Oct 25, 2006 3

The downside of getting your shit together

Oh, no!

You start with the easy stuff: cleaning. Sorting. Trips to Goodwill. More trips to Goodwill.

Then maybe you drop a pursuit or two—say, your previous livelihood, for example. And then maybe you add another, one that you know will prove useful to your down-the-road self, but that you’re not too facile with now so it takes a lot of time. A lot of non-paying, stress-raising time.

And as you prune and cull and pitch and clean, you start to notice what’s left—say, your heart’s desire, for example. Which should be a series of shiny, happy moments for you and that organ in the top left quadrant of your chest cavity, only it feels more like someone took all your clothes away and hid them in a closet and then ripped off a wall of your house and replaced it with glass.

So instead of feeling happy and graceful and proud and clean, you feel like a lumpy, pigeon-toed spaz who’s been thrust into Swan Lake against your will and everyone else’s better judgment.

I’ve never said it before, but I’ll say it now: the only change that’s easy to make is four quarters for a dollar.

And only that when you’ve just come from the bank…

xxx
c

Most excellent photo by Javier Bravo via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Posted in: The Personal Ones

{ 3 comments }

Curtis M Sawyer October 26, 2006 at 5:33 am

We had to purge so much stuff when we moved from a 3BR, 2.5 Bath home in Virginia into a 2BR, 2 Bath apartment in Manhattan. We lost bout 800 sqft of space, and while that may not sound like much it makes a huge difference. Moving like that really makes you prune and cull and pitch. Even still, we moved with way too much stuff and have been spending the past 5 years doing minor pruning, but we are due for another full purge of all the stuff we moved with but haven’t used in the past 5 years.

Neil October 26, 2006 at 10:04 am

Well, maybe cleaning out your closet doesn’t necessarily mean it cleans out your head.

Donna B. October 26, 2006 at 1:56 pm

sheesh, I hear ya on the change thing.

I think “lumpy, pigeon-toed spaz who’s been thrust into Swan Lake against your will and everyone else’s better judgment” sums it up perfectly. brilliant. :-)

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