We are in the midst of giving stuff
away. The system we decided to follow dedicates at least two things a
day to be given away. The way that it has worked out I (Joshua) have
been doing much of the thinking and giving away. Some of the items
have been my own things like clothes and books, but some have been
collective items that I add and then ask Alyssa if she is comfortable giving that item away.
Yesterday, we got rid of a ton of
clothes and several other items. It was more than two items even if
you count clothes as one, but we were just in a mood to clean some
things out. Alyssa did not have to work until noon and I was off
because of Presidents' Day and Westmont's four-day recess. We had a
lot of time to just think about what we didn't need or use.
As I was walking around our apartment
finding little things here and there, I realized that having a lot of
stuff actually deteriorates from its value. Economics echo this, as
long as there is some demand, when there are lots of something the
value of that item goes down and when there are few the price goes
up. That is why when I can go buy a used CD Miles Davis' Birth of
the Cool for $1.50, but
if I want the Limited Edition, Vinyl Import, Birth of the Cool
will cost me a cool $88, used. In our life, all of the things we have
clutter space and hearts. We loose the value of the important things.
I don't think it is impossible to value items even when we have a
lot, but it gets difficult to remember what
is important when you have everything to choose from.
Things
also become valuable because they play a particular role in our
lives. The game of checkers has immense value in my life because my
grandaddy and I used to sit on the porch for hours upon hours and
play together (it may have only been minutes, but it felt like hours
to a little boy). Checkers is still important, but I don't play the game much, we have other games
to choose from so we play those. I have wanted to have a good checker
board (my grandaddy's was lost somewhere), but I have not taken the
effort to do so, because of all the other things, all the other games
we have. However, an honest examination reveals that we really only
have those games, we don't regularly play them, they aren't
important. They are fun don't get me wrong, but they have little
meaning and little value.
It
seems to me that the less we have the more we value what we have.
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