About a year ago Lynda and I came to the realization that we had to begin decluttering. Maybe that realization came longer ago than that, but it wasn’t strong enough to begin taking actions toward making it happen.
Then, in May of this year, when we had to move a bunch of stuff to make way for workers to do a certain task, we saw the stuff being moved was the fruit of over-accumulation and un-noticed hanging on. De-cluttering was suddenly real. We couldn’t just talk about it and think that no longer accumulating meant we were de-cluttering. We had to actually get rid of stuff.
So, since then, we’ve actually been getting rid of some stuff. Perhaps not fast enough and not enough, but we are actually getting rid of stuff. We put out an old exercise bike for a special trash pick-up this week. It’s a bike that worked but which we never used as we have a better one. Wednesday I took a load of electronic items to the County solid waste center. I also took the old microwave that died back in April. That felt good.
About two weeks ago I started tackling the stamp collection. Or rather, collections, for I have three here. I’ve written before about how stamp collecting was a big part of our growing up. From the time I was 8, for the next ten years barely a day went by that we didn’t work on stamps. Our albums grew large. Dad built stamp boxes out of old TV cabinets from Uncle Kenny’s shop. Before long these overflowed, as did our large Harris Citation albums.
I continued collecting into adulthood, but not in a very organized way. We bought the new stamps as they came out and “sort of” filed them. We bought used stamps from dealers and put them in albums. We saved all stamps that came into the house. We soaked stamps off paper and put them in shoe boxes. In short, we did everything we had done when I was growing up.
We couldn’t get our kids interested in it. I eventually lost interest when the pull of career and other interests came on. Two periods of overseas living, with the stamps in storage in the USA and us wondering if they would survive their boxed exile, helped to lessen the desire. By the mid-1990s the collection was in boxes, in closets or the garage, unseen and untouched.
Then, when Dad died in 1997 we had all the stamps in his house to deal with. I was the one designated by the will to handle the collections, so we packed them into our van and brought them to Arkansas, to rest beside their cousins in other boxes. Then, in 2001, my brother made a visit here and brought his stamp collection with him, asking me to sell it when I sold the others.
We’ve known since then that the collections would some day be sold, but sitting down to organize everything seemed to be so big a job that I didn’t want to devote the time to it. Every now and then I did some internet searches about selling stamps, but that was it as far as actually working on them. The stamps continued to sit. I decided there was no point in trying to interest the grandchildren it stamp collecting.
Fast forward now to May of this year. Stamps were pulled from different places. I realized the time had come to do something. The first task was to bring them all together. I did this, and found the work massive. But slowly I’ve been doing more on it. Over the last two weeks I:
- Separated the catalogues and how-to books from the 1960s out and put them in a separate pile. I think it’s unlikely any dealer or individual who might buy them (if, indeed, I find there’s any market for stamp collections, which I’m questioning).
- Separated out what are really nothing but recyclable materials, such as sheets of cardboard, old envelopes, plastic bins from old cookie boxes used for sorting stamps, etc. I have a pile of these that I’ll get rid of before long.
- Putting all the sheets of new stamps together and then into a mint-sheet notebook or a small box. I got that done last week, realized the notebook was bulging and something else was needed. On Wednesday I came up with a better solution and completed that on Thursday.
- Organizing a stock book of duplicates. I’m not sure why, some years ago, I put this book together. But now it’s over-stuffed and bulging. Yet, it had empty pages. Yesterday I tackled it and found that the bulging was due to a poor distribution of stamps in the book. Yesterday afternoon and evening I put all my time into reworking that book, and found the stamps all fit with only minor bulging—and I still have some empty space in it. I may be able to eliminate that bulging if I spend all my time this evening on it.
So, where does this leave me? I should have all the stamps organized and stored in one place by this time next week, maybe sooner. I’ll discard/place for recycling those things that are no longer needed. I’ll check with one person who I think might want my brother’s collection. Then, I’ll break off to do some other things. I have two books in progress that I’m doing a little on simultaneously, but a little more concentrated effort and I’ll be able to finish and publish them.
It was easy to accumulate over 45 years of adulthood and 43 years of marriage. De-cluttering, which really means de-accumulating, is proving hard. I’m sure I’ll shed a few tears when the stamps leave my possession, not to storage, but for the last time. At that time I’ll tell myself “Better with someone else than put in my coffin with me.”
Wow! I have a small (insignificant by Todd family standards) stamp collection that I haven’t touched since my early 20s. I haven’t added anything to it since my mid teens. I too need to get back to our “purge” There always seems to be something that comes up to push it down to road a little longer – many of those things are legitimate but many are just procrastination. If I could/would complete this purge our garage would be 80%+ empty instead of pull of stuff we will never use again…
Martin: Procrastination is my enemy for sure. Let’s see, they say perfection is the enemy of good. I suspect procrastination is the enemy of done.
I can relate to this! I collected stamps as a child too. I don’t have anything near the collection you do, but mine too resides in the basement. One daughter was interested for about a year — got an album, supplies — now hers is there too. It makes me question many hobbies/collections — it’s hard to know what to do with them after their time has passed. It’s sad to think that they’re worth little to nothing, after they brought so much enjoyment at one time — but that is the way things seem to go. Maybe the enjoyment we got from them at the time *was* the point of it all?
Susan: Yes, hobbies/collections are of importance to the person doing it, but then….? My book collection will be of no interest to anyone. Nor will my many notebooks of genealogy research. I’m slowly working through the books, reading with the intent to donate to the thrift store. But at reading 15 books a year while purchasing 10 new ones I’m not really making a dent in them. As to the notebooks, I’ve spent a little time this year organizing them, but, again, hardly a dent. So much work, so few years ahead.
I recently took many hundreds of stamps (belonging to the wife’s father when he was a hobbyist/dealer in the 1960s) to the RI philatelic group for appraisal. Sold two or three for $10 and was told the rest weren’t worth more than $25-30. It seems only a few old nerdy guys collect stamps anymore and the supply far exceeds their demand. I was told to give them to a kid who might be interested in collecting (if I could find one). An alternative is material for art projects. Some US ones are still legal for postage.
Gary: Yeah, I don’t anticipate getting much for them. I have a few such as the ones you sold. Maybe they’ll get me into the hundreds of dollars. But I suspect I won’t get into the thousands, which is what I’d prefer. I’ve thought of using some for postage, but what with sending maybe 80 items in the mail a year, even that would take a long time to result in any noticeable reduction. After all, how much room do 100 stamps take up?