As many of you know I am planning to relocate overseas to Malaysia later this year. There's a two-plus week real estate reconnaissance trip scheduled for May at which time the house goes up for sale here and I plan to allocate about 2 final weeks upon my return to clean out whatever else remains in the house.
I'd mentioned several times about the baseball card collection which was sorted, entered into a database and sold to a generous soul who is a part of this coterie of Mets fans that make this site possible. That grouping of over 10,000 cards was split into two very large and heavy boxes that got shipped out on Monday.
What remains in the home of sports-related stuff called to mind a philosophical and economic debate as to what to do with an American lifetime of collecting. On the wall in my home office is a home plate shaped shadow box containing more than a dozen autographed baseballs ranging from fringe players to Hall of Famers.
So when faced with these many things I got to thinking about what made me buy and display these many tokens of favorite teams and players. It also made me realize that this aspect of American life is pretty much going away as baseball and football are not sports that are played in that part of the world.
The question that arose in my head is whether I should preserve some of these belongings as a remembrance of what my life has been, or should I sell it all and start a fresh life in southeast Asia? The baseballs in the display case are small enough that it is indeed possible to pack them for shipping in the suitcases-only constraint I've given myself, but most of the rest is too large or otherwise unwieldy to consider incurring the cost of special packaging.
I kind of faced the same dilemma with a lifetime of art collecting. This past week I took 58 original art works wrapped in moving blankets by rental van to New Braunfels, TX (about 600 miles away) to drop them at a gallery and auction house to convert them back into some cash. Driving that distance on a Thursday, staying overnight, then driving that same distance back to El Paso on Friday made me develop a sense of what it must be like for long distance truckers who do this type of mileage on a regular basis.
A good friend made me realize something that the sacrifice of my Peter Max, Marc Chagall, Itzchak Tarkay, Salvador Dali and other significant works was indeed painful. However, he said to think of it as a new opportunity to cover my "canvas" of blank new home walls with a fresh collection to highlight this start to a new chapter of my life. Don't think of it as a loss but as an opportunity.
I therefore think and wonder if I should embrace the dispatching of my sports memorabilia the same way. Yes, it was significant to me and touched me emotionally to have these many things on display in my homes in New Jersey and Texas, but now I will have a new home in a new country with a new culture. Perhaps I should welcome the challenge created instead of mourning the loss of the past.
You certainly have had amazing collections. If it was me, I'd keep a few items like the baseballs, and see what a new unencumbered life brings your way. No doubt, your collector's mindset will readjust to collecting other interesting things. Most people cannot let go of the old. The old can be entrapping, and a clean slate to build on is a whole new adventure.
ReplyDeleteAgree with Tom......a few keepsakes and let the rest go, IMO.
ReplyDeleteYou can always take photos of everything before the purge, so you can look back on those items (sort of) by reviewing the photographs. I have found that retirement, along with getting older has made me more of a minimalist and that I don't miss all of the stuff that I used to have (but that's just me). Or maybe having "hoarders" in my family scares the hell out of me?
Anyway, I guess I am a bit out of the loop.....your pending move is news to me. I am excited for you Reese and I hope that everything works out better then you anticipate.
I also hope that you plan on staying a part of this blog.
Reese. .. Best Wishes to you. You are doing something that I could not at this point.
ReplyDeleteI am a collector of different things and could not do a full 'lift, clean, and replace' of my treasures. My wife will keep trying, but I just can't get the whole Marie Kondo things.
"We have to downsize" just means "we need to build another addition".
Good luck with everything. This is not an easy thing to do!
I've visited 75 countries thus far (nice to have the flexibility to travel a lot when you don't have kids, huh?) I've seen beautiful scenery, impressive architecture, wonderful ruins, sampled amazing cuisines, done awesome shopping and experienced all kinds of cultures. The original goal was to move to Panama but the property owned there was contiguous to a national park and little by little they imposed the same environmental regulations on anything that touched the park grounds. I sold that vacant land, paid off my mortgage, and now when I sell the house I get that money back (and then some). Not having children makes it a bit easier to pack up and head overseas. The current goal is to rent a furnished home for the first year (condo, townhouse, house...undecided right now), and then use that year to explore the area in more depth about where I want to put down roots long term. It could be the place where I'd be then living, some other place in the same city, some other city in Malaysia or even some other country. Taking essentially just a bunch of suitcases and nothing else makes it much easier to be mobile and flexible. Today I sold my second motorcycle. The first is on display at a dealership. That hurt a little bit. Later this month we organize for an estate sale and then April 1st and 2nd it takes place. In May I do a real estate reconnaissance trip to Malaysia and if the right rental property comes up, I'll sign on the dotted line even if it will take another month or so to go back there. It's all part of the adventure.
ReplyDeleteQuite a plan - few would wish to tackle it, but having visited 75 countries sure helps. I've visited 5 besides the U.S. (I won't count a layover in Japan as # 6).
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