Robbin L Marcus
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 15 - Convolution

2/28/2025

4 Comments

 
I realize now, the guilt was baked inside the china. It was always about the damned china. 

My grandparents were “as poor as church mice” (their words) when they got married. My grandmother, motherless, the only child of an Italian immigrant working as a milkman in New York City. My grandfather, born in 1909, the youngest boy of 11 in a family so poor they wore clothes homemade from flour sacks, and burned the coals they’d picked up from along the railroad track.

My grandfather slowly worked his way up from bank teller, hired because he had graduated high school and could play baseball for the bank team, to Vice President of HR by his retirement in the early 1970s. 

It wasn’t until the 50s, when my parents had already met and were courting long distance between Maine and NY, that my grandparents began to experience some quiet affluence in their lives. They’d scrimped and saved and were finally moving to the suburbs to their first (and only) house. My grandmother got to furnish a home in the most modern blonde-wood furniture from top to bottom. My parents became engaged during the time my father was stationed in Japan during the Korean conflict. It must have been an incredibly exciting time for both mother and daughter. 

A sure sign of affluence in those postwar days was to own things, and my grandmother jumped right on that bandwagon. What she wanted most was a set of china. China meant you’d made it – you could afford something so fragile that you were almost afraid to use it. My mother, too, wanted a set of china plates for her wedding. This was going to be expensive. 

My father came to the rescue – near the base where he was stationed in Japan was a china factory. They must have done a brisk business with American GIs. My father, through the mail, sent pattern ideas home to my mother and grandmother, who were able to basically design what they wanted – a plate with a simple gold rim and a pink rose in the middle. This was a far less expensive way to purchase china than going through an American department store and, they had something totally unique. They decided to purchase a set of 12; each one of them would have six settings. They could share when they needed to as my parents planned to settle in the suburbs nearby after their wedding. Back home, they purchased the same silver setting – 8 sets for each household – in a lovely, simple rose pattern to match the plates.

Later on, here was the rub. They had something totally unique. Heaven forbid you should break a plate. 

Growing up, I remember china moving back and forth between our houses when needed. My grandmother almost never entertained, so the bulk was with us. There were serving pieces added over the years. I really had no idea the extent of what was there. 

When I got married, I never got to pick out a china pattern of my own. I was always told that when the time came, I’d have a set of 12. I don’t think they expected me to live 4 hours away from home. My mother quickly came to realize that marrying into a large family I’d need something for entertaining, so she bought me a cheap set of 16 plates I never would have chosen for myself at a registry. They could go in the dishwasher. They were ugly, but I never looked back. 

I told myself that if I’d had the good china, it just would have been a headache – always worrying about my in-laws breaking it or not washing it properly. 

I thought I’d get at least service for 6 when my mother died. But no. My grandmother wouldn’t let go. She “might entertain.” I was routinely serving dinner for 12-15 people, practically monthly, but she “might entertain.” 

By the time that china came into my possession, I’d outgrown the need for it. After my grandfather died, I packed it up in NY and then never unpacked the boxes again, until I moved to Atlanta.

There was something symbolic and deeply ironic about finally unpacking those boxes here into a server I’d had built in for the purpose. I remember sitting on the floor in tears. I live in a casual, modern home with a Japanese dining room. We have potlucks when we do entertain. I no longer own any tablecloths. I like my dishwasher. I was never, ever going to use that china here. 

And so, it sat, weighing more guilt on me every year.  How is it possible for something so simple to be so complex?

Anne told me a while back that she didn’t want it, so last fall I told her I was ready – the time had come for me to get rid of my mother’s china. Amazingly, now that she owns a home, she changed her mind. She’s now the one entertaining 12 – 15 people routinely. She doesn’t have or want a dishwasher. It’s perfect. I hope she uses it until all the plates are chipped or broken. She should enjoy it.

I packed it up. It left last month and I was able to put my old Pfaltzgraff everyday dishes in the server with room to spare. My house and I took a deep breath.
​
Forward.


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Postscript - In the 20 years I owned that china, I never took a single photo of it. 
​

This Meissen china must be what they were interested in copying - the edge of our china is not scalloped and there is a single rose only in the middle. It's the closest I could find on the internet. ​
4 Comments

Cleaning Out the Old, Day 14 - The Last of the Family

2/27/2025

3 Comments

 
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My Dad, me, Dave and my stepmother at Dave's and my wedding in 2007.

My father was my last living connection to my family of origin, until his passing in 2017. Together he and I death cleaned for my mother, my grandmother and my grandfather – each time growing both closer to each other and more efficient in the process. My father was the single witness to each stage of my life until very recently. He helped me move as a young adult and again as a middle-aged woman, twice. He met and knew both of my husbands. When Dave stepped up at the end of my dad’s life and asked all the tough questions in the hospital, I saw a new respect for him form in my father’s eyes. Although not an emotionally close person, my father loved Anne and I both dearly. I could always count on him to be there if I said I needed him.

There was never a doubt in my mind that I’d get the privilege of helping with the closure of his life, as well. Or was there? I think there was in his mind. 

Every time we would go to visit in the last 5 years or so before he died, he’d take me out to the garage and bring out family photo albums from his side of the family. He walked me through each one, identifying himself, his mother, his aunts and uncles, his father. And then he’d ask me to take it home. I had mixed feelings about this, but he was insistent each time.

By the time he passed away, there were only a few things left in the house that I would have liked to have had – a favorite one of his mother’s paintings that hung over the piano while I was growing up, and his few mementos in the safe, which I knew were important to him. 

I’ll never see the painting again. I’m reconciled to that. 

My father – always efficient, always thoughtful, organized in the way engineers are to predict the future. He knew far more than I did. Years ago, he sat me down and told me exactly what his small estate would entail for me. The rest was headed to my stepmother. This was fine. As it should be. 

I always knew where I stood with my dad. 

 The box of mementos, when it arrived 8 years later from the woman with whom I never knew where I stood, was simply a stunning surprise. 

In many ways, this entire cleaning process has been a surprise from beginning to end. Not the least of which is the defensiveness and fear that rises in people’s eyes when I explain what I’m doing. What I want people to understand is that it’s not just about getting rid of things; it’s about learning to value what’s most important to me. It’s about enjoying the possessions I love and letting go of that that no longer serves me. It’s seeing the connections between things I loved, but no longer used, being enjoyed again by my daughter or by friends. It’s been rediscovering the forgotten known and leaving clues for my descendants, so it won’t be forgotten again. 
​
Mostly, it’s been letting go of guilt. 


3 Comments

Cleaning Out the Old, Day 13 - A Whole Lotta Death

2/26/2025

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During the lockdown part of the pandemic, a lot of things happened simultaneously:
  • Dave and I started thinking seriously about death and dying. We had our wills updated. 
  • Our bank branch closed, and we had to buy a fireproof house safe and clean out our safety deposit boxes. 
  • I started agitating for a place to lay our heads after death. What if one of us died during COVID? This became more urgent as the whole world faced the possibility of death. Dave was fine being thrown in the ocean. I was not. So rather than spend eternity up in New York where the family plot is, we bought plots in the green cemetery at Monastery of the Holy Spirit, not far from our home. 
  • I started cleaning, slowly, in multiple places over that year.

I read Marie Kondo again, and, she had a television show on cable for a while about her “sparks joy” cleaning method which was slightly less draconian than the book. Turns out she’d had a kid and life got messy, as it always does. I never could advocate throwing all my clothes in the middle of the floor, but I did pile folded clothes from a dresser and then later, hung clothes from a closet on the bed and neatly go through them. Books did get thrown on the floor and it was great. The one lasting thing I learned is how to fold laundry and put it in drawers so you can see everything you have. My drawers all close now. I have less because I can only have what fits in each drawer. 

More effective for me was the show “Swedish Death Cleaning,” which if you haven’t watched it or read their materials, I strongly advocate. The idea of doing it so your loved ones don’t have to so resonates with me. They break it down so easily and carefully and involve lots of people who are on board. It’s lovely and is applicable to many forms of considering death. It’s the “Queer Eye” of Death – bring tissues.

Turns out a whole lot of thinking about death lead to a rebirth, as well. 

It’s been 10 years since we renovated. I’m redecorating small places that make me happy. Dave says I’m “nesting.” It feels like the next logical part of this new beginning as I move into retirement. 

I continue to let go of work, of board committees, of responsibilities. It’s good to be ready for the next chapter in my heart and in my home.

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Cleaning out the Old, Day 12 - Formation

2/26/2025

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High school friends and I visiting during college in my parent's house. The chair we are all resting on, Grandmother's painting on the wall and the piano all ended up with me.
In my parent’s home, I was conceived. 
After birth, I was cared for, loved beyond measure. That, I never doubted.

Who I became, what I valued, my ethical code, the way “life worked” – all of these things I learned at my mother’s knee. Directly, yes, sometimes. Indirectly, perhaps even more. 

My family kept things. We reused many things. My mother never had a scrap of fabric or yarn that she didn’t keep for a craft project, or the quilt she was going to make someday. We kept bread twist ties and rubber bands. Paper grocery bags. Frugality reigned in our home; it needed to. 

From birth to age 22, when I left that home for good, I learned to save all the things. Letters, school projects, embroidery yarn, whatever. Mementos from childhood. Vinyl record albums, that traveled back and forth to college with me.
​
As a young person on my own, I acquired what I needed to live in a small apartment. It wasn’t much – my first sleeper sofa I came to hate.  A coffee table that now lives in Anne’s house. Lots of hand me down furniture made up the rest.

At 25, I got married. It was an idyllic time, looking back on it all. It crashed to an end soon afterward, when I was 27. From then on, I had to learn to clean out other people’s things. 

First was my mother’s house, and I was so young and emotionally devasted that I let my grandmother take the lead and keep far more than she should have. We got rid of some things that my father wasn’t going to use. I furnished my kitchen from her gourmet baking tools and my house with Aunt Grace’s antiques.

I learned then to only take things I thought I would use. No knickknacks. No art other than my father’s mothers’ paintings. My own boxes from my closet. Pared down, but packed into the little house Ed and I bought a year later. I didn’t know how much my father had stuffed into the attic over the years until he sold that house upon remarriage, when we had to do it again. 

When my grandmother died of a broken heart 7 years after my mother, I helped my grandfather pare down. We started by removing the plastic covers from the living room furniture that had driven us both nuts for years. There may have been a high five involved when we were finished. 

From the sublime to the ridiculously packed cupboards and closets, we pared down a lot. My grandfather wanted to keep most of the things on display in the house, so I knew I’d face those again someday. 

My grandfather survived another 15 years without her and, hid away a lot of things we thought we’d gotten rid of after my dad and I left. 

In the middle of that was my divorce.
​
At 45 years old, just before my grandfather died, I’d finally moved into my own house as a single adult, with the things I wanted to take there. And no more. I knew what I had to face, one more time.

Lessons learned in a life of death cleaning for others:
  • Only keep things you will use. Throw out the scraps. 
  • If you’re still acquiring at my age, you’ve got a problem.
  • If you haven’t worn it for a year, get rid of it by swapping it, selling it, donating it.
  • Move often. For a while it was once every five years. It helped me pare down every time.
  • Have a few items you value and are attached to. Let the rest go.
  • Loss sucks. Grief doesn't stop when you want it to. Try to keep your wits about you when death cleaning for someone else.
  • All of this is easier said than done.
​
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 11 - I am Gen Jones

2/24/2025

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I consider myself part of Generation Jones. The Jonesers are a small subset of the baby boom - our dates run from 1954-1965, which puts our dates overlapping the official end of the Baby Boom and the start of Gen X. The term was coined by American cultural commentator Jonathan Pontell, who argues that the term refers to a full distinct generation born from 1954 to 1965.

Read these qualifications from a Wikipedia article and see what you think, if you’re born in that time span:
Members of Generation Jones were children and teens during Watergate, the oil crisis, and stagflation. Unlike "Leading-Edge Boomers", most of Generation Jones did not grow up with World War II veterans as parents, and, as they reached adulthood, there was no compulsory military service and no defining political cause, as opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War was for the older boomers. Much of their parents' generation was sandwiched between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boomers. Also, by 1955, a majority of U.S. households had at least one television set, and so unlike Leading-Edge Boomers born from 1946 to 1953, many members of Generation Jones (trailing-edge boomers) have never lived in a world without television. Generation Jones were children during the sexual revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and were young adults when HIV/AIDS became a worldwide threat in the 1980s. 

The name "Generation Jones" has several connotations, including a large anonymous generation, a "keeping up with the Joneses" competitiveness and the slang word "jones" or "jonesing", meaning a yearning or craving. Pontell suggests that Jonesers inherited an optimistic outlook as children in the 1960s but were then confronted with a different reality as they entered the workforce during Reaganomics and the shift from a manufacturing economy to a service economy, which ushered in a long period of mass unemployment. Mortgage interest rates increased to above 12 percent in the mid-eighties, making it virtually impossible to buy a house on a single income. De-industrialization arrived in full force in the mid-late 1970s and 1980s; wages would be stagnant for decades, and 401(k)s replaced pensions, leaving them with a certain abiding "jonesing" quality for the more prosperous days of the past.
​

Generation Jones is noted for coming of age after a huge swath of their older siblings in the earlier portion of the Baby Boomer population; thus, many note that there was a paucity of resources and privileges available to them that were seemingly abundant to older Boomers. Therefore, there is a certain level of bitterness and "jonesing" for the level of doting and affluence granted to older Boomers but denied to them.
Boom. 

I found my place.
 
I have never felt like a baby boomer, nor was I a “latch-key” Gen Xer. For me, this definition sums it all up. We watched our older brothers and sisters get it all – sex, drugs and rock and roll with all the fun, and my generation had all the consequences – AIDS, illegalization of LSD, arrests for having small amounts of pot, and then, disco. Yes, we were bitter. 
On television we were constantly bombarded with perfect families and with toys we all should own. We acquired because we were told to, day in day out, by the shining light on the wall that everyone watched together at the same time. Imagine that. 

Our parents worked hard to feed this myth. They bought us what they could. The Vietnam war and, later, Watergate were our dinner companions. All in the Family grew to define many of our homes far better than the Brady Bunch ever did.

In high school, I remember feeling bitter, angry and confused when the officials made it much harder for us to enjoy what our older brothers and sisters had generous access to. After graduating college and grad school with my high-rate student loans (albeit nothing to today’s young people) I was both angry and terrified that I couldn’t get a job or find a place to live that I could afford. Back then it was practically a crime to move in with your parents after graduation. I was thrilled to find a low-paying job in a private school – at least I was working. 

The desire for things, for acquiring, was baked into us as children. As parents, we did no differently. No wonder our homes are chock full. No wonder our children have become minimalists. 

Learning about Generation Jones was what kicked off this whole desire to pare down my belongings. Watching my child and her generation furnish their homes sparsely, but with beautiful high-quality furniture choices from our parent’s mid-century homes has really influenced me to not want to screw that up. 
​
My things leave with me or before me. I get to choose.

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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 10 - From the Box

2/23/2025

1 Comment

 
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In a worn envelope, a photo. 
One I’ve not seen before. 
It’s one of those mandatory holiday/birthday/everyone line up for a photo you all look so nice pictures. 
Three generations of strong women in my grandparent’s yard.

First impression – happiness – it’s a photo of me with long hair! 
Very few of those exist. Very few photos of that time exist.

My mother hated that hair. Couldn’t wait for me to cut it off again.

Look again – 
Me - Gangly. Miserable. Nerdy. Withdrawn. 13.
I want to be anywhere but here. 
Hair should be straight but of course that’s impossible. 
Tired. I look tired. 

My grandmother – Strong. Steely-eyed. In focus. 58. 
Fifity-eight! That is not what 58 looks like today. 
The executive’s wife. Living her role.

My mother - - really tired. Puffy. 38. 
Her coat is too big. That never happens, she’s an expert tailor. 

But wait – look again – 
See that scarf around her neck? It’s hiding the radiation scars. 
My mother had throat cancer. It was not good. She was very ill. That was all I knew.

See my grandmother? She’s propping us both up. Literally. 
Willing us both forward. So strong. A Mack truck of strength.
No wonder her hair is snow white. 

I remember now, she was living with us. Took charge. Fixed the dinners. Made my life a living hell.
My mother needed her. She was there. 

Fierce. 
She was fierce. 

I understand it now. 

I hated her then.

I sit with tears of understanding in my eyes. 

Look again – 
Why did my father keep this picture with him? 
Why was it not in an album stored somewhere in my guest room, with all the rest?
It would have been in his desk, his dresser, somewhere private where even in his second marriage he could look at his “three girls.”

Perhaps having a photo of the time my mother made it through gave him hope.

Maybe he liked my long hair. ​
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 9 - The Unexpected Box

2/20/2025

2 Comments

 
It’s been 4+ years since I’ve spoken to my estranged, conservative Christian stepmother. We tried for 3 years after my father died to get along for his sake, helping her pick a senior place to move to and choose finishes in the being-built apartment. Ultimately, since I was going to hell for being an Episcopalian and Dave was damned for being Jewish, there was simply no way for the relationship to continue without my father as the glue. It broke down during the 2020 election cycle when she emailed my liberal spouse propaganda about a certain candidate literally being the second coming, and he very nicely drew a boundary. She cut us off entirely. We never knew if she managed to move as we were no longer allowed to speak to the representative at the senior development.
 
Out of the blue last month, a box arrived. Dave came in from outside, arms full of box, with a funny look on his face. “This is for you,” he said. The label, in her neat handwriting, was addressed only to me. He set it down on the bench in the foyer and we both stared at it. “It’s not a bomb, is it?” I joked. “No, it’s not ticking,” Dave said. After a minute, we both said, “I guess she’s finally moving.”
 
Pause for a moment to consider that I had just finished months of work cleaning out my ancestor’s stuff in my basement. I was done. Furthermore, I had once expected to be able to choose what of my father’s was coming home with me. Given the relationship, I had long ago let go of having any of his effects other than what he gave me before he passed away. Looking at the unopened box, I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
 
What happened next was odd, as packages invariably move the onto kitchen counter, get opened with a knife, unpacked, and the box goes out to recycling. This box stayed on the foyer bench. I brought a knife over and cut the seal.
 
Sifting through on a first pass, I could see the box was full of my father’s mementos. Photos of my mother, of a life before my stepmother entered it. Photos I had never seen. My father’s wallet and his Navy Insignia pins. His name plate from work. A soldering iron I once expressed interest in having. His father’s pocket watch. No note. Just envelopes full of miscellaneous photos and stuff she didn’t know what to do with anymore. I burst into tears. Dave encouraged me to leave the box there until I was ready to look through it thoroughly. It sat for at least a week. 
 
Then, shock and surprise being over, I sat down to really go through the box. In my father’s wallet, next to all his ID cards of various kinds, was this little card with a scripture from the book of John on it. Given what’s been happening since Inauguration Day, it felt like a sign from heaven. This was the man my father was at his core, before FOX news entered his life. I miss that Dad, very much.

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Being a well-trained daughter, I wrote my stepmother a thank you note. 

I apologize if I've offended anyone here by this writing. It's impossible for me to talk about this experience without revealing my political and religious beliefs. The conflict and crisis in my family would not exist without those differences between us. Please consider this a microcosm of what we are facing in the US and have mercy on us all. Thank you.
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 8 - My Turn

2/19/2025

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During the long drive in the van I found myself coming to some kind of reckoning. How hypocritical was it of me to have spent so much time and energy on the items that had belonged to previous generations, without also considering my own contributions to the clutter in my home?

  • Who was going to clean my stuff out for me someday? 
  • Who would decide if anything was important or not? 
  • Is there anything of my own important enough to be kept and passed on?

On the one hand, I began to understand why my grandmother took me by the hand around her house, showing me things to keep.

On the other, I am determined to challenge my upbringing and not leave all of that for someone else to have to go through. 

Since early August, I have gone through the storage spaces with a vengeance. I’ve cleaned closets, kitchen cabinets and a large shelf section in the mudroom. I’ve reorganized my sewing area. I’ve painted and redecorated as a reward. Boxes and bags of items have been donated to our local charity resale shop. Other things have been gifted to friends and family. I gave the bulk of my old folk-song book collection to the teacher who took my place this summer. (That also went in the van.)

The final frontier is my office. It may look neat on first glance – a little cluttered, perhaps, but don’t look in the corners behind the furniture. Filing cabinets are stuffed full of old professional papers from my music teaching career. Things I kept “in case I ever go back into the classroom;” songs and teaching ideas that seemed great 18 years ago but are significantly outdated today. Old workshop handouts. Old notes about the University program when we did things on paper. 

I was talking to Dave about this the other day – this is my career, here. Is any of it important in the larger scheme of music education in the US? My song collection – 5 volumes, some of it handwritten, some of it re-analyzed to my own standards (which are now used in many Kodály programs in the US), well, that, probably. I can donate that to an archive somewhere when I’m ready. The George Mason University Kodály program incorporation papers I’ve already sent in electronic form to my successor – would she want the folder I created at the time? I need to ask. Workshop handouts I created? I only have a few that are not stored in my computer files at this point.

Workshop handouts from others, songs I picked up here and there – old national conference booklets – my inclination is to toss the entire file cabinet. On the other hand, are all those booklets in my professional organization archive? Is there anything missing that I might contribute? We’ve been running 50 years of conferences; I’ve probably attended 40 of them over the years. 

So many tasks to add to my list - I look around and this stymies me, way more than anything in the basement. After all, who am I to judge my own importance, if indeed I have any? I’ve always been a background player, a worker – 7 times on the national board, never in an executive office (thankfully.) I’ve never published a book, although I’ve written for the journal. I’ve taught all over the country and worked side-by-side with several of the heroes and US founders of our methodology. I can tell you some stories. Sometimes I feel a bit like the Forrest Gump of Kodály teaching. Does any of that matter to anyone but me?

The difficulty of dealing with all of this makes me understand my grandmother a bit more. As the world has moved from physical items to those stored in the cloud, is it any less easy to part with ideas? Photos? Creations? 
​
I see this as “my retirement job.” Which is a cute way of saying I’m putting it off. Since tomorrow is never promised, I need to rethink that idea. 
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My retirement "roast" from the faculty at the George Mason University Kodály program.
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 7 - On the Road to Letting Go

2/18/2025

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Until the day came that she had to learn to ask for help, anyway.
I knew nothing about driving a transit van. I just knew it was more than big enough to fit all the furniture and boxes. In the month between the rental agreement and the day of the big drive, stories of transit van thefts – gangs of thieves who were going to Atlanta hotels and breaking into vans in their parking lots, emptying the contents while the owners slept – started filling my news feed. 

I made arrangements to stay with my friend Bruce, about halfway between Atlanta and Baltimore.  That solved the hotel parking problem. Still, I was worried about the whole trip. 


The day I picked up the van was one of the hottest of the year. Walking around it with the young clerk, I pointed out to her that indeed, this van had been broken into. In multiple places. Doors missing interior locks. Crowbar marks obvious even to me. We stood dripping sweat in the parking lot. She shrugged. “It’s all we’ve got. It would be a week before I can get another one out here.” I reluctantly got behind the wheel after drawing circles and arrows all over that little van-shaped diagram on the paper.
Empty, that van bounced all over the road. I began to seriously question what I was going to do. Why didn’t I just call a company who would take this load up there for me in a moving truck?  Why do I want to do it myself? 
Dave and Chuck, our neighbor, were waiting in the driveway to load the van. When the last chair was tied down, we gathered in the air-conditioned house for some iced tea. Chuck asked, “You going to be ok driving that thing? It’s huge!” “At least it’s only one way,” I replied. Chuck left, Dave and I showered and went out for a nice dinner. Before we left, he took my photo to send to Anne.
​

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In the morning the drive began. It was exhausting. Every gust of wind sent the van into shudders. The automatic shift clunked and felt like it was going to stall between 4th and 5th, so I kept the van in the right lane at about 55 mph, maximum. This was going to be a long day. By the end of the drive, the only thing keeping me going was knowing I didn’t have to be back in the van until I’d had a good night’s sleep.

I pulled into Bruce’s townhouse complex and parked across the street. Wow, that’s odd – I’m parking next to an identical van. Unbelievably, it belonged to Bruce. And we went out to dinner in that, his car being out of town with his wife. OMG. Back bouncing in a high seat again. 

Over a large margarita I poured out my driving difficulties, and Bruce taught me the basics of van handling. What to do in the wind gusts. How to stay in lane without working so hard. How to get past the shift-clunk and get it up to speed. I bought him dinner. 

Driving now significantly smoother, I had 8 road hours to think on day two. Normally I just call people to pass the time. No modern technology here. I put in my ear buds to call Dave and let him know I was on the road. Why hadn’t I thought of this the day before? Road noise vanished. I could think.

I was on my way to retire from my summer university teaching. There was still a lot to consider about letting go, giving my replacements the reins. Mostly, I worried that I would not step back far enough this summer. I wanted them to feel trusted and ready to go. I was teaching a class I had never taught before and I was unready and nervous. I didn’t want to leave on a bad note in any way. But oh, I was ready to leave and not have to do this drive another summer. If I hadn’t already been ready, the van would have taught me that lesson. I laughed. 
I thought about the remaining shelves in the basement full of things. I realized I was not content even with this much gone. More was leaving when I got home in a month and I was fired up to do it. 

The van and I slowly made friends. I got it up to 65 mph before I was mired in rush-hour traffic in Washington DC. I finally arrived at Anne’s for a week of unpacking and helping her move in. I even parallel parked that sucker on the busy city street.
​
“Mom! You’re here!” Anne greeted me with a smile and a huge hug. It was all worth it.
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Cleaning Out the Old, Day 6 - The Dirty Work

2/17/2025

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It never ceases to amaze me how many communication styles exist out there. Clear, straightforward. Sideways. To the point. Rambling. And on and on. 

I think of myself as a clear communicator in writing. 

In speaking, I recognize I’m not always as good at asking for exactly what I want. I qualify. “If you could, I’d appreciate it if you might…” Or “It would be nice if someone did X” when I mean you. Yes, you. Get the idea?

No, actually, they often don’t. Or they deliberately choose not to, like my spouse.  He thinks he’s going to change my communication style. That would be nice. Unlikely, but nice.

Why is it always the most difficult to communicate clearly with the people we love? And what happens when we get caught in the middle between two of them? 

Case in point - my daughter’s boxes in my basement. 

When I moved south, Anne, my daughter, was going off to college. It was tacitly understood by all three of us that we would store the contents of her room she didn’t need in her dorm (or at her dad’s house). What was less clear was for how long. Dave assumed we’d have them here until she graduated in 4 years. Anne assumed we’d keep them indefinitely. I assumed we’d have them at least until she finished grad school. Of course, none of us had voiced any of those assumptions out loud in each other’s presence. 

 Four years went swiftly by. A month or two before graduating with her bachelor’s degree, Anne announced that she was moving to California with her boyfriend. I understood that this meant we’d have the boxes a while longer. It was at this point that Dave started quietly fuming. Remember that formerly clean basement?

A year and a half later, she returned to the east coast to go to grad school (for 3 more years.) “Now?” Dave asked, plaintively. “No.” we both said to him.  It was left to me to explain that Anne said that putting her boxes in a small apartment would mean she couldn’t fit anything else there. Eye roll from Dave.

Every time Anne moved, it seemed she moved to apartments with smaller and smaller closets, less and less storage. She became someone indicative of her generation - buying secondhand items and letting them go each move to keep costs down. Owning very little other than clothing. Good on her.  

This did not take care of the boxes. Or, for that matter, for the furniture we were also keeping for her. “Not now,” she’d say to me, every year, leaving it for me to tell Dave. Again.

This went on through contract jobs and even through her first apartment in Baltimore, where she told us she was going to put down roots. Dave’s patience was at an end. I couldn’t blame him. Mine was, too.

About a year ago Anne indicated that she was starting to look for a house. Things on my end were now rapidly coming to a head. I informed her that the end of free storage was near. I knew full well that Anne did not want “a bunch of junk,” which is likely what was in those boxes she’d hastily thrown things into seventeen years before. I also knew for my own sanity that those boxes needed to leave. I felt squeezed between a rock and a hard place. Even though I had no desire to open the boxes, I realized I’d save myself a lot of grief if I went through them first. 

Lucky me.

Last spring, with Anne’s permission, I began opening everything on the last, untouched shelving unit. I had to make the tough decisions. I threw a lot out. I took photos of other things to inquire first whether I should throw them out. Some boxes were simply going to Baltimore. Her yearbooks from grades K - 12? Not my problem. Papers from elementary school we were both particularly proud of back then? She can scan them and discard. And so on. 
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Once the house was purchased, I started sending photos of the furniture. Some was items we were not using; some was previously claimed by Anne. Approvals were obtained for additional items. I started piling boxes and furniture in the middle of the basement floor. It was quite astonishing what needed to go. I worked on this daily for over a month. ​
Picture
The amassing pile in my dining room, ready to be loaded onto the van.
I came to realize that no matter what went to Baltimore, these three things were a given:
  • Dave would do the happy dance and pack the van for me.
  • Anne would be unhappy about the amount of boxes coming to her, even at less than half of what there were originally.
  • I’d be relieved that this chapter of being squeezed between the two of them was over.  

​I called the truck rental company and secured a transit van.
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    Robbin Marcus


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    An occasional post from me, about stuff that interests me.

    2025 blog series:
    Cleaning Out the Old

    2024 blog selections: Resistance

    ​2023 blog series:
    Slow Forward 
    ​
    2020 blog series:
    1) Processing - Experience, Thought, Action
    ​2) Diving for Light - Shedding 
    light on a dark time
    ​

    2019 blog series: 
    Exploring the Power of Habit 

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