I love presents. LOVE
presents. I love giving them. I love receiving them. I love wrapping and unwrapping them. I love talking about presents before and after
they’ve been given. I love guessing what
wrapped presents are. I love Christmas
presents, birthday presents, travel presents, just-because presents.
All of it. All of it
except maybe the fact that most of the time, giving and receiving presents =
adding to the accumulation of stuff, both in my life and in someone else’s.
So I spend a lot of time trying to come up with presents for
people that are intangible (food, travel, events). If I can’t come up with something like that,
then I settle for a present that is super useful, but enough of a splurge to
make it special.
Obviously, Christmas is the big kahuna of stuff and present
holidays. With so many people to get
gifts for, how do you stay away from stuff-syndrome? And what do you do with all the stuff you
receive?
This Christmas was an especially hard stuff-Christmas in
some major ways. The biggest of which had
to do with several deaths and moves in both my and Andrew’s family. Andrew’s grandmother died two Christmases ago
and his Great Uncle Stu died this Spring.
With Andrew’s parents moving into a new house, we had been prepared by
Andrew’s folks that we would need to go through some stuff and see if there was
anything we wanted.
Andrew and his mother went through boxes and boxes of
beautiful old things. I mostly left them
to it, but every once in a while would be consulted as to whether we needed
something.
I have a weakness for small animal figurines, especially if
they’re made out of metal or wood. And I
especially like little fat pigs. (Who
knows why? I certainly don’t understand
it, but put me in a room full of stuff and if one item has a pig on it, that’ll
be the only thing I pick up). So when
Andrew’s mother asked me if I wanted two small ceramic piggy banks that used to
belong to Andrew’s great aunts, I had a mental battle.
Normally I would’ve automatically said no - I already have
too many pigs, too many animals, I’m already threatening to turn into one of
those ladies with shelves and shelves of small creatures. But they had belonged to Andrew’s great
aunts. Which despite anything else,
imbued them with the quality of a family treasure. They were the kind of little piggy banks a
child would own, although they had never been smashed, so possibly never used. I could imagine his aunts holding them in
their tiny hands, shaking them, trying to remember how many pennies had been
dropped inside. By owning these little
pigs I could bring his family history into our home, have a connection sitting
there on the shelf.
But they were just little ceramic pigs. Clutter. Stuff. Stuff that would be added to all of our other stuff which we would then add more stuff to until our house was overflowing with cute little pigs and more and more stuff.
I turned them down.
This weekend I brought home a bag of items that my mother
had set aside of my Aunt Mimi’s stuff. I
wasn’t able to join the family when they went through her home so I told my
folks that all I wanted was one or two small meaningful mementos. That I didn’t want stuff.
Me and my Aunt Mimi at her wedding. I was the flower girl. |
When I opened the bag she had packed, I didn’t know what to
expect. I found a couple of pieces of
clothing, a serving plate, and a hand mirror.
Honestly, nothing that I would normally keep. And sitting there, looking at my Aunt Mimi’s
things, I realized that it was okay for me not to keep them.
Because people don’t exist in their stuff.
My Aunt Mimi doesn’t live in her stuff. And owning her stuff wasn’t going to help me
remember her or help me keep her memory alive.
It was really just going to make me unhappy to have more stuff to keep
track of.
My cousin Alex spoke at the start of my Aunt Mimi’s memorial
this weekend and gave the opening prayer.
He spoke about how my Aunt Mimi reminded him of Matthew 6:19-20:
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where
moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal.
But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth
and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal.
Alex talked about how my Aunt Mimi never saved up for
earthly treasures, she didn’t save up for stuff. She never owned a new car, or a nice TV, or a
big house. She saved up to go visit
family and friends, to take trips to see people she loved, and to care for her
dogs.
And I keep thinking about stuff. About how we somehow equate stuff with
success, and after people are gone, we equate stuff with our loved ones. And how weird that is. And how my cousin Alex is right, and my Aunt
Mimi is right, the only stuff worth saving for is the stuff that isn’t stuff,
it’s food for dinners with loved ones, tickets to concerts and plays you’ll
never forget, and most importantly trips to see family and friends. That the only thing really worth spending
money on is whatever you have to in order to create memories with the people
you love.
oh the battle with stuff! I have a packrat mother and she has been battling with stuff for ever. The amount of stuff I have had to go through is unreal. She keeps things under the guise; "it's stuff you (meaning me) might need some day." what!? Problem was that this behavior rubbed of good and proper on me and so I have battled with my own petite case of hording in the past, usually only cured by a move and a lack of packing space. But I have done well to curtail my stuff over the years and am now proud to be a lean unit, with only the things I really need...naw, I still have a lot of stuff.
ReplyDeletegreat post Erin!
I love giving and receiving presents too!
ReplyDelete