This quote popped into my head this morning while I was helping
Gabe find a website on the computer. As
I sat there waiting for the page to load, he climbed up in chair with me and
just sort of hung on like a little monkey in my lap. While he was doing this, I had the clear impression
that he was asking if he could keep me.
Could I stay as his, could he add me to his memories, thus holding onto
me forever. It is so infrequent that he “gets
me all to himself”, I knew that this was one of those moments I could never
forget, nor ever wish to trade. It was
fleeting as he popped off my lap in search of food not a minute later, but that
brief period of time was all ours, it was perfect.
As we wander through life, we spend our time gathering;
clothes, toys, papers and books, memories, and even people. And if you are like me, you tend to hold onto
too much stuff that you just cannot part with.
There is no reason to keep it all, to keep lugging it around from place
to place. You might open up a box once
in a while and take those things out.
Look at them, remember them, consider downsizing, but then you pack them
all back up lovingly to rediscover maybe a few years later. Every so often, you decide to throw some things
away, donate to charity, give to a friend or family member. You feel good about
it at first, but then a year later when you remember that item and wish to see
it again, you spend a day tearing apart your attic searching in vain for
something you stupidly thought was insignificant enough to get rid of. Never again you say.. and you mean it, but
then the cycle repeats.
And to a point, it has to, or we’d all become hoarders. There is a fine line between pack rat and
hoarder, so you work hard to keep yourself on the safe side. After all, you know that you don’t look good
on TV and who wants TLC following you around exploiting your personal stuff to
the world anyway..
So we gather and purge, gather and purge-- it’s just stuff, right? It can
be replaced thanks to Ebay if you truly regret getting rid of that Rubadub
Dolly you loved as a child. Granted it
won’t be the same one you had (I don’t believe anyone else could sharpen those
fingers as well as I could or gnaw on her nose as effectively), but you could
have it again if you absolutely needed to see its matted hair one more time.
But, can you purge people?
Sure I guess you can and I guess there might be enough people in your
life that could be considered “toxic” enough to warrant purging. But your memories are there, you’ve kept
them. No matter how hard you try, you
can’t truly get rid of them (yes, I know Hollywood
says you can, there have been enough movies saying so, but in the real sense
they are always there). And good or bad,
I guess they helped make up who you have become today.
And unlike tangible things, you can’t sell them for money,
pass off onto another family member (although some would argue you can) or truck
them off to the green center for recycling--
Like it or not, you are in for the long haul. And like anything you cannot change, you
learn to adapt, to work with.
I had a horribly ugly carpet in my apartment I shared with
Kristine in Wilton. It was a horrible Avocado color (think circa
1975 toilet/fridge/oven combo) and nothing I owned was going to match it or
mute it in any way. So, as I knew that
the carpet was going nowhere fast, my
mother went out and found a plaid comforter that was had blues and yellows
predominantly in the pattern. And oddly
enough, and where the colors intersected, it actually made a light avocado
hue. Surprisingly, it worked and that
carpet didn’t look so out of place anymore, it actually complemented my
comforter and tied it all together.
What I am getting at is that sometimes you might not want a
person or memory in your physical world anymore, but getting rid of the memory of them
is just as impossible as ripping up a carpet in a rental apartment. So, rather than sit and be miserable; find a
way to make it work and not stand out so much.
Keeping a person or memory isn’t a bad thing if you know how
to make it complement your life. I have
a number of friends moving through a field of indecision, sorrow and
confusion-- As I think about them, I
realize that many more of us might be feeling the same, be it with a loved one,
a friend, a colleague, etc. Allowing the ghost of a memory or time before
to remain can’t hurt you if you don’t allow it the power to do so. Take from it what you need and put the rest
in that box in your attic to bring back out once and in a while to consider.
Awesome my friend <3
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