Thursday, July 25, 2024

Juggling


            It’s been quite a week (or two). First, we are not moving to Ann Arbor. The short version of what happened is that when we had our final walk-through prior to closing, we noticed some serious problems that we were prevented from seeing before. (I’ll skip the details, but they include some building-wide plumbing problems and the fact that our car does not fit in the garage.) So, we said, No deal. We had driven a carload of mainly kitchen stuff down to put in our new place, and then we drove it back home. So it goes.

 

            But as I write this, we have not gotten back any of the full purchase price that we wired down in anticipation of closing. No, not the Earnest Money – the full price, about half of my life savings. The owners say they want to keep much of it in escrow so that if the unit sells for less than we were going to pay, we would make up the difference – not a great motivator for them to take to negotiations! We also heard that the money should stay there in case they wanted to sue me for breach of contract. We have an attorney trying to get our money back, but nothing has happened yet.

 

            When I was in high school I learned to juggle. I thought maybe it would help me with sports, so I sent away for instructions and some small rubber balls. After a few weeks I was capable of juggling 3 of them. I tried to move up to 5, but I could not master that many.

 

      Well, now I’m struggling to juggle all 5:

 

1.     See above.

 

2.     Our Bark House is on the market. We’ve had some realtors come by for a look, a couple people lured in by the sign, and one scheduled showing. This leaves us hanging – what do we do if someone makes a good offer? Where will we go to live? Meanwhile, we are working extra hard to get the woods and gardens looking good, cobwebs off the house and garage, beach raked, dust off the molding and out of the corners.

 

3.     With the abandonment of our Ann Arbor deal, we are again hitting Zillow and Realtor on my laptop over our second cup of coffee. Where should we look? Ann Arbor is cool, but expensive, and it’s much more crowded than it was when I lived there a half-century ago. We love it up here in Northern Michigan, and we are looking at places in or near Traverse City – closer to our doctors and the medical facilities for Kim’s chemo and other maintenance. And possible emergencies. But we also see real advantages to living in Southeast Michigan, near family, for love and support. Scott and Shariee were there for us giving physical, logistical and emotional support during the Ann Arbor collapse – they fed and housed us, and offered to do it whenever we needed. So, we are looking in both places.

 

4.     Then we found a place that we really like in Traverse City, and after a visit for an hour or so, we went home and made an offer. The owner responded with a counter-offer, and we found a way to bridge the gap through their furniture. We were ecstatic, even though it stretched a little beyond our budget. But then we realized that without our money held in escrow by an Ann Arbor title company, we could not close on the condo, so we did not sign the Buy and Sell Agreement. Unless our attorney can get our money sent back to our account in the next day or two, we will just have to let it go.

 

5.     Another big juggling ball in the air, and starting to come down, is our health. We are dealing with some mobility issues, and though we are pretty much able to laugh at it, some cognitive issues involving short-term memory. I have this naïve hope that we can find the right doctor, pill, diet, or physical therapy, and somehow bounce back to the health we enjoyed ten years ago. My guess, however, is that we are pretty much on a one-way street here, a reality that impacts where we choose to live next.

 

            Getting the balls in the air is not difficult. Dealing with them as they come back down is another story. I remember from my juggling instruction manual that the key is to make a good toss. This, for example, is what we did not do with the Ann Arbor non-purchase. Our friend Beth suggested some pills, no doubt derived from mushrooms, to help deal with stress. It will soon be time to re-order.

 

 

  

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Stroke

  I wrote this piece several years ago – I’m not sure when. My mother was dying from a stroke, my brothers and sister were there with me, it appears, though to be honest, I can’t remember the scene – though it’s unlikely that I made it all up. I do remember seeing an episode on a television series where one of the characters – I think it was a nurse – was having a stroke, and we heard her voice saying what she was thinking.

 

Stroke

 

What happened to me? What is happening? The ring of faces, this unfamiliar room . . .. Voices. Can’t make out the words. A few words – “Jackie” – that’s me. That was me. And “love.” Yes.

 

Candy trying not to cry. Her reassuring voice – the one she uses with her kids. Reassuring me – of what? That I’m going to be OK? That she’s going to be OK? No, only that she’s here. Which means I’m still here.

 

That voice is Bobby. That face his – seriously and manly, brimming with love. But I can’t answer. These ugly sounds grunting from me. They pretend they understand. Bob here, arranging all this. He hates hospitals – no need to explain that to me. He’s kissing my forehead, stroking my hair. What must it look like? Glad there are no mirrors here.

 

Ken’s sweet face so close to mine. Calling me Sweetie Pie. He’s the real sweetie. Those intense Norwegian eyes. Ken is with me, darling Ken. I’m not alone. Except I can’t reach out with my voice. To tell them how I feel. How do I feel? Afraid. Of leaving these dear people. My family. And the missing ones. John. Steve. Kim – her father with cancer. Afraid. But I need to rest. Let me struggle through this. I know I can. Then rest. Struggle through – then rest. You all seem so far away.

 

Like David. Standing back. Where is he? Meeting my gaze. Come closer. Can’t read you behind that beard, those glasses. Your voice a comfort. Your words unclear. You take my hand. At last. Kiss my forehead. Love me.

 

What happened to me? Is happening. Will . . ..

Thursday, July 11, 2024

The Armadillo Club


            Early in my teaching career, maybe sometime in the 80s, I found myself faculty sponsor of Ann Arbor Huron High School’s Armadillo Club. I took the post of sponsor because I was asked by a student I liked. It seemed like a good idea at the time.

 

            As you may know, we have no native population of armadillos in Michigan. Nevertheless, we formed a club centered on these remarkable creatures – unknown to Michiganders but familiar as roadkill to Floridians. This random irrelevance was at the core of the club.

 

            Still, we did learn some interesting trivia about armadillos. For example, if an armadillo wanted to cross a river, it would hold its breath and walk across the river bottom. We also learned that armadillos were useful in leprosy research – which sounds pretty cool – though a recent google check simply said that contact with armadillos can cause leprosy.

 

            The primary goal of the Armadillo Club was to be the biggest club in the school, beating out the Ski Club. We succeeded, mainly by including, in our charter, that everyone in the school was a member unless they petitioned to be removed – which, for some reason, few did. One of the main appeals of our club was the photo taken for the yearbook. It was a warm sunny spring day, and when the announcement was made over the P.A. that it was time for the photo to be taken outside on the hill, the school virtually emptied. Success!

 

            A secondary, though unstated, goal was to make fun of more traditional school clubs, an expression of the counterculture movement at the time. Success!

 

            Kim joined in the cause by designing the Armadillo Club logo, and we worked out a motto: “Tough on the outside, tender on the inside.” We printed up some stationery. 

 



 I have adopted the motto as my own.

 

            I don’t want to take all the credit for the success of the Armadillo Club. The real organizing force was Sarah Dunning, a senior in my Humanities class and the daughter of my poetry professor at the University of Michigan. It was Sarah who got a U-M professor to give a talk to the club on armadillos. It was Sarah who somehow got hold of a video-tape (remember those?) of an armadillo race held somewhere in Texas. And Sarah organized a game called “Hugadillo” where participants were given the name of a person they were to hug, and if the hug were successful, the hugger was given the target of the hugged, gradually reducing the field to an eventual winner. (The game was based on a nasty game, perhaps called Murder or Assassination, but we thought the use of hugs made it OK. Probably not . . ..)

 

            When Sarah graduated, the Armadillo Club pretty much ended. The following spring one of my colleagues made a comment about how “apathetic” seniors were if they had been accepted to college. I worked (briefly) with a few seniors to form the Apathy Club. We had one rule: if you attended an Apathy Club meeting, you were kicked out of the club. The yearbook picture of the club was, I believe, an empty room. I haven't bothered to check . . ..

Thursday, July 4, 2024

The Wisdom Package

             This week’s post is a poem by Hayden Saunier that I found on the back cover of The Sun magazine. It seems appropriate to our age and to what’s going on in the news.

            

            The Wisdom Package

 

I ask the youngish eye doctor why my eyes itch

and burn and why new floaty bits

of paramecium-shaped debris swim

 

through my view each day, and he tells me

enthusiastically that this comes absolutely free

with the new wisdom package – an honor

 

I have been awarded. I blink. And, he adds,

the wisdom package comes with lots of other

free stuff too, but just like life, some people

 

will get more than others. I guess he’s in his thirties,

forties tops, and I am falling in love with him

for his gentle way of reminding me I’m getting old

 

and that it’s a privilege. I’ve passed

the air-puff test, seen my retinal scans, which look

like the red-orange surface of the sun, each

 

with its pinprick dot of optic nerve – thin thread

connecting the eye to the dark, ornate theater

of the brain, where the picture shows of our lives play.

 

I laugh and ask him about knees and knuckles,

liver spots and forgetfulness, and to each complaint

he answers: Wisdom! Wisdom! Wisdom!

 

We do not know one another’s stories, how many

each of us has lost, the who or how of it,

from war, disease, or fate’s unfairness doling out

 

more death to some than others. He and I give

each other’s hand a quick squeeze, let go,

and get back to the business of my sight.

 

He swings a heavy black heart suspended

from a giant arm in front of me,

clicks through pairs of lenses

 

with the careful ticks of a slowing clock.

I blink and answer him each time: clearer,

better, thank you, yes, much clearer now.

 

            The poem does not really explain what is meant by “wisdom.” I’m not at all sure what wisdom is, but I am certain that I don’t have it. Unless – that’s what wisdom is . . ..

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Conversation


            As you know, Kim and I enjoy having garage sales – especially now that we are downsizing sometime within the next few months. We enjoy finding new homes for our stuff, and we enjoy making a little money (not much in a garage sale), and we enjoy meeting people, especially after a winter of relative isolation. We enjoy conversation.

 

            I recently noticed, because Kim pointed it out to me, that I frequently repeat myself in talking to potential customers. My go-to opener is to ask where they are from, which frequently gets two answers, summer and winter. Then I find a way to ask them what they do for a living, or, perhaps, what they did before they retired. This allows me to say that I taught high school for thirty-some years – something they never ask about because they are remarkably uncurious about my life. Kim has heard most of my jokes and stories several times. It’s become my schtick. This is something old people do.

 

            Sometimes clothing suggests an opening. When I worked at Starbucks we were told to try to connect with our guests (a.k.a. customers), so if someone were wearing an Ohio State hat or a shirt with a clever remark on it, I had my way in. Likewise, if they were carrying a book or magazine – or anything at all. This talent transferred to our garage sales. Often the shirts reflected where the customer guest worked, making the conversation easy to open.

 

            I occasionally walk around with the guests, partly to prevent shoplifting, which is a frequent occurrence. In doing that I would comment on some of the items we were selling. The carton for Two Dogs beer would lead to my retelling of the Two Dogs joke. (“Why do you ask?”) Or I’d go to the framed print that asks us to detect how many things are wrong in the picture, such as the dog with a beaver tale. I’d point out that my wife is the artist who did much of the work they see – the photographs, collages, bird nests, etc. I’d also point out that there are no prices on anything, that my wife knows the prices, and if they have any questions, just ask me and I’ll ask her (ha-ha).

 

            Most of our guests notice our birdhouse, located right outside of the garage, and I point out that it is a replica of our house, including the bark siding. This often gets them curious, and I have a convenient piece of the siding to show them, which sometimes leads to a walk up to the house. If Kim is with them and connects with them, and if they are curious, they may get a brief peek into the house. We’ve done this a bit more often now that the house will be going up for sale.

 

            “Up for sale! How can you sell this place right here on Torch Lake?!” We’ve asked ourselves the same question, but we are dealing with our age and the workload our home requires, so we are moving to Ann Arbor. Many seem puzzled about why we would leave paradise to move to a city. I explain about the eight months of isolation, and I tell my usual joke that when we feel isolated, we order something from Amazon so the UPS guy will come to our house (ha-ha). We are looking forward to having more conversations, hopefully less rehearsed than my garage sale ventures, with folks in our new Ann Arbor community.

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Surviving Act IV

             I wrote “Surviving Act IV” twenty-five years ago, following my 35th college reunion. Now that we are clearly in Act V (see below), it might be a good time for us to look back a bit. Apologies to non-English majors, for all the Shakespeare, and apologies to my non-classmate readers, for my making it so Amherst-centric.

 

Surviving Act IV

 

A personal reflection on retirements and reunions:

“Either you’re in transition or you’re in denial.”

 

According to my high school students, there are six stages in a person’s life: Before you get your driver’s license, 16, 18, 21, Senility, and Death. They showed little doubt where their teachers fell in the continuum.

 

Of course, there are other theories: Jung’s idea of the Athlete, the Warrior, the Statesman, and the final more Spiritual stage—the one that seemed so elusive as I tried to stay in shape, learn how to teach Hamlet to high school seniors, and negotiate the roles of husband and father. And others have their theories, from Erik Erikson to Gail Sheehy.

 

As I looked over the program on my way to my 35th reunion at Amherst, I could see that the stage of retirement (from Latin for “drawing back”) was a recurrent theme. Topics included “Surviving Retirement—An Insider’s View,” “Managing Life Transitions in Your 50s and 60s” and “When I Retire, Will I Go Crazy? (Preventing the King Lear Effect).” And a related threat: “Memories Are Made of This: How Memories Are Formed, Why We Forget, and How Aging and Disease Affect Our Ability to Form Memories.” Also, “New Directions in Medicine and How They Affect the Mature Population.” I decided not to attend “What We Should Think About Euthanasia?” sponsored by a very young-seeming class of ’79.

 

All of which encouraged me to develop my own theory, one based on the five acts of Shakespearean tragedy, keyed especially to Hamlet, a play I had taught for 32 years. I call it the Act IV Syndrome. Our lives are divided into five acts, each approximately 15 years in length. In Act I, we grow to our adult bodies, and we are introduced to a central conflict: the difficulty of living an engaged life. The Ghost introduces Hamlet to this when, encouraging him to get revenge, he says, “Oh, grow up!” Then in Act II, ages 16-30, we complete our formal education, launch our career and family. This coincides with Hamlet’s pretending to be insane, an apt parallel if we can remember what it was like to be in our 20s.

 

We intensify our commitments to career and family in Act III, ages 31-45. This is when our young kids sap all our time and energy while we are trying to devote the same to climbing some professional ladder, and making money. It’s when our spouse wonders what happened to the charming person he or she married, and when Hamlet puts on “the play within a play,” becoming fully immersed in the deceptions of the world. He also tells off his mother and kills the wrong man by mistake. It’s a time of achievement and energy—much of it misdirected.

 

Let’s wait a moment on Act IV. Act V—ages 61-75 (and beyond, given our extended life expectancies) is when we acknowledge our mortality, accept our fate, and take on an identity that is both noble and humble. This is Hamlet in the Graveyard (“Imperious Caesar, dead and turned to clay,/ Might stop a hole to keep the wind away.”) and later, “There’s a divinity that shapes our ends/  Rough-hew them how we will.” Our rough-hewing days are over.

 

Act IV? That’s the transition to Act V—the difficult letting go of what seemed so important to us in Act III. It’s where Hamlet allows himself to be sent into exile, and where his girlfriend floats off into suicide. It’s a time of turmoil—yes, ages 46-60—when people divorce and remarry, when we start to question the career that seemed so important to us. It’s a time of reflection—not the tranquil reflection of Act V, but the soul wrenching re-evaluation of core values and whether we are living up to them. It’s frequently a short act in the play, fortunately, and it can be awkward, even badly written, but it is essential on the path to Act V.

 

The reordering of priorities comes in part from the awareness that we have a finite time on earth. The illness or death of parents creates this awareness, as do, for many, our own illnesses—cancer, heart attacks, brain aneurysms, alcoholism, and staring dumbfounded at the jars of pills we know we will be taking for the rest of our lives. It also springs from an awareness that we don’t have the energy/waistline/hair/memory that we used to have, or that we no longer have the agility at work that seems more valued than the wisdom we think we have accumulated.

 

With this theory in mind, I approached my ’64 classmates and people from ’59, back for their 40th. The usual response to my theory was, “That’s a good theory—but it doesn’t quite apply to me.” That didn’t deter me because I knew that Shakespeare didn’t divide his plays into acts. And besides, what can one expect from Amherst alums if not critical evaluation?

 

Few really wanted to talk about “retirement” or to call it by that name. A classmate admits, “I’m scornful of people who say they are retired.” My attitude toward my own recent retirement from high school teaching generated my own self-scorn because it meant a lack of identity. Once I was a teacher, and now I am not. At a session sponsored by the class of ’59, someone made the point that we are often identified by how we answer the question, “What do you do?” and the answer is usually in terms of occupation—attorney, medical researcher, investment banker, or the like. Not very often is the answer “I’m a father” or “I drink breakfast coffee and study the birds at the feeder.” Or even “I attend meetings, talk on the telephone, and ride on airplanes.” No, we take identity from our productive jobs. And when I retired from teaching, I often felt more unemployed than retired. But now, when asked on my 1040 or my mortgage application or at my Amherst reunion, I can say I’m a writer, and I feel I have a center. It’s an illusion, of course. Robert Frost claimed on his 1040 that he was a “farmer.”

 

Retirement can be frightening. A recently retired classmate quoted a friend who “thought he needed to experience some career silence.” The silence was painful, largely because of the way he experienced time. He works out longer and is reading the Bible and works in philosophy and religion, but he finds his day consumed by errands and looking after his six-year-old son. It’s enjoyable, but not, at the end of the day, enough. In fact, recently retired John Cooper (’64) is writing a book dealing with the fears and difficulties of retirement, especially the psychological ones. The title: Surviving Retirement, and the first chapter, “Not Necessarily Nirvana.” Just so.

 

The trick, as many of my classmates in their mid-50s have found, is not to retire but simply to change. A writer of mysteries is starting a publishing company. Several people are leaving large business or law firms where they feel overwhelmed and underappreciated to start their own smaller and more humane companies. Some are making more radical career changes, from dentistry to financial consulting, or from the regularities of teaching to the uncertainties of writing. And in some ways the most difficult of all—some stay in the same roles, high school teacher or newspaper editor, and struggle to make the adjustments needed to remain fresh.

 

Others are creating change by starting new families. A classmate, divorced after a 30-year marriage, is building a new house for himself. Another, married a few years ago, showed up with twin daughters the age of my granddaughter—a change that meant anything but retirement. Psychiatrist Ben Oko (’59) saw the new family in a different light—the change in marital relationship that resulted from a change in job. If you are home more often with your spouse, you are forced into increased discussion and negotiation: a new sense of family. My wife responded to my retirement and consequent working at home by taking a part-time job outside our home. Go figure.

 

Many in the class of ’59 mentioned a need to step back, “to make proper use of our lives.” Some found ways to reduce hours, working part time while devoting more time to philanthropic work, to family and friends, or to building a new home. “The secret,” one explained, “is not to retire from something, but to retire to something.” We need a project, a vision, to provide the focus that generates energy.

 

On Saturday night of Reunion Weekend I retired (drew back) early to my room on the third floor of Mayo-Smith. There, as the noise from the younger parties started to fade, I thought about the word “transition.” I remembered from a Lamaze class ages ago that transition was the most difficult, the most painful part of birth. And though I took some comfort in saying that I was not really “retired” but “a writer,” I knew about the pain—and not just the pain of being elected Class Secretary earlier that evening. Transitions are difficult in part because of the ambiguity: the need to let go, and the need to stay engaged.

 

It was on the way home from Amherst that I saw a way out of the pain. The solution is in the reunion itself. We stay engaged by keeping in touch with the people who are important to us. As Mark Sandler (’64) said in his presentation on surviving retirement, one way to make it meaningful is to meet and talk with interesting or even unlikely people—in contrast with the occasionally unpleasant people whom your worklife had forced you to deal with. You know who I mean. For many—for me—these deep friendships involve people met at Amherst. And interestingly, for many—for me—it means making new friends from the pool of classmates who I never really knew on campus years ago. The chemistry of the reunion sometimes makes that happen. And that’s why I took on the burdens of writing Class of ’64 Notes.

 

In one of the sessions sponsored by the class of ’59, a person not on the panel pointed out that in the Southeast, where he comes from, the key to establishing a person’s identity is not in the answer to “What do you do?” but “Who is your family?” And while I am distorting the meaning a bit when I say it, we do have a measure of control over who we include as our “family”—the friends we choose to embrace with love and forgiveness. Let me put it another way: One of the things we learned at Amherst is to question underlying assumptions. In English 1-2, Roger Sale stated it more baldly when he explained his grading scale: If you fulfill the assignment, you get a C. If you reject the assignment, you get a B. Only if you redefine the terms of the assignment do you earn an A (which I never got). So we can reject and redefine the terms of the question, “What do you do?” to mean “Who is your family?” And we can include work that does not give us power in the old ways through income, status, or leverage over other people, but instead through the blessings of connection itself. Volunteering at a hospital or elementary school, sharing yourself with grandchildren or with your grown children who may be even more confused than we are—this is all holy work, empowering work.

 

Put another way (quoting here another from ’59): “Retirement is an issue of loss of control—moving away from an area where we had some control. We must find an area where we do have control over our life.” And while some of this control can be won through thoughtful planning for our retirement years, it can also be won by a process of redefinition. Bob Teare (’59) quoted King Lear’s words to Cordelia after he fully gave up both his power and his struggle to reclaim it:

 

No, no! Come let’s away to prison.

We two will sing like birds i’ th’ cage.

When thou dost ask me blessing, I’ll kneel down,

And ask of thee forgiveness. So we’ll live,

And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh

At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues

Talk of court news; and we’ll talk with them too:

Who loses and who wins, who’s in, who’s out;

And take upon’s the mystery of things,

As if we were God’s spies; and we’ll wear out,

In a wall’d prison, pack and sects of great ones

That ebb and flow by th’ moon.

 

The wisdom here lies in Lear’s realization that what was once so important to him (“Who loses and who wins, who’s in, who’s out”) is now nothing more than an amusing game for “poor rogues,” a spectator sport enjoyed by the repeated “we” and “us”—Lear connected (tragically, too late) with his family.

 

But that is Act V, and we are, many of us, in Act IV. Remember all of the conversations that were part of our Amherst education—in the classrooms, the dorms, Valentine, and even the fraternities. Remember the disquieting and argumentative nature of most of those conversations—so much so, that some choose not to return to the college. These conversations, continuing in the formal programs during Reunion Weekend as well as in the informal talk all over campus, reveal a fundamental restlessness. We called it “intellectual curiosity” back in the ‘60s, but it’s more than that. Our restlessness strikes me, in my mid-fifties, as more spiritual than intellectual, and it needs to be honored. The restlessness is a hunger for meaning and connection—the opposite of Lear’s retirement. It’s why Rabbi Peter Rubinstein (’64) went to Albania and Hungary to meet with refugees: to bear witness, and to challenge us by asking how we will respond when our grandchildren ask, “Did you know? And what did you do about it?” It’s why pre-geezers my age take on new families, new businesses, new roles. It’s why we struggle with our transitions, why we need to talk about them with friends we love.

 

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Things

 

            “It’s only things.”

 

            As we are starting the process of downsizing to move out of our beloved Bark House into the Ann Arbor co-op, we try to reassure ourselves that the process will not take an emotional toll on us. So far we have been unsuccessful. “Things” can be important, emotionally, and in getting rid of them we pay a price.

 

            I say “we,” but it is Kim who is paying the biggest emotional price, for her “things” represent her artistic, loving, and very personal connection to the world. Her things include objects that belonged to her family – parents and grandparents. They include raw materials that she might someday use in her artistic creations. To name just a few – feathers, bark, fibers to make bird nests. They include an array of tools that she uses to create her art. They include collections that are part of who she is: collections of shells from Florida, Petoskey stones from here, bones, antlers, shark teeth, game pieces, clothes pins. They include files full of old photos and documents for use in the scrapbooks that are underway. She also has her box full of old scissors, for example, or wooden shoe lasts – we are keeping those, of course.

 

            Our new place is, quite simply, smaller. With her typical generosity she steered our selection of a new place toward where I would live when her cancer returns (her oncologist assures her that it will). As a result, she has no art room – only a small desk for her computer in the guest bedroom. My office on the third floor is just too many stairs away, and she sees the point of this enterprise is getting me squared away for the future. In getting rid of her art supplies, part of her is preparing to die.

 

            How do we “get rid of” the things that are part of our downsizing? Family members and friends will be selecting what they want when we move out, but they don’t have room for much. A few things we are just throwing away – a raggedy pair of my shoes, for example, or some weird clothing that has accumulated in my dresser. Paint samples – no, we are keeping those. Some of Kim’s nests made it into the fire pit. 

 

            We do take some things out to our garage sale, which is running most weekends when we are home and working in the yard. Clothes are fairly easy to move into the garage sale – we still have plenty from our years as snowbirds, with closets full in Michigan and Florida.  Very little clothing is being sold, however, but we can always donate clothes. I have a box full of old cables from previous television hook-ups, some of which may be useful in the new place, so I have been reluctant to take them to the garage sale, though I’ve taken a dozen out there. We’ve hauled out books that we know we will not read again, though we are keeping some just because the cover reminds us of a good read. Artwork? Kim has sold some in galleries, and it is discouraging the way customers only want to pay garage-sale-prices for work that is worth much more. It’s insulting. Still, some of her photographs have sold, and a few of her other creations. And people have been complimentary, even when they don’t buy.

 

            Furniture is, in a way, simpler. We love our Stickley Craftsman pieces, but we may not have room for all of them. We are taking some to Ann Arbor, and we may sell some with the house – when and if the house sells. We have some valuable vintage furniture, and people buying it with the house or at what is called “a living estate sale” probably won’t be willing to pay what it is worth. When the house sells we may put some pieces into storage until we figure out what to do with them. It may be hard for some people to conceive of loving furniture, and thus the pain of losing it, but those people are insensitive. Like me.

 

            Yesterday I overheard Kim’s saying to a friend, “I know they are just things, but they have significance. They are part of me . . ..” Yes, it’s an expression of her loving connection to the world.