Sunday, July 5, 2009

The Existential Garage Sale Manifesto, Part 2

If you can resist the urge to acquire stuff you had no desire for before you woke up this morning, garage sales (existential and otherwise) can be a good way to simplify; you can unload unnecessary stuff or obtain necessary stuff without feeling you’ve directly contributed to the stuff crisis. In fact, lots of little daily actions give me a small measure of well being in the face of the stuff avalanche: filling the small green biobags with egg shells, vegetable nubbins and coffee grounds and leaving them out in the compost bin for pickup; religiously recycling paper, plastic and glass each week; observing the ever-decreasing amount of actual trash we discard from our house each week as more of it goes into recycling and compost; using the library or buying used books rather than new ones where possible; resisting purchase of plastic crap, or stuff over packaged in plastic crap; reveling in the clean, peaceful look of a room with a few beautiful things in it and no clutter; walking and riding buses instead of driving, and retaining the job with the 7-minute commute.

But of course the guilt trip is alive and well: for two people we use way more electricity than seems humanly possible—no doubt too many devices are on all the time despite their stand-by modes; lights are left on to lend some psychological security at night; juice flows to keep the icebox cold and the hot tub hot (not luxury, but medical necessity to deal with neck and back pain after sitting too long in front of the electricity sucking computers). Always the tradeoffs.

3 comments:

Jim L said...

I am too lazy to do a garage sale. However, another good way to get rid of things is Freecycle - a mailing list for offering (or asking for) things people may need that you want to get rid of. The only rule is it has to be free. I've used it a lot to get rid of all kinds of items that otherwise woulda went to the landfill. It's amazing some of the things people have taken that were really truly junk to me. One man's junk is another person's treasure and all that. There are Freecycle groups all over the world. The Boulder Freecycle sign-up page is here.

Lynn said...

Great idea - I should try that. I have a laptop where only 1/2 of the screen works now, can't seem to get it fixed. But I'll bet there are parts that can be salveaged. Right now it's clutter in my closet....

Jim L said...

Precisely! Although make sure you format the hard drive, first, if you can (hint - connect an external monitor to it so you have full screen, then format the hard drive). Someone could possibly want it just for the disk drive.

Anyway, Freecycle rocks!