I’m not a collector of antiques. I have
some, but none was acquired intentionally. They just came my way because they have
family history of some sort. They are keepsakes. I hesitate to use the word
heirloom since that word connotes (not denotes but connotes) something
valuable, and none of my keepsakes is valuable in any but a sentimental sense. If
sold, all together they probably wouldn’t cover my heating bill for this past
winter. I own some of them simply because my dad was a builder and consequently
always had a storage barn where grandparents “temporarily” deposited stuff:
kerosene heaters from the 1920s, oil lamps from the 1920s and 1930s, winemaking
equipment from the Prohibition era, and so on. (Aside: It is commonly believed
that homemade wine for home consumption was legal during Prohibition; it was
not.) Half a century later the barn and its stuff were mine. Some of the items
I cleaned up and brought into the house as conversation pieces; others remain
in the barn. Then there are things my parents themselves acquired new but have
become antique over time: my dad’s baseball bat from the 1930s, his uniforms
from WW2, paintings from the 1940s, a dining room table from the 1940s, very
of-its-time plastic wall art from the 1950s, and so on.
Just a few examples: all the items including the piano (which my mom played but I do not) are keepsakes. The oxen yoke was rustic art made by my grandfather, the oil lamps are 100 years old and the clock 200.
This comes to mind because somewhat
desultorily I’ve been attaching discreet labels to the items since I’m the only
one left who knows how old they are or from where they came. For example there
is a handheld school bell from the Cranford elementary school that was given to
my maternal grandfather in 1910 when the school bells went electric. Without
the attached note, it is just a bell. The pith helmet is more interesting if
you know it is from India in 1944. You get the idea. Anyway, the labeling has
reminded me just how many of these keepsakes there are around the house. I’m
not one for clutter in a general way (typically following my mom’s dictum, “When
in doubt, throw it out”) and don’t regard myself as particularly sentimental. If/when
the time comes to sell my property and downsize, I don’t think I’ll have a
problem leaving this stuff behind. Yet while I have room for the things with
family history I balk at selling them or tossing them. I’m not sure why. Maybe
they just remind me of people and places. I don’t have kids to saddle with these
legacy items, and if I did they might not want them. A few years ago Forbes ran an article titled “Sorry,
Nobody Wants Your Parents' Stuff” that became their most downloaded short
article. It was written by Richard Eisenberg whose 94-y.o. father had died some
months earlier. He and his sister struggled to handle their father’s personal
property; it was a problem because the market for what were once called
collectibles has collapsed in recent decades. The article notes that two
generations (Boomers and their remaining parents) are downsizing (or dying) at
the same time. By itself this would create a glut of old furniture and tchotchkes.
But demand has dropped off simultaneously. The article quotes Chris Fultz of Nova Liquidation, “Old mahogany stuff
from my great aunt’s house is basically worthless.” Eisenberg adds that “auction
houses have little appetite for your parents' stuff, either. That's because
their customers generally aren't interested.” Those customers would be Millennials
and Zoomers who (money woes aside) mostly want to be mobile without junk to lug
around. Even if the stuff is offered free and from their own families they don’t
want it. For most, “sentimental value” isn’t really a thing. Xers still provide
a modest (albeit only modest) demand, but they are a small generation and can’t
carry the whole load. So, there is a high probability that my
keepsakes one day will end up in a dumpster. That is OK. I won’t be here to
wince. But just in case anyone (perhaps a cousin or two) is interested before
they go to the landfill, the items are labeled. I’m sure the executor(s),
whoever that might be, won’t mind if they are taken away – maybe to a property with
a barn.
There's always donating to Good Will or some other outlet. I have to admit I have a real hard time of letting go. I don't know what that says about me, I blame it partially on my parent's collector's gene. I bet there are many people would love to have something, the trick is how do you find them? If rather than giving it to Good Will or the Salvation Army where they had to 'buy' it, if given to them, they'd probably want it.
Surprisingly, in the current environment even the Salvation Army has gotten picky about what they are willing to accept since they don't want to end up throwing out unsaleable stuff, though they are still a good bet for wooden furniture and the like. If I don't outlive my resources so that I have to downsize radically, it will one day be Someone Else's Problem.
There's always donating to Good Will or some other outlet. I have to admit I have a real hard time of letting go. I don't know what that says about me, I blame it partially on my parent's collector's gene. I bet there are many people would love to have something, the trick is how do you find them? If rather than giving it to Good Will or the Salvation Army where they had to 'buy' it, if given to them, they'd probably want it.
ReplyDeleteSurprisingly, in the current environment even the Salvation Army has gotten picky about what they are willing to accept since they don't want to end up throwing out unsaleable stuff, though they are still a good bet for wooden furniture and the like. If I don't outlive my resources so that I have to downsize radically, it will one day be Someone Else's Problem.
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