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"Whatever happened to the old bank? It was beautiful!"
"It kept getting robbed."
"It's a small price to pay for beauty."
- Butch Cassidy to the bank guard from Butch Cassidy And
The Sundance Kid
"One man's trash is another man's treasure"
- Alexandra Van Dongen
"One can maximize positive energy, or qi (pronounced chi),
by altering spacial relationships and other aesthetic elements
in a home or workplace. The effects can either enhance or negate
qi, having a profound influence on one's finances, health, happiness
and relationships, according to this belief. "
- A Principle of Feng Shui
September 2nd, 2004
MARRIED MEN! Before you spend another dime on
your wife, read this article.
I'm sorry, that actually came out a bit harsher
than I intended. I really don't want to have a score of angry
wives beat down my door and demand restitution. No, no, that's
not what I want at all. However, in order to produce a sense
of harmony and balance and, heaven help me, you guys save a
buck or two and get an early Christmas, listen to what I have
to say.
Clean your closets and storage spaces.
I know, I know. You're thinking, "What the
hell is Vikar babbling about this time?!! And how can that save
me money?" Well, I'll tell you. Hidden in your closet and
storage spaces is a treasure trove of unused, untouched, stuff.
I'll bet my pinky toe on it. What you find in there will not
only prove to be profitable but educational as well.
I'm in the middle of a purging process. I've
been doing some very late spring cleaning and thought it would
be a great idea to make a list of all the things that have to
be done around the house. I created a list within Excel as to
what the task is, where it has to be done, how long it should
take, task priority, what substeps must be done to accomplish
this task, and what the probable cost incurred would be. I made
about 50 projects that MUST BE DONE and decided for sanity's
sake to stop there.
Now, doing this list in Excel was an idea that
I borrowed from one of the managers at the company, Sharmi Das,
who with a similar cleaning goal said it really worked. As I
am very comfortable with Excel and don't own MS Project at home,
Excel would be the computer tool of choice. The neat thing about
Excel is that you can sort through your spreadsheet and create
prerequisites for other jobs. There is a reason why Ms Das*
is a manager at my company. Moments of brilliance happen to
her frequently. As for me, I usually have to consult a lunar
cycle and see when the moon is blue.
The one job that I knew would have to be done
before all of the other ones was to clean the storage spaces.
After all, if I were to clean the other rooms, where would I
put the excess? I had estimated the amount of time to clean
out the storage bin to be about half a day. I was dead wrong.
This job, compiled with cleaning the master bedroom closet (which
is supposed to be a walk in closet. I haven't been able to walk
into it in years.) is still being done as of this writing.
I went out to Home Depot and bought plastic storage
units. Five "gigantic" and five "large"
with two "under the bed" containers (which did not
go over well with Guinness as his favorite sleeping place is
under the bed.) set me back a little over a hundred bucks. The
plan was to find all summer stuff, winter stuff, spring stuff
and fall stuff - sort em out, pack em up, put em back - less
good will and garbage. I kidnapped my wife into helping me on
this. As we were both off this week, I figured something productive
would be good for our mental well being.
Well, that's what I thought anyway.
However, there's a lot to be found in this "secret
chamber". The first thing I did when I started to clean
the storage bin was empty half of it. That was easy as all I
had to do was open the door. Four garbage bags of old clothes
tumbled out of the storage doorway and hit me on the head. Lazy
me - I started putting things into the bin and did the old "close
the door quickly before the avalanche starts" move. The
pile of bags was about two feet above my head. To be safer and
to get "a head" of the game, I decided to empty a
few more bags as well on the floor.
And there I sat. The balconey looked like it
was a "ground zero" site for a new al Qaida weapon designed to affect only clothes.
Clothes were everywhere.
I grabbed a piece of balcony and some space to
make piles. Pile A (on my right) was all clothes that were to
be thrown out. Pile B (center) was all clothes we were going
to keep. Pile C (left) was all the clothes that were going to
good will.
The first thing that became painfully apparent
was that much of the clothes I'd bought my wife from the time
we were dating to the present were NEVER worn. The price tags
were still on them. Ordinarily, this would be a good thing but
things happen as time goes on and, well, my wife is no longer
a size 2. One for pile C. I also found, much to my embarrassment
and regret, many of my 32 inch waist jeans that I'm certain
will never feel the back of my butt again did not fit as well.
I softly whimpered on the balcony and tossed another for pile
C. Maybe I'll see 34 again... someday. I'll begin the South
Beach Diet again after Labor Day weekend. That at least will
make me feel better.
The tragedy of going "storage spelunking"
like this is that you come across old clothes that will never
come back into style again as well as your partner's commentary
of "I can't believe you actually wore that... in public."
The 80's were a very misunderstood era. I'm certain very thin
ties will come back into style in some other country but as
for the here and now, well, Billy Idol concert T-shirts just
aren't cool anymore.
Oh well, back to the "Love Shack".
There is also the inevitable finding a great
piece of clothing that has been worn to death. Three molecules
of cotton are all that hold the article in question together
and with the help of a strong breeze, it will disintegrate to
dust upon contact. Clothes like this behave very much the exact
same way that good stable clean clothes don't. I found an old
sweat shirt that had a lot of great memories in it that I was
forced to chuck because I would be mistaken for one of the homeless
if I wore it in public. Some people have suggested I use this
for the next painting job I have in the house. I'm sorry, I'm
an old sentimentalist and would rather see it thrown out than
ruined by paint - then thrown out. One more for pile A. I wound
up throwing away a white championship Yankee hat that had turned
yellow, an Ocean Pacific shirt that had fit so well the fabric
had memorized the shape of my back, and about 50 dress shirts
that were now stained green under the armpits.
Don't ask. I don't know either.
Conversely, there were a lot of unworn clothes
that my wife could still use - pile B and would save me a trip
to the store when she would run low on jeans and such. BURIED
TREASURE!!!!!
How do you know you've hit buried treasure with
your significant other? Listen for the following phrases:
- I've been looking for that!!!!
- GREAT!!! I needed more (fill in the blank).
- I didn't think this would fit again but now...
- I'll use these for when I'm bloated.
- I had one of these?!!!
- When did you give me this??
- This will be perfect for that wedding next
month!!
If you hear any of those sentences, you've made
hours of work worthwhile. You've just done shopping and it has
cost you exactly NOTHING! Zero! Zip! Zilch!! And not only did
you not have to spend any money, you have just reminded your
partner that you have been thoughtful, generous, and are
willing to clean the house. HOW CAN YOU BEAT THAT??
Plus, here's another bonus - YOU JUST GOT
RID OF CRAP THAT YOU WERE NEVER GOING TO USE ANYWAY!!! You
have just created new space that you can put other stuff in
that won't be cluttering up your house. And, if you do it well
enough, come moving time, that's less you have pack.
This is a process that should never be ignored
or put off for too long. Granted, there are a lot of clothing
items that have personal memories attached to them. In our most
recent closet spelunking we came across my wife's wedding gown.
And even though we are not going to have kids, it's not something
we are just going to throw out or give to good will. But those
things are few and far between. Your memories will most likely
always be with you. You can always take a picture of you in
the questionable article of clothing and keep that. It's less space and you can keep the feeling
inside.
There is, however, a Jim Morrison T-shirt
that I'm pretty sure I'll never give up and still wear on occasion.
Does it hold any nostalgia for me? Actually, very little - I
just like the way it looks and I like the way it feels as well
as the way I feel when I wear it. And the bottom line? That's
what good clothes are for anyway. How you feel when you wear
them. It's better than a bowl of chicken soup when you're sick.
But just like being sick, cleaning your closets
and your storage bins is a purging. You are getting rid of all
of the bad things that you have either out grown or don't use.
There is definitely something soothing to the creation of space.
A Buddhist would call it reaching a sense of "emptiness".
It's sort of like a cancer operation. Remove all of the bad
stuff that has a tendency to grow and keep all the good stuff
that will be useful. Anything else is just waste and to a point,
destructive.
While I was cleaning, I had to ask, "How
many sweatshirts do I actually really need?" I couldn't
help but think as well, if someone less fortunate than my wife
and myself could do better with a new pair of jeans.
I get a great feeling now as I can walk into
our "walk-in" closet and I know that somehow, somewhere,
I've made a rabid Billy Idol fan very happy.
*- The nickname I have for Sharmi is Ms. Das
to be said like "MS DOS". I am perpetually amazed
by her technology acumen as well as her fiancé's, Anthony
Skipper. Like my former manager, Mr. Wizard, there is a lot
I can learn from these two.
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