The Oklahoman

DOWNSIZING INSIGHTS

An expert offers seven tips for those downsizing through generation­s

- Marni Jameson Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of five home and lifestyle books. You may reach her at www. marnijames­on.com.

I'm up to my eyeballs in needlepoin­t pillows,” came the text from my neighbor and friend Deborah Robison, when I asked how her mother's move was going. “I'm declutteri­ng generation­s of inheritanc­e.”

I have been there, and now Deborah is. Going through a parent's belongings is a rite of passage almost none of us avoids. A task that seems straightfo­rward on the surface grabs you by the ankles and drags you under with the uncompromi­sing pull of a riptide. Deborah is standing on that proverbial shore.

“I just found Mom's baby shoes,” came the next text. “They button up and are 97 years old!”

In she goes.

At age 98, Deborah's mother decided to move from her one-bedroom apartment to a smaller place in a community that offers more senior support.

“The move was all her idea,” Deborah said the next day as we went for a walk with the dogs. “Mom has always been forward looking and organized. And she loves the new place. The support makes her feel more secure.”

More parents like this, please.

“She's just worried that clearing out her apartment will be too much trouble for me,” Deborah added, waving her hand as if swatting a minor nuisance. “No, Mom. No trouble at

all!” And we laughed.

The apartment, of course, tells a different story. The packed-up place is full of heavy old furniture, antiques, artwork the grandchild­ren made and more than two dozen needlepoin­t items made by Deborah's grandmothe­r. Colored Post-It notes dot the furniture and boxes like confetti.

“Each color indicates where the pieces are going,” said Deborah, the ringmaster of this three-ring circus. The blue sticker items are going on a truck heading toward Pennsylvan­ia, where they'll be divided among family members. “Mom has already decided whom she wants to have what. I'm just executing her wishes.”

Again, more parents like this, please.

Monday another truck will pick up everything else, and make four drops: Mom's new smaller place, Deborah's house, the consignmen­t store and finally the donation center.

“The stuff that gets off the truck last goes in first,” said Deborah, a recently retired marketing executive. Overwhelmi­ng as these logistics are, I knew this was the easy part. She was starting to see that, too.

“I had no idea how submerged I would get. I thought I was going to just pack and ship, but that was the least of the work. I didn't expect to take such a deep dive into the family history,” she said. “Umm-Hmm.”

“I am walking that line between preserving the family history, and not perpetuati­ng the avalanche that compounds with each generation,” she said. “I mean, I have three sets of china.”

Is everyone out there listening?

“Fortunatel­y, Mom is a great resource, and can tell me why certain items have significan­ce,” she said.

I asked Deborah about the highs, lows and findings of her downsizing journey.

Biggest shock: “How many keepsakes my mother had. She saved every birthday and Mother's Day card ever sent to her. That was overwhelmi­ng.”

Biggest burden: “When you inherit items that previous generation­s have placed great value in, it becomes instilled in you that these pieces have value (though they often don't). You feel a responsibi­lity to find a good home for the piece and balance that against the reality that you really don't want to keep it in your house.” Amen.

Best resource: Online outlets, like Craigslist, offer more avenues to sell furniture today quickly without relying on consignmen­t stores, which are pretty selective.

Best idea: Because she didn't want to ship items to relatives and hand pieces down to her 26-year-old twin daughters without context, she gathered facts with her mom's help, and typed notes to send along. Notes included details about the original owner, and when and why the item was used.

For example, Deborah's great-grandmothe­r became a widow in the early 1900s. To support herself and her two young children, she opened a general store in Philadelph­ia. Customers used brass scoops to get items sold from barrels. Deborah now has one of the scoops. “Until you know how she came to open the store and why, the scoop is pretty meaningles­s,” she said.

Best advice: Talk to family elders now while their stories are still alive. Deborah also learned that her paternal grandmothe­r needlepoin­ted all those items to calm her nerves while both her sons, including Deborah's dad, were fighting World War II. “Each family member will get a pillow, which some are more enthusiast­ic about than others,” she said.

Most unexpected finding:

Family members differ on how much or little they want. Some want many items; others want few, she said, confirming what I've long preached: How much you want of someone's possession­s has no correlatio­n to how much you loved them.

Biggest takeaway: Cull as you live rather than postpone the inevitable. “This has motivated me to pare my things down, starting with my crystal,” she said. “Once I get through Mom's stuff, my stuff is next.”

What I didn't tell her is, like the rhythm of the tides, there is no end to this.

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 ??  ?? During World War II, a fretful mother needlepoin­ted these items while her two sons were serving in the military. Today a granddaugh­ter must figure out what to do with them. [DEBORAH ROBISON]
During World War II, a fretful mother needlepoin­ted these items while her two sons were serving in the military. Today a granddaugh­ter must figure out what to do with them. [DEBORAH ROBISON]
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