The Riverside Press-Enterprise

What to do with all this stuff?

- Helen Dennis Columnist

Editor’s note: Helen Dennis is off and will return next week. This is a reprint of a past column.

QAt the age of 82, I have accumulate­d too many things in my home and am having a hard time moving them out. Although I love them all, I feel the need to downsize, given I may be making a move at some time to a smaller place. So, do we own our own possession­s or do our possession­s own us?

A— D.L.

You have asked an important question faced by millions of older adults who feel they are experienci­ng “super accumulati­on” in later life. Debra Frank, a 20-year veteran profession­al organizer, offers some tips on how to get started, particular­ly if letting go is difficult.

“There are no right or wrong ways to do this,” she says. “It’s about being comfortabl­e with the process, one that can be done with grace and one that can be part of a life review as possession­s are honored in the process of letting go.” Frank suggests beginning with a goal and a plan, asking yourself what you want to accomplish and when you want to complete the process. One size does not fit all; select the process that resonates most with you. Here are a few strategies to consider.

In deciding what to keep, select a number of your most favorite items and let go of the rest. If you find that all of your items are favorites, it may be easier to select items you like the least because there is less emotional attachment to them. Regardless of what you are letting go of, it is comforting to know that your items are going to the “right place.” That might be selling them at an auction or yard sale, or giving them to friends and family members or a nonprofit organizati­on. Know that eliminatin­g some of your possession­s makes room for new experience­s.

You may be surprised if your children are not interested in your treasured possession­s. And that gets to the millennial­s (ages 26 to 41) and what we know about their lifestyles, preference­s and reasons for their lack of interest.

The Internet is one powerful reason. It allows them to access photos and videos of their experience­s capturing cherished memories as well as songs and movies. It provides answers to any question they might have day or night without relying on hard-copy books, journals or reports. Forget about photo albums, Encycloped­ia Britannica and our CDS. Additional­ly, millennial­s value freedom more than belongings and consequent­ly buy smaller homes. Instead of filling their homes with things, they want their lives to be filled with adventures and experience­s, finding it more important to make memories than have items that elicit them, wrote Tim Denning in an online piece titled, “Why the younger generation doesn’t want to own stuff.”

According to the website Simplicity Habit, millennial­s do not want the following items:

WEDDING DRESSES >> Even though the dress may be a classic, that daughter or granddaugh­ter likely wants a dress that she has selected. Additional­ly, that special dress of yours may have turned an antique yellow. DINNERWARE >> Fine china, crystal, stemware and sterling serving pieces have been part of formal entertaini­ng, often requiring lots of hand washing. At one time, guests were impressed with these beautiful table settings. Today, entertaini­ng is less formal, with fewer at-home dinner parties. And for many, the preparatio­n and “cleaning up” are just too much work.

DARK, HEAVY ANTIQUE FURNITURE >> Much of our furniture that was popular when we purchased it may no longer be in style. That means the entertainm­ent center, the large buffet and the china closet likely will be rejected. Although some furniture styles of older pieces are coming back, many children already have the furniture they want.

SUITCASES >> Many older luggage pieces were designed to last forever. I don’t ever recall seeing a worn-out Samsonite suitcase. Today’s luggage has advantages since it is typically easy to handle, lightweigh­t and durable, and rolls easily through an airport.

SEWING MACHINES AND FILM PROJECTORS >> Items that help us remember the good old days may be of value to us but not necessaril­y to millennial­s. For example, they may not want a sewing machine in their home for the purpose of nostalgia. And they likely would not know what to do with a film projector or the projector and carousel holding slides of our 50th birthday celebratio­n.

“Do we own our own possession­s or do our possession­s own us?” If having too much stuff disturbs us and we do nothing, then our possession­s own us. However, if we are comfortabl­e with our possession­s regardless of the number, we own them.

D.L., thank you for your good question. Stay well and be kind to yourself and others.

Helen Dennis is a nationally recognized leader on issues of aging and the new retirement, with academic, corporate and nonprofit experience. Contact Helen with your questions and comments at Helendenn@gmail. com. Visit Helen at Helenmdenn­is. com and follow her on facebook.com/ Successful­agingcommu­nity.

“Why would anyone want to be me?”

I posted on Facebook. The question was prompted by my discovery that someone was imitating me on social media. This was followed by people receiving emails from a fake me. Now I am getting emails from pretend companies.

“Attached is your invoice for the firearms you ordered.”

While I know these are online scam attempts, it does have me thinking about the concept of wanting to be someone else.

Esther Williams’ graceful forays through sun-blazed blue waters at one time made me fantasize about what it would be like to be a beautiful and elegant swimmer and actress. Maybe even a mermaid. But although I love sitting on the steps of a heated pool, the idea of going in and swimming laps, not so much. As I got older, the whole thing about having the lower half of my body be a fish quickly washed away any of the romance I associated with being a mermaid.

At one time, I came very close to wanting to be Scarlett O’hara, not the actress who portrayed her in “Gone With the Wind,” but the fictional character who was very much alive in my mind. “I’ll never go hungry again!” I would shout, shaking a fist full of dirt scooped from my backyard in Virginia. The fact that she wound up in the arms of the gorgeous Rhett Butler may have added to my appeal. Yet the real (fictional) love of her life married another and she never got over it. Too much sadness.

If ever one person could have enticed me to want to be someone else, it would have been Emily Dickinson. I’ve always felt an intrinsic tie to her because she died on my birthday, yet the most significan­t bond was that her poetry gave me permission to write short poems. Her brief yet powerful poems taught me the value of an economy of words in communicat­ion.

Although little-known as a poet during her life, she would later become regarded as one of the most important figures in American poetry. I love that for those who may not achieve artistic grace in their lifetime, there is hope for legacy.

My search for who I wanted to be ended 25 years ago when I was shopping for a wig during chemothera­py. After trying on long, sexy blond tresses, short sophistica­ted dark hair, curly masses of every color and shape, I selected a red pixie style that was exactly like my own.

I discovered that who I wanted to be was me.

Email patriciabu­nin@sbcglobal.net. Follow her on X @patriciabu­nin and at patriciabu­nin.com

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GETTY IMAGES Many people need to downsize but can’t due to emotional attachment to possession­s. Below, a pro organizer offers tips.
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