We’re moving. As I contemplate the demands and logistics of
organizing, packing, and notifying friends, family, agencies of our new
address, I wonder if there is an up-side to moving. The answer is, yes.
I haven’t moved often as an adult, but throughout my
teaching career, I did change schools and that isn’t a lot different than a
house move. Packing up the classroom – files, books, teaching materials
necessitates much the same organizing and sorting.
Classroom contents such as textbooks belong to the school,
but every teacher has a truck load of their own materials. My own books,
posters, manipulatives, pictures, etc. go into boxes. Then, with each move, I
face the filing cabinet, go through each file carefully—something I often haven’t
had the time to do in years. Many things can be discarded as obsolete. Files
I’ve used often and know I’ll use again get packed along with the rest. And
often I stumble across gems that elicit an “Oh my, goodness, I’d forgotten all
about this.” Ideas for teaching that I’d used with success in the past and
somehow let fall by the wayside. They’ll be put to good use again in the new
school.
Our last move was from a house to a condo and the process
not much different from that described above. Decisions were made regarding
which pieces of furniture to take and which to sell. The accumulation of
“stuff” in the basement sorted, some of the items to be sold, others to be
donated or junked. Cupboards and closets opened and emptied.
“I didn’t know we had this,” I said (more than once) as I
sifted through boxes from the bottom of the closet.
“If we didn’t know we had it, do you think we can live
without it?” my husband asked.
Settled in our new home, everything unpacked, pictures hung,
I’m determined to keep our belongings minimal, to avoid the “acquiring” mode of
my younger self.
Now as I prepare for this move, I see that I’ve partially
succeeded. We still have too much stuff and much of it will have to go as we
sort and pack. Some of the decisions will be harder than others. Do we really
need those glass plates that were wedding presents, but never used? Do we
really need two sets of dinnerware? We haven’t used the fancy ones more than
once a year. What to do with those afghans Nana knit for us? Ah, we’ll give
them to the grandchildren.
Where, in all this work, is the up-side of moving? Is it in
the flood of memories that come with the finding and handling of items we’ve
had for so many years? Is it in the freedom of parting with items we’ve had for
so many years?
For me, the process of moving has invariably been positive—a
cleansing of sorts. It’s rejuvenating to leave the old behind and move to the
new. It’s liberating to divest oneself of material acquisitions. Of course I’ll
keep the things I hold dear—family antiques, books, special souvenirs of
Mali—but the rest will be downsized once again and I won’t miss any of the
things I leave behind. Perhaps this is a piece of the freedom we all aspire to.
I should move once a year to get rid of some clutter.
ReplyDelete