know!)
The one thing that has to come with me overseas is my book collection. The dog-eared pages and notes in the margins are like trusted company where you feel relaxed and comfortable. I couldn't bear to think of them languishing in an attic back home, gathering dust. I like to have those stories and facts to hand. I know, I know, I can hear you shouting "GOOGLE" from here, but it's not the same, is it?
They fill 15 packing boxes and are constantly being added to. I am a removal mans nightmare!
Glad you managed to salvage most of your collection, I guess you'll be storing them in the loft from now on...
@Julia - Wow! And it sounds like you earned the right to have those cookbooks on your shelf. That is impressive commitment and dedication to a cookbook collection.
Fortunately for me, there could be no lugging of records around Europe so they had to be packed into many boxes. But the cost, oh the cost. Makes my hair go curly just thinking about it, especially given the movers priced everything by weight and 1,500 records weigh a fair bit.
Now I buy iTunes all the way. Not as fun as vinyl though :(
@expatlogue - Thanking you kindly for your comments!
I have another dirty little hoarding secret to confess... I also have a tres grand book collection, which has also followed me from the UK to Canada then on to Australia. And, where as I no longer buy records, my collection of books grows by the hour. I am so much trouble if/when we move again... and I'm determined to have the finest library in the land one day so NO books can ever be returned, traded in, lent out permanently. Not good.
We have no loft to speak of so the records are in nearly every cupboard of our house. Much to say, the other half isn't best pleased...
When I first moved to England 20 years ago I brought 15 boxes of Stuff. I have no idea why. Most of it sat unopened against one wall of our tiny flat for several years, then unopened in my in-laws garage for years then I finally just got rid of most of it. While living here I accumulated more Stuff. Then house move after house move and many visits to the charity shops or car boot sales (I made £80 one time!) I finally converted to minimalism! Life is so much lighter not being a hoarder.
I felt terrible reading about your LPs though!! Glad to read most of them were saved.
Hi Michelloui - yes, thank God, most of the records were saved but not without a few missed heartbeats and me wondering what I would find when I opened each mouldy, sodden box.
I have also become more minimalist over time (kind of!). I don't gather as many things around me but prefer to rely on a few choice personal possessions. I think I'm getting there... :)
My book collection was the hardest to leave behind. I donated most of it to oxfam. Several hundred. No idea on what they cost to buy but certainly in the thousands. Got an automated email from the charity about six months later saying they had earned fifty pounds so far from them. Either my taste in literature in unsellable or there was a mistake there.
Other stuff I just gave to friends or threw away.
It was a chance of a fresh start. To be totally minimalistic. I didn't ship anything. Just came with two suitcases.
I do miss some things but I never use half the things I brought with me in those two cases.
Hi David - That's a great approach to moving. Take two bags, give the rest away, and discover that you really didn't need those things.
I've now undertaken three big moves and have found myself ditching more and more, and then buying less and less. I wrote a previous blog post here - http://www.insearchofalifelessordinary.com/2011/07/striving-for-balance.html - which talks a bit about de-cluttering and removing the noise. Six months on and I feel ever more strongly about this approach.Cheers.
After 14 moves in 15 years, I find that "stuff" is still my biggest struggle. I lost everything of my childhood when I was 17, and I think it affected me deeply, making me want to hang on to everything I can. I find I can be sentimental about any object which makes it difficult to part with things, especially since I have two children and I feel like I have collect everything that they might find important at some date down the road. I understand this is a bit crazy, what I think is important won't be what they think is important. But it's still hard. My homes have always been neat and tidy, not overflowing with stuff, but still, it's hard to part with things. My motto for our current relocation is "Collect experiences, not things." I am filthy rich with experiences, I need to remind myself that it's okay to be "poor" with stuff!
Hi Heather - that's a fantastic outlook on life - 'be filthy rich with experiences but poor with stuff'. I'm going to remember that. I mean, it is all just stuff so why do we worry so much. Maybe we fear we'll lose sight of our experiences when this stuff vanishes but I'm sure we'll be okay.
My current 'stuff' dilemma is what to do with the rapidly increasing numbers of digital photos we've collected from our different expat locations. I have literally thousands of files and, whilst this stuff isn't heavy or cumbersome or expensive to move, it means so much to us and I'm terrified of losing any of it either now or during a big move. This is most definitely a work in progress...
The part detaling the records with the memories they evoked and their smell almost moved me to tears. I too, have hung on to old vinyl LPs. Some dating back to my parents' younger days (Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra...) - although I do love the cleansing effect of getting rid of "stuff", I hang on to this gone-by part of my life.
Thanks Peteriina. It was written from the heart, about a time and place that I'd stored away in my memories. I think it's so necessary to hang on to the important things and all too easy to keep decluttering to the point that you have nothing meaningful left. My records and my books are my treasures. I won't be letting go of either if I can help it. Glad to see you'll be doing the same :)
Hi Russell, my partner did the same with his vinyl collection and his 2000 piece cd collection. It kills him to have them in boxes whilst we are in short term rent. Howber HR did spend 3 months burning all his cds onto his pc to ensure if they went to the bottom of the sea when being shipped he knew what to buy all over again in a heart beat! You guys....;-)
Too funny Kerry. That's some effort on his part. Burning all of his CDs onto his PC? I'm impressed. Seriously.
It's hard not having all your things around you when you first move and go into short-term rent. In the end, my vinyl collection spent a lot of months packed away in storage units but they held up fairly well. I'm not looking forward to the next move (if there is one) and having to pack them all up again...
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