“How does it feel to have a 24-year-old child?” my sister asked me a couple of weeks ago on the occasion of my daughter’s birthday. “To tell you the truth,” I say, “I’m amazed; I never envisioned it.” But then I never envisioned myself at this age either.
I admit I’ve never spent much time thinking about the future; I’m not one for planning ahead. Staggering student loans and the lack of a retirement fund attest to that. I used to feel guilty about it. Now I’m thinking it doesn’t matter. It’s 2012.
2012; the end of one world age cycle and the start of another wrote the Mayans some 5000 years ago, predicting a great planetary shift that would bring about a quantum leap of consciousness. A time of brotherhood, they promised. An era of harmony, balance and light. Sound too good to be true?
I’m counting on it. Open to any new beginning these days, I cannot wait for the next adventure, cosmically and personally. I am ready for change.
To expedite it, and without any other idea for the immediate future, I head for the basement to see if I can’t sort through the stuff that has stubbornly hung on from lives in Elkins Park, Paris, Recife, Key West, Philadelphia, Washington and New York. It’s been almost 20 years in this house alone. There are things boxed and unboxed, stacked and scattered across the unfinished basement’s cold, concrete floor. A lot of things. It is overwhelming.
“Just make three piles,” I tell myself, gearing up for the job. “Toss Goodwill and Keep.”
There are the costumes; the dayglow boas and carnival masks, silver-striped Indian bloomers and yards of white netting ideal for head wraps, all of which were quite smashing under the black lights we set up for our regular dance nights. There are the fossil fish my Ex wholesaled with the geodes, and the painted ceramic animals I shipped back from Brazil to sell, but which never managed to leave the house. Toss, Goodwill or Keep?
There are the photos of Les Halles, Paris, circa 1973, pictures of the demolition site that would become the Pompidou Center. I am there, young, looking through the rubble for treasures of another time. In back of me, a wall of graffiti reads, Une Seule Solution, La Révolution. Fitting, even then.
Mildewed manila files, stuck together in green jackets, hold catalogs from the jewelry business, radio scripts, programs from the performance art pieces my family never understood, press releases on alternative therapies to sewing machines, and copies of letters I wrote to the school board on the outrage of sugar snacks in the cafeteria and other such grievances.
There’s the child’s chair with its orange toucans bought in Key West when my daughter’s preferred playground was the city cemetery, and a carton of beanie babies that was to make us rich. There is the illustrated book she made for me; I, in the character of an angry cat; and a work of art by a one-of-a-kind Appalachian artist, a friend whom I loved, dead of AIDS in 1988. The painting was too brutally despairing to hang up. Toss, Goodwill or Keep?
It’s hard. Harder than it should be. Is it that I might forget? The past, I remind myself, will weigh you down if you insist on carrying it with you.
Clearly, it’s time to let it go. The future is now, for the Mayans and for me. And when that planetary shift kicks in, full force, I don’t want there to be any resistance on my part. Nor stuff to hold up the works. I want to be ready when that energy moves. Ready, light, buoyant and free.
A soaring and transformative 2012 to all!
December 31, 2011 at 11:37 pm |
My offer still stands…I am available to help you “sort, sift and trash”! It’s my hobby… sort of. And since, at present, I don’t have any more of my own stuff to dispose of, I will gladly take on yours. I am, without a doubt, the most talented in this particular skill in the entire Gold family. (Although it could be a close tie with my anal brother.)
You said it yourself…the past can weigh you down. Which means you can’t soar into 2012 as high as you might like. (OK, that’s a bunch of crap.) In reality, you are just making the place less of a fire hazard.
Happy New Year, cousin Maizie!
Anne
January 3, 2012 at 3:45 pm |
As the Buddhists say, possessions will weigh you down, you are not free until you let me them go. I agree. But I also know that there are some things you just cannot part with. Like my mother’s “Bless this House” plaque (complete with bits of grease dirt from the many dinners she cooked) that hung in our kitchen when we were young.
And my son’s first pastel paintings which I framed. I think your painting from your friend falls into the keeper category. We have to be very hard and let the rest go.
January 3, 2012 at 9:38 pm |
I’ll send over a dumpster…the toss pile should be the largest…
January 5, 2012 at 12:49 am |
Maybe it is a daughter’s birthday. Maybe it is a civilization that just disappeared…..but what ever it is…I got it too. I have been clearing and throwing for weeks now. Lightening my burdens that glue me down on my butt is what I thought I would be curing.
I will let you know by spring, ( when I will probably finish letting go of stuff ), if it gives my butt wings. I sure as hell hope it does. Love you! xo
January 5, 2012 at 3:42 am |
i call the silver stripped bloomers… 🙂
January 6, 2012 at 11:49 pm |
love it
May 13, 2012 at 9:41 am |
Venenleiden…
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