The Hamilton Spectator

The year of purchasing and purging

People are getting rid of stuff as they evaluate their lives post-pandemic

- MARIA CRAMER

For more than 13 years, the moulds that Roland Mesnier used to fashion frozen desserts for heads of state, celebritie­s and the first family of the United States sat in his basement.

After Mesnier retired as the White House pastry chef in 2004, he began taking his roughly 300 dessert moulds to his home in Fairfax, Va., where he stacked them neatly away and put them out of his mind.

Then the pandemic struck. With no end in sight to the lockdown, Mesnier began to contemplat­e the future of the moulds he had lovingly collected through five administra­tions, starting with president Jimmy Carter.

“I am kind of a sentimenta­l man, don’t get me wrong,” he said. “They were my babies.”

But keeping them, Mesnier said, felt a bit pointless.

“I’m not that happy to let them go, but what am I going to do with them?” he said.

In September, the moulds will be auctioned off, including a delicate one shaped like a dove that Mesnier said he had used to make an ice cream dessert for the 1993 lunch then-president Bill Clinton hosted to negotiate the Oslo Accord between prime minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel and Yasser Arafat, chair of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on.

Mesnier is one of many clients who were spurred by the pandemic to rethink belongings that once felt impossible to sell, said Elizabeth Haynie Wainstein, owner of the Potomack Co. in Alexandria, Va. The number of clients who want to auction items increased 25 per cent in 2020 and 2021, compared with 2019 levels.

“The pandemic just put the normal purge cycle on steroids for people,” Wainstein said.

The months spent in lockdown compelled people to reconsider their careers, where they live and whether they should remain married.

The time at home also caused them to scrutinize what was in their homes, especially after months of stocking up too eagerly on electronic­s, toilet paper and even suits.

In May and June of last year, 1-800-Got-Junk reported a 10 per cent increase in the number of customers who the company said were using the service to declutter compared with the same time period in 2019.

Recently, a person called to get rid of half of a Porsche that had been converted into a grill, according to the company.

In May, Goodwill asked people to stop using its donation centres for waste disposal after the organizati­on was overwhelme­d by cartons and bags of broken toasters, old batteries and dolls with missing limbs.

According to Robert J. Foster, a professor of anthropolo­gy and visual and cultural studies at the University of Rochester, many piles of clutter can be directly attributed to the human need for artistic expression.

People want to create art that reflects how they see the world and themselves but, in our modern society, most people do not have jobs that allow for selfexpres­sion, Foster said.

“We’re not all artists or artisans of some kind, so that work in a consumer society gets done by buying,” he said.

The pandemic increased our need for self-expression and, in turn, our spending habits, Foster said.

Later, it forced people to reexamine how their belongings reflected their identities, said Andrew R. Jones, a professor of sociology at California State University, Fresno.

“If they can’t show off their possession­s, do those possession­s have any other value than to be shown off?” he said. “The pandemic may represent an opportunit­y for some people to reinvent themselves, to form a new identity.”

Jess Tran, a marketing consultant and vintage clothing dealer in Brooklyn, said she had gotten carried away acquiring new tchotchkes while she was in isolation.

She found a shrink-wrapped VHS copy of “Dirty Dancing” on the street and decided it had to be hers. She bought an outdoor lounge chair and spent the weeks leading up to the presidenti­al election redoing her entire living room to fit the new piece.

“It was a direct stress response,” Tran, 28, said. Then she became determined to own an antique mirror she had found on an auction site.

She had planned to spend no more than $300, but she got swept away when another bidder began competing with her. She bid $900 and won. After fees and shipping, the purchase came out to $1,400.

“This mirror became a manifestat­ion of this person I wanted to be,” Tran said.

She kept the mirror and the lounge chair, but she gave the VHS tape away, as well as many pieces of clothing that she said no longer reflected whom she had become.

“I don’t want to continue to be the same person I was pre-pandemic,” she said. “I was, like, running around like a chicken with its head cut off, seeking validation from people I didn’t care about, going to places I didn’t care about.”

Scott Roewer, a profession­al organizer who founded the Organizing Agency in Washington, said business was “extremely dead” last year.

But his organizati­on began getting more calls in May and June from people wanting him to come into their homes and reassess everything they had bought during the pandemic: high-heeled shoes, designer handbags, cocktail dresses that had never been worn.

One client “was kind of living this fantasy,” Roewer said. She had bought $1,000 outfits that still had the tags on them a year later. Another client — an “impeccably dressed” lawyer in a high-end law firm who decided to start his own, more casual law firm — traded in tailored suits for baseball hats and sweats.

Roewer uses neighbourh­ood email lists as well as platforms like Nextdoor and Facebook Marketplac­e to help clients declutter. He also encourages clients to pay a $25 appraisal fee to auction houses and sites that might be interested in selling their belongings.

Roewer said the vast quantities of stuff he has seen people accumulate “tears me up a little.”

“The amount of waste is obscene,” he said.

“If we could all just buy a little less and repair something when it’s broken instead of replacing it, we would have a lot less trash.”

 ?? RON EDMONDS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Then-U.S. first lady Laura Bush and White House pastry chef Roland Mesnier in December 2001. Mesnier, now retired, will be auctioning off old dessert moulds he used in the White House.
RON EDMONDS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Then-U.S. first lady Laura Bush and White House pastry chef Roland Mesnier in December 2001. Mesnier, now retired, will be auctioning off old dessert moulds he used in the White House.

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