It took me 35 years to serve my sentence to the greatest enslaver of my
life, My Things. My servitude began at 21 when I was given a household of
expensive wedding gifts and heavy furniture (I believe the marketing term
is “solid”). Those gifts gave birth to My Things, and I happily slaved
for the monster with more work and more money. My Things were growing
bigger, and I was the proud slave.
In the beginning, the more Things I accumulated, the prouder I was. It
didn’t matter how much work, worry and money I spent on keeping My
Things. First there was the cleaning. Silverware needed to be polished.
Hardwood furniture needed to be oiled. Jewelry needed to be valued,
insured and then locked away. The hand embroidered linen needed to be
hand-washed, the leather couches needed to be dressed, and the Chinese
wool carpets needed to be spot cleaned every month or so. Of course, I had
to insure all My Things, just in case someone else wanted to take on the
burden.
I worked hard to keep My Things secure and in “good condition” for
three decades. Household rules were created to protect My Things. Certain
Things were rarely used; lots of Things were locked away in the “good
rooms” where husbands, children and pets were banned. I paid half a
house to keep My Things in good condition through eight moves. It somehow
didn’t seem to matter that several people, including myself, would be in
worse condition after the move. It was OK to wear people out, but not My
Things.
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All of that madness I might have handled. But when My Things began to
dictate where I could move and when I could afford to move, I began to see
how My Things were taking over. Would I ever give my husband the patience,
love and tolerance I gave My Things? As much as I dearly love my husband,
I doubt that I would agree to wash and massage him regularly so that he
won’t “crack”. I doubt that I would let him dictate the size of the
house I can live in, or where the dog or I can sit.
Yet I continued to give this power to My Things, despite a string of
messages to let go. Some people are pretty tuned into understanding when
they are being given a “message”. My tuning dial was stuck for years,
and even the most horrific experience of being pinned down by My Things in
a small flat did not awaken me. My Things had me hooked.
The nightmare began when I left my ex-husband and four-bedroom house,
and fled to a dollhouse with a kitchenette, small living room and even
smaller bedroom, taking a sea container full of My Things with me. The
moving man tried to tell me that it wouldn’t fit, but I insisted that
all My Things had to be moved into the tiny flat. As he squeezed the last
box into the last unoccupied cubic foot of space, My Things were piled six
feet high throughout the flat. Thankfully there was enough free space for
me to partially open the front door.
That night I ate a delivered pizza, after crawling over My Things to
retrieve my purse. I sat on the floor in the precious square foot of space
that My Things had graciously left me. As I slept curled up on the floor,
I didn’t mind. I had kept My Things.
Over the next six months I lost twenty pounds, as I carefully unpacked,
lifted and moved My Things around every night trying to create a few more
inches of floor space. After that, I moved into a bigger and more
expensive flat at double the rent, just so that I could accommodate My
Things. Over the next six years, I moved My Things seven more times,
costing me more than $20,000 in moving, packing and storage costs.
Then in 1997, my soul mate and I decided to exit the rat race of
Sydney, and live in a motor home to travel and work our way around
Australia. As we prepared to leave Sydney, I failed in my first attempt to
let go of My Things. Well-meaning family and friends convinced me that I
had such beautiful and precious Things, and that I must not abdicate my
duty of ownership. Reluctantly, I placed all My Things into long-term
storage. For the equivalent cost of feeding a large Indian family for
their entire lives, I purchased the ability to lock up all My Things so
that they could not be used, read or enjoyed by anyone for four years. The
total bill of keeping My Things had now skyrocketed to nearly $30,000.
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These costs, of course, do not include the many thousands of dollars I
spent on insurance against theft, fire, natural disaster, willful damage…the
usual fears peddled by the insurance companies. By now I had paid the
original value of My Things several times over, feeding the fear that I
might lose My Things.
My Things were last moved when my sister was dying of pancreatic
cancer. As I unpacked My Things, I thought of my dear sister who also
loved Her Things. I thought of how all Her Things couldn’t help her now,
and how meaningless Her Things had become in the face of death. I
remembered ten beautiful days I had spent in Egypt with my sister, only
two years before she became sick. I realized it had cost me as much to
move My Things from Sydney to Adelaide as it did for that magical
experience in Egypt. I wondered how many wonderful memories had been
sacrificed so that I could keep My Things. I resolved then to choose
living life rather than hoarding My Things.
Now my soul mate and I are preparing to travel again, to experience the
beauty of life and the gift of the present. This time I am letting go of
My Things, with even the computer that I am using to write this story
being sold next week. When Michael and I leave here in two months, we will
retain only what we can carry and use. Everything else will be sold “for
a song” or given away.
I am now more than halfway through selling all My Things, except for
those few practical and small items that I will carry with me. I estimate
that I will have received no more than $6,000 by the time I have sold the
same Things that cost me more than $50,000 to trundle around the country
with me, hide away in storage, and insure.
How do I feel about that? Light, relieved and ecstatic! Since I have
decided to “let go”, all the energy has been positive. The right
people are showing up at the right time, and “buying” My Things for
whatever they can afford. Already I can see how My Things were not used,
but Their Things are needed and loved once again.
A boy hungry to learn about computers will be using this machine. A
single mother will have a coffee table she could not have afforded. A
struggling family will enjoy the luxury of leather couches. A
house-dresser will brighten up houses with the blue and white china. The
elderly people in an aged care home will enjoy the books and paintings of
days gone past. A young couple committed to a house loan can now afford a
nice bedroom suite. A woman battling cancer is already enjoying the solid
pine hutch that fits perfectly into her kitchen and proudly displays her
most precious memories. I had not loved My Things for some time, because
they had become too demanding. My Things were a prison, while Their Things
fill a need.
I was warned that I would receive “nothing or little” for My
Things. Yes, I have lost many thousands of dollars in selling them. But
even winning Lotto couldn’t buy the prize that I have found.
I have finally found freedom from My Things.