• CREATE AN ACCOUNT
  • LOG.IN
  • CONTENTS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • ARCHIVE
  • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US

  • Home
  • News
    • News Main Page
    • NewsFlash
  • A&E
    • A&E Main Page
    • Movie Times
    • TV Listings
    • A&E Blog
    • Art Galleries
    • Best Bets
  • Opinion
    • Opinion Main Page
    • Columns
    • Voices
    • Letters
    • In Memoriam
    • Obituaries
  • Events
    • Today
    • Search
    • Submit
    • Best Bets
  • Living
    • Living Main Page
    • Outdoors
    • Travel
    • Sports
    • Peeps
  • Food & Drink
    • Food & Drink Main Page
    • All Restaurants
    • Delivery
    • All Bars & Clubs
    • Drink Specials
    • Open Now
  • Outdoors
    • Outdoors Main Page
    • Outside Insider
    • Spotlight On
    • Features
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
    • Jobs
    • Autos
  • Personals
  • Obits

    The Stuff Slough

    Sorting and Sifting the Souvenirs of Seven Decades


    Wednesday, September 17, 2008
    By Starshine Roshell (Contact)
    Article Tools
    Print friendly
    E-mail story
    Tip Us Off
    iPod friendly
    Comments
    Bookmark This
    del.icio.us. del.icio.us.
    Digg! Digg!
    furl furl
    google google
    newsvine newsvine
    reddit reddit
    technorati technorati
    Facebook Facebook
    Yahoo! My Web 2.0 Yahoo!

    It was cancer, and it all happened faster than we expected. Not 24 hours after my mother-in-law’s ashes were scattered at sea, I found myself sitting on her bed, staring blankly into her bedroom closet, with a trash bin beside me.

    Nancy was a generous woman who spent her whole life giving. It wasn’t until we peeked into her long-shut cabinets and wrestled open her overstuffed drawers that we realized how much receiving she had done. And collecting. And clipping. And buying. And generally, alarmingly, amassing.

    Starshine Roshell

    She just had way too much stuff. More than she could have fully enjoyed in any lifetime, even one that hadn’t been cut short at age 70. And it fell to us—her grieving sons and daughters-in-law—to “go through her things,” sorting and sifting the souvenirs of her seven decades.

    Knitting needles and antique hats. Greeting cards and hotel soaps. Place mats and curling irons.

    Illness wrests control from a human being, from a family, and hard work lets us feel like we’re reclaiming it. Death brings emotional chaos; resolute tidiness restores order.

    We trudged through as many emotions as we did half-empty bottles of nail polish: The shame of poking around in someone’s private stashes. The frustration of not knowing what this key opens, or what to do with Great Aunt Catherine’s geodes. The guilt from allowing practical considerations to squelch sentiment—from giving away, or throwing away, things that were surely precious to their owner, but had no special meaning to those of us on the Hefty Bag Brigade.

    I wondered why the family was in such a hurry to clear her clutter. Couldn’t it wait, for goodness’ sake? The woman was barely gone and here we were disposing of evidence that she existed.

    The work was therapeutic, though. Illness wrests control from a human being, from a family, and hard work lets us feel like we’re reclaiming it. Death brings emotional chaos; resolute tidiness restores order. So in the unfathomable absence of an always-present mother, we focused on indisputable tangibles: Her lipstick. Her teacup. Her shoes.

    From beneath teetering sweater piles, we exhumed cheering memories, fingering the fancy scarves she wore and sniffing the candles she set out last Thanksgiving.

    But much of what we unearthed was unsettling. Every tote bag and trunk held a disheartening reminder of her unmet goals and dreams: Gifts—some of them wrapped—that never got given. Recipes that never got made. A pair of jazz shoes without a single scuff. An astonishing inventory of unopened wrinkle creams. A library of how-to books whose objectives, from simple craft projects to ambitious entrepreneurship, proved ever out of her reach.

    What bothered me was not that the projects were unfinished. It was that they were never really started. I’m haunted by a series of small jewelry boxes scattered throughout the house, each cradling a tiny silver charm representing her favorite things: the Eiffel Tower, a sewing machine, a cable car… And each had a price tag still attached. Never linked to the nearly bare charm bracelet curled up in yet another buried box. Never worn.

    Nancy wouldn’t have loved us trodding through her tucked-away stuff. Nor, frankly, would she have wanted strangers to read about it. But she’d have been glad at what it taught me: That you can’t hold life in your hands. You can’t wear it, stockpile it, or cram it into cubbies for safe keeping. You can’t divvy it up into boxes marked “Garbage,” “Goodwill,” and “Grandkids.” And you can’t measure it by the number of dumpsters it takes to dismantle.

    Life doesn’t live in the things that we have. It takes place in the things that we do: coming and going, building and bonding, laughing and even grieving.

    Nancy cherished her tchotchkes, to be sure. But she’d have traded them all for another chance to scuff those dance shoes.

    Related Links

    • More Starshine columns at independent.com

    For more, visit StarshineRoshell.com

    Comments

    Discussion Guidelines

    "you can’t hold life in your hands. You can’t wear it, stockpile it, or cram it into cubbies for safe keeping. You can’t divvy it up into boxes marked “Garbage,” “Goodwill,” and “Grandkids.” And you can’t measure it by the number of dumpsters it takes to dismantle.

    Life doesn’t live in the things that we have. It takes place in the things that we do: coming and going, building and bonding, laughing and even grieving."

    I know this all too well--as my mother died July 28th.
    I can relate to this entire article because we (My father, sister and I) have had to go through the same process.

    For whatever it's worth, I've found that accepting the fact that no material thing in this life can possibly connect my to her in any way has been very liberating. She is in another dimension that cannot be connected to in THIS life.

    Material things can be taken from you, but the memories one leaves and the hope of being reunited with loved ones in the afterlife cannot be taken from you.

    billclausen (anonymous profile)
    September 18, 2008 at 4:16 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    Starshine - Thanks for sharing your experience, thoughts and reflections with us - in your wonderfully articulate and sensitive way - and for touching upon and exploring issues, emotions and concerns many of us have or soon will have to deal with.

    Justice (anonymous profile)
    September 18, 2008 at 9:06 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    Post a comment

    Username:
    Password: (Forgotten your password?)

    Comment:

    EVENT CALENDAR

    Previous Month | Next Month

    Today's Events Best Bets Submit an Event

    Local Weather

    Currently:
    Clear Sky
    Temperature:
    64.9°
    Wind:
    6 SE

    Surf Report
    • Specials
    • InPrint
    • Top Emails
    • Blue Green Guide 2008
    • Summer Camp Guide 2008
    • Wedding Guide 2008
    • SBIFF 2008 All Access
    • 2008 Election Coverage
    • Best of Reader's Poll 2007
    • Calendar of Fundraisers
    • Local Bands
    • Kid's Mother's Day Issue
    • Made in Santa Barbara
    • Tea Fire 2008
    • The Brief but Violent Life of the Tea Fire
    • Nonprofit Steps in When County Stops Sea Sampling
    • Homeless to Move Along
    • Anti-Gang Action in Santa Barbara
    • Little Dragon Makes Big Return to Santa Barbara
    • Westmont Soccer Scores Big Despite Being Burned Out of House and Home
    1. Plumber Fills Firefighters’ Tanks Using Undocumented Hookup
    2. Major Losses for Westmont Faculty Housing
    3. Tea Fire Cause Is Determined
    4. Tea Fire Update
    5. Tea Fire Appears Close to an End
    6. Sycamore Canyon Fire Deja Vu?
    • CREATE AN ACCOUNT
    • LOG.IN
    • CONTENTS
    • CLASSIFIEDS
    • ARCHIVE
    • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US
    Google
     
    Independent.com Web
    Copyright ©2008 Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. Reproduction of material from any Independent.com pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. If you believe an Independent.com user or any material appearing on Independent.com is copyrighted material used without proper permission, please click here.
    This is our Privacy Policy.