Too Good to Use Moccasins; Deb Marshall photo |
End of last year, the Husband and I finally decided to make
an official, witnessed, notarized will, and do all the other notarized
paperwork that goes along with that sort of thing: basically, a paper that says
who gets to decide when to pull the plug, another that explains who has to pay
the bills with our piddling savings if we can’t physically or mentally do it
ourselves, and another that explains, to who’s in charge of getting rid of our
stuff and of what happens to the house (if
we still own it when we meet our demise), how best to get rid of the odd equipment
and text books and related gear we own that most people wouldn’t have a clue
what to do with if they weren’t in the same businesses.
It was a total buzz-kill, I gotta tell you.
We’d made a will decades ago when we were young and carefree,
and even got our friendly out-back naybahs to witness it for us. That was as
far as we went…well, honestly, that long ago I don’t think there was such a
thing as a living will or powers of attorney for this and that – not that
regular people would have had, anyway (“regular people” meaning anyone not
stupidly rich). In that long-ago will,
we left all our stuff to our friends, who were as poor and living-on-the-edge
as we were. In our imaginations, all our rent-strapped friends would decide to move
into our house, maybe build onto it or erect straw-bale houses or 4-season
cabins on our 7 acres of land, turn the raised-bed garden into an even bigger
raised-bed garden, can stuff and freeze stuff and put squashes and root
vegetables down cellar, get some chickens and maybe a cow, and maybe manage to
live more comfortably than before.
We, of course, wouldn’t be there because we would have either:
a. decided to move anonymously and permanently to Canada after having searched
out my Scots and French-Canadian roots; or, b. gone on to the next existence
after dying in an impressive crash on our way home from a late-day run to
Montreal for supper. Yes, there was a time when a late-day run to Montreal
wasn’t something we thought twice about doing.
That old will got tossed into the fireproof box and we
assumed that if we did, indeed, expire in an impressive crash, someone would
find it and all would be well. Truth be told, I knew better – I’d been a
paralegal in a previous life and knew that we needed to get it notarized for it
to be legal, but money was tight and we didn’t really believe it would ever be
needed.
Fast forward four decades. Last spring I realized that the
need for the extensive raised-bed gardens wasn’t going to go away in our older
age, but for me to be able to continue to effectively work them in my seventh
decade and beyond, I was going to have to do something now to make them less work-intensive. So I started paving paths and
eliminating the need to weed so much and doing some other labor-eliminating
things; and that got me thinking about what it meant to get older with creakish
knees and sore back muscles and joints, and a memory that records something
I’ve only thought about doing in the Done List instead of the To-Do List. So I
started to make an actual list: finally put up hand-rails on the stairs in the
house, replace that ancient furnace, put heat into the chapel so we won’t have to burn wood if our bodies don’t
want to haul it, rebuild the back wart, and so on. Phase one of buzz-kill.
Then I remembered that besides never having actually gotten
that old will notarized, some of the beneficiaries were now either dead or a
lot richer than they’d been, and than we are, and that they wouldn’t need the
benefit of our miniscule largess. And worse, if I were to die in an icy or moosey car
crash late at night on the way home from work, and the Husband died intestate sometime
later, his much older adopted sisters in Ohio – or their children - who would
have no interest in or need for our stuff, would inherit everything and it
would be a major irritation for them and a bummer for my niece and her kids.
Thus, phase two of buzz-kill: the wills.
And that started a new and strange mental exercise. Now that
I’d written everything out, maybe I should myself take care of some of that
stuff that would need to be dealt with after our dramatic demises, or at least
make it easier for the person who has to do it eventually.
So this is phase
three of buzz-kill.
There’re a few rules that native New Englanders are born
with tatoo’ed inside their eyelids and carved on their bones. One is that you
never, ever, ever throw out something that might be useful later, because you
never know when you’ll want it or need it. Another is that there is stuff
that’s too good to use. A third is that if it belonged to a relative who’s now
dead, it’s both too good to use and too precious to get rid of.
I’ve been breaking those three rules lately, with
interesting results. I’ve begun to wear the hand-made moccasins I bought for
much more money than I could afford to spend when I was in my 30’s and have
stored since then in my closet: too good to use. Turns out they’re wicked
comfortable!
I’ve given away a couple of items of clothing that are
almost new, worn only once or twice, but never worn again (some for several
decades) because they didn’t fit quite right, or are otherwise impractical.
Yes, I still think they’re beautiful, but am I really likely to wear them when
I’m another twenty years older? No. And with those clothes are going some books
I know in my heart that I’ll never read again.
And those things that I’ve had forever, but never really
liked, but they belonged to some dear dead relative? They’re headed to the
younger generation now, to use or
save or toss. And some stuff is just going gone. Who needs a chipped china
teacup, no matter that it belonged once to dear departed Great-Aunt Honey?
Phase three of buzz-kill turns out to be amazingly
satisfying. I like it. It means sorting through a lot of stuff, and a lot of
papers, and organizing, and eliminating, and marking things off my Lists. Less
to dust, less to bump into, less to clutter my mind. And unexpected goodies for
some folks who’ve benefited from my clearing-out activity.
Anyone need eight complete but unbound copies of a text I
wrote for a class I haven’t taught for five years?
Published in the Concord
Monitor on 18 April, 2019 as “Where There’s
a Will… “.
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