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Maybe you caught one of the shows Oprah has done on hoarding. Or maybe you’ve seen accounts on the news or in the paper of people who literally cannot open their doors or move about their houses because of the floor-to-ceiling stacks and piles of stuff — aka rubbish, trash, junk, garbage. Some people even hoard animals — much to their detriment (the animals’ and the people’s).

Hoarding is considered a real malady related to OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder). And while researchers aren’t sure why people hoard, they think genetics and upbringing play a role, as they do in OCD.

Genetics and upbringing? In my family that means one thing: holy crap. 

While I don’t think we actually qualify as psychologically disturbed (at least not when it comes to hoarding), we definitely have those tendencies in our genetics and upbringing, thanks to my mother’s side. We recently had to clean out one room in her house — a sunroom (what we always call the sunparlor) about 10′ by 16′. It took 4 of us about 3 days. For one room. Granted, it was a bad one — with only the smallest of spaces to stand amidst old furniture, magazines, scads of plastic take-out containers, books, games, bags of old drapes, a rolled up carpet, a 4½ foot statue of Jesus (don’t ask), and more. It was a junk room gone mad. The house also has an absolutely insane 3-room attic, a berserk cellar, and a few nutty bedrooms.

Our task this week is to take advantage of the dumpster on site for the construction project to transform said sunparlor into a bathroom and small bedroom and get rid of as much of this accumulated madness as we think we can get away with without my mother noticing. It won’t be easy — like all hoarders, she’s extremely attached to her things. But, regardless of mama’s wrath, go it must, and go it will.  

I’m hoping to use the dumpster opportunity to get rid of some hoarded trash chez moi as well. (Nothing compels a woman to action quicker than the thought she is turning into her mother.) Unfortunately, I’ve married a hoarder (though he doesn’t think so), so there’s only so much I can do. But I’ve taken real steps to break my own pack rat tendencies. A while back, I actually threw away a couple shoe boxes full of old cards and letters from my childhood. It wasn’t easy — that postcard from Beth McVeigh from her 4th grade family trip to Florida…the letters from my sister when I was 10 and she was 20 and away at college (15 minutes away)…30+ years of birthday cards. But I did it, and I was proud of myself.

I still have a problem with boxes — empty boxes. I’ve moved half a dozen times, and finding moving boxes is such a struggle I have a hard time parting with a sturdy box. Right now, we have dozens of boxes, some flattened, some not, stashed all over the house. I also have “collections” that I have no idea how to part with — I paid money for these things on eBay, at flea markets, and at antique stores, and am loathe to just give them away. But who hasn’t seen Aunt Minnie’s 47 adorable raccoons or Uncle Al’s beloved salt & pepper shakers languishing on the 10¢ table. I can picture a similar fate for my treasures.

In the meantime, I’ll collect some good karma by pitching someone else’s “trash.” Maybe that’s the key — to let someone else do the pitching for you in methodical, detached fashion. Preferably someone with good sense and good taste. Hmmm….any takers? You declutter my house, and I’ll declutter yours. Chances are neither of us will walk away empty-handed.

You have succeeded in life when all
you really want is only what you really need. 
                                              ~ Vernon Howard

Let me entertain you…

Oooooh, a new catalog (actually the same catalog we received a month ago with a different cover). Ooooooh, catalogs make me salivate (no bell needed, just pretty pictures). Oooooh, garden goodies. Oooooh, buddha sculptures — how cute…$109 each?…not cute enough. Oooooh, bamboo arm chairs. Ooooooh, cedar birdhouses on a stake. Ooooooh, a fleur de lis flatware caddy — perfect for the buffet line.

Buffet line?

Who am I kidding? Of the approximately 847 items in this catalog perfect for “entertaining,” I need exactly none of them. The sad truth is, we do not “entertain.” Well, to be accurate, we “entertain” exactly two dear friends semi-regularly. Happy hour with hors d’oeuvres and champagne. A fancy meal. Dessert. Aperitifs. The whole nine yards (except when we say “screw it” and just have champagne and pizza).

Well, we tried to have a party in January, very impromptu, very exciting. But then a lot of people couldn’t come, and I got deathly ill, and we cancelled (“postponed”) the whole thing. So that almost counts, right?

Otherwise, we are social misfits. The fact that I drool over Mandolay Casseroles with Rattan Baskets and Bali Green Glass Tumblers and the Caffe Italia Dessert Collection (otherwise known as $95 for 4 plates, cups, and saucers) belies the fact that these items are more than overkill when “dining” means eating one-handed from a plate held in the other hand while sitting on the couch in front of the TV night after night.

Oh, I know for a fact that other people do “entertain.” Ninety-nine percent of the HGTV shows I watch involve people wanting to buy, sell, (re)build, (re)design, or (re)configure to better accommodate “entertaining.” It’s no secret that the rest of the world is way more popular than I am — this became evident in grade school and ±35 years haven’t proven it wrong.

I could try to blame it on permanent fixer-upperhood, but that would be a lie. Even when I lived in new homes, “entertaining” occasions were few and far between. And it’s not that I don’t want to “entertain” or don’t know how to “entertain” — in my head I throw great parties with scrumptious food and drink and lots of people milling about laughing and having a good time. (Hey, I work alone, the mind wanders.) And it’s not that I don’t love to go to good party — and admire their good hosts and hostesses — I just don’t seem to have the circle of acquaintances to pull it off.

Or maybe it’s all just excuses. Social angst masquerading as laziness.

No matter — I have plenty of HGTV entertainers to live vicariously through (I couldn’t bring myself to write “through whom to live vicariously”) and plenty of catalogs to keep me entertained. It all goes to prove my favorite movie line ever…

I don’t have the life I keep shopping for.
         ~ from a movie I can’t remember

Oh for the love of…coffee

OK, time for a break from the morbid “oh we’ll all get old and destitute” posts of late.

Today’s topic, much more stimulating: java, joe, café, kaffe, black gold, leaded, unleaded…the all-American drink…coffee! My friend and fellow blogger Mel recently wrote a post about enjoying the “simple things in life.” She mentioned coffee, favoring a French press brew.

Me, I’ve been rediscovering the joys of the java after a 5-year tea kick, during which coffee has been de rigueur only with a big sloppy breakfast at a place with Eat’n or Bob or Diner in the name, or with dessert somewhere other than home. Part of this is because my husband doesn’t imbibe (nor do his parents), and I got out of the habit of making it just for myself. Plus I really do love my green tea — it’s a morning ritual I’ll never abandon, and it’s just so darn good for you.

But lately, as I’ve been running back and forth to the hospital, a big steaming sippy-cup from Panera’s or McD’s has become my reward, my treat, my $1.50 (or $1.64) pat on the back. I actually don’t like the regular brew from Bigbucks (although a venti non-fat chai latté is nirvana in a cup). They make their money off of me anyway, in 20-cents-a-teabag increments for my must-have Tazo Green Ginger every morning.

But coffee? Coffee’s different. Who doesn’t remember their first time? What a rite of passage it was. So much anticipation after smelling that wonderful, sensuous scent filling the house from the percolator and then wafting upwards from mom’s cup, seeing the beautiful caramel color as she added cream (most likely, canned milk), and observing the ritual of pouring “coffee with dinner” in a real cup and saucer that always marked a special occasion or a post-get-together nighttime “lunch” with my grandparents or other relatives around the table.

Then you take a sip, and it’s the most disgusting horrible taste you can imagine. (Much like your first taste of beer.) How can grown-ups drink that swill?

Well, you learn. Although I didn’t really drink it until college, not like today’s high-schoolers filing into Starbucks by the dozens. (Where do they get all that money?)

These days, my brother has turned coffee-making into weird science, with a funky gravity brewer that looks like something that rightfully belongs on a Bunsen burner to be handled only while wearing goggles and gloves. (The resulting brew is so strong it’ll curl your hair.) My sister favors her French press. Me, I like a good-ol’ 2-minute drip. My absolute favorite thing about our family vacations is that by the time I get up, someone has already made a pot and it’s there waiting for me with a carton of half-and-half right next to it. Seriously, I love that — make me coffee every day and I’ll follow you anywhere.

It really is the simple things that make life so enjoyable. These days, walking into that hospital with a large half-caf with cream in hand, or heading home with one sloshing over in my too-small cupholder after a long, trafficky drive, I’m facing the world a little happier and a little more self-indulged. Not bad for a buck-fifty.

Just around the corner,
There’s a rainbow in the sky.
So let’s have another cup o’ coffee,
And let’s have another piece o’ pie.
                        ~ Irving Berlin, 1932

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