LIFE & STYLE

Amid The Marie Kondo Tidying-Up Craze, The Beauty Of Making Space For A 52-Year-Old Receipt

By Heidi Stevens
Chicago Tribune

WWR Article Summary (tl;dr) Heidi Stevens writes a beautiful piece about the current “Marie Kondo” de-cluttering craze. What makes this article unique is that Stevens also acknowledges “the power and the beauty of holding on tight, to our stuff and, by extension, to our stories.”

Chicago Tribune

I’m making a point lately of asking my parents more about life before my brother and I came along.

I wish this had occurred to me a decade or so ago, but for whatever reason, it did not. Now, as I round the bend toward 45 and, through lived experiences both lovely and sorrowful, gain both a deep appreciation for their stories and a gnawing fear of missing out on them, I’m learning to ask.

Around Christmas, we got on the topic of my parents’ first car. It was a 1967 Volkswagen Beetle, two-door, leatherette trim, custom orange paint job.

My dad bought it as a gift for my mom Jan. 27, 1967: exactly one month after their wedding. It cost $2,054.17. (The custom orange paint job was an extra $110.)

My dad still has the receipt from University Volkswagen Inc., in Pensacola, Fla., where he was stationed in the Navy. He and my mom would drive that car across the country together to California, where my dad shipped off for Vietnam, a few months later.

I keep thinking about that receipt as so many of us engage in a flurry of Marie Kondo-inspired tidying up.

Kondo, if you haven’t heard, is the star of the new Netflix series “Tidying Up With Marie Kondo,” in which the organizational guru/life coach visits people’s homes and helps them part with their clutter.

Her 2014 book, “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” has sold more than 8.5 million copies in some 40 languages. Her upcoming book, “Joy at Work: The Career-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” reportedly fetched a seven-figure advance from Little, Brown.

She and her formula are hot, particularly the part where she invites us to hold up our possessions and check whether they spark joy. If they don’t, it’s off to the consignment/garbage pile with them.

This directive has sparked a million or so memes and countless trips to the Salvation Army drop-off, and that’s all fine and well.

I’m all for being more mindful about the items we surround ourselves with, particularly on the front end. Maybe her gentle prodding to tidy our lives will inspire more of us to think twice before purchasing that inspirational wall plaque just because it’s on clearance at Target.

I hope we also leave room for 52-year-old receipts.

I hope we don’t feel shamed into tackling every shoe box, every filing cabinet drawer, every attic crevice, with the eye of a surveyor and the detachment of an auctioneer.

I hope we reserve some space in our hearts and our kitchens/offices/closets/basements for stuff that sparks … what. Maybe not joy, but maybe a little nostalgia? A sweet memory? A rumination on the rising cost of living versus stagnating wages?

The chance for a meandering conversation with your kid, five decades down the road, about those early years of marriage, the struggle to make ends meet, the joys and fears and losses and memories that make up a life together and, oh, here, I actually still have the receipt for that first car?

Part of my desire, I think, to gather as many stories from my parents as I can is the growing sense that life isn’t tidy. People aren’t around as long as you’d like them to be. Plans go poof. Jobs go poof. Marriages end. Diseases come knocking.

I understand, embrace, even, the desire to control what we can. Our linen closets, for example.
But I also understand, thanks to that receipt, the power and the beauty of holding on tight, to our stuff and, by extension, to our stories.

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