What to do about STUFF.
Did I mention that we are moving? And I don’t just mean to Mexico
for the summer.
Last month we had to pack up our entire house and put most
of our belongings into storage because we are in the process of buying a house.
(I tried to explain to my husband that the summer you are buying a house is
perhaps NOT the ideal summer to take your family abroad for two months… but he disagreed.)
I am also an elementary school teacher. Last week I spent no
less than 18 hours sorting, packing and cleaning up my classroom. It is a
painful ritual that is tolerated only for the sense of relief and closure it
brings.
So I have been swimming in stuff. As I cleared out the
corners and crevices of both my home and work place I was confronted with unfathomable
quantities of, there is no better word for it: crap. Toys, clothes, writing
tools, books, plastic containers, the list goes on. It would have taken me
endless hours to properly sort, repair and catalogue each item, so I ended up
throwing many things away. If it wasn’t “like new,” I trashed it. If I hadn’t
used it in the past six months, I tossed it. If it wasn’t part of a set, it was
headed for the landfill. Single marbles, individual Legos, notebooks with only
two written pages, half-sized pencils, partially used markers and pens, single
socks (dozens of them!), stained shirts, torn stuffed animals and pillows,
puzzles with one piece missing, games with no directions, outdated technology (“Where
did we get that printer anyway?” “What the heck is that power chord for?”),
reams of sheets of paper that would be good if they weren’t faded around the
edges and I had somewhere to put them, the list goes on. I cringed with each
sacrificial item, feeling as if I were appeasing the God of Capitalism and
consumption, and somehow losing my soul in the process.
Every year when I open up my classroom I swear it is going
to be different. Next year I won’t waste so much. Each time we move (about once
every 3 – 5 years) we pledge to buy less and reuse more. My husband, the Carbon
Scientist, is better about this. He lives in his three pairs of pants and four
dress shirts that he washes only when I insist, and could fit all of his
belongings into two boxes if he had to. But when the rat race gets moving and
it’s all I can do to make sure everyone is dressed and fed and at work on time,
conservation goes on the back burner. Convenience rules the day.
As I prepare for Mexico , I find myself stuck in the
same quandary. On the one hand, I know we could get by with only the basics. We
don’t need a thing beyond a few clothes. Patching together the rest and meeting
our needs there would be part of the adventure. On the other I am worried we
won’t have enough or the right stuff. Will they have the right kind of sunscreen?
Should I get bug spray with no deet? Shouldn’t I bring those dorky hats with
the flap down the neck so my kids don’t get cancer? Do we have enough books? We
need more books. What if we want to fly a kite? What if the kids get bored and
drive me nuts? We’ll need more toys. I need another / different pair of shoes.
What if we get sick from the food? Should I bring my own meds? And on and on.
Slowly but surely our one bag has ballooned in to three.
So what does this have to do with carbon?
I feel like this summer we are heading to the source. Beyond
the shelves of Target, before the factories in Honduras
and China ,
all the “crap” originates in, and is destined for, a single element: carbon. The
building block of all living substance. If we can come to understand all of the
things we produce, consume and throw away as more than just clutter and trash,
but as pieces of a larger system connected intimately to the very air we
breathe, perhaps there is hope. Perhaps there will be change.
For now, I find comfort in that extra bottle of SPF 50
paraben-free sunscreen. In August, I hope to feel differently.
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