~This essay was originally published in Epiphany (2006).
The lobby of the building where I live
contains two huge breakfronts which house the sentimental items of former
tenants. The building is a good value
pre-war co-op with a contingent of renters which grows smaller every year, as
they move into nursing homes, retire to Florida, or die. They leave behind the little somethings for a
shelf, the small vases, the prancing figures, the engraved bowls, the
statuettes of animals. Our superintendent takes what he considers the best of
the selection and displays it in the breakfronts, bric-a-brac as memento mori.
I hate all this stuff.
My father had a talent for transforming an
ordinary word into a profanity simply through pronunciation. One such word was “junk.” “Get rid of all this jjjjuuuuuuuunk,” he
would command. “Junk” became a curse, a
German curse, a bad cinema German curse, the kind that Hollywood Nazis shout at
the uncomprehending conquered in war movies.
Junk! Junk!
Get rid of all this jjjjjuuuuuuunk!
And there was a lot of junk to sort
through. A widower with three teenagers,
my father married a divorcee with four.
In the interest of strict accuracy, I should point out that my sister,
the eldest, had just left her teens and I, the youngest, had not quite entered
mine, but you get the idea of our baggage — dolls and toys, tea sets and train
sets, tennis racquets and skateboards, abruptly obsolete 45s and eight-track
tapes and the equipment that played them, abandoned worlds of aquariums and
terrariums — the normal flotsam of childhood.
But in addition to the boxes and boxes of things we had been exhorted to
sort through before the great move to the combined house on Ironstone Road,
there was their stuff — the heirlooms, the wedding gifts from three
different weddings — his, hers, theirs — the treasured mementos. Or the junk. The value of bric-a-brac is in the eyes of
the beholder.
For example, a decoupages wooden box was
just a disposable craft project, unless the handed that had wielded the glue
gun and the lacquer brush was my mother’s.
In that case, the box was a treasure.
I don’t remember much about my mother, who died when I was eight, but
the smell of varnish or paint evokes in me a wistful yearning for the
possibility of home. My mother made a
lot of things. She made my clothes — and
don’t pity me as an outcast, envisioning sad floppy frocks, but picture me in
elegant sheaths of olive green raw silk, my monogram inscribed across my then
non-existent bodice. I was still an
outcast, of course, with all my classmates in short sets, but I have never
since dressed so well. I was the First
Lady of the second grade.
My mother made my furniture, refurbishing
second-hand stuff with new knob s and hinges and paint. She painted paintings and gold-leafed the
frames they went into. These pursuits
were not soothing domestic hobbies. She
had a fierce urge to create every aspect of her world which in a different era
would have led her to become Martha Stewart, or a film director, or the
Secretary of State. As it was, she left
behind small artifacts of her restlessness.
My sister and brother were teenagers when she died. When they set up their own homes, they made
shrines of her things — the platters shaped like fish to serve fish, the fish
forks, the watercolors of sailboats, the enormous hutches sanded and re-hinged
and varnished. With a sense of
abandonment stronger than my memory, I abandoned those things.
And so we came to a series of
divestitures. My stepmother was
diagnosed with lung cancer and my stepsister left for college. My father, stepmother and I had a garage sale
and we moved to a smaller house. My
stepmother died and I went to college.
My father moved to a townhouse and sent our family legal into storage.
As we set up our own homes we began,
inevitably, to miss things. Initially,
the older kids asked me about certain items, since I had manned the garage at
the Great Yard Sale of Ironstone Road, which had come to represent a loss as
epic as the burning of the Great Library at Alexandria. But since I had been practically checking the
flights for my permanent departure from home at the time, I don’t remember
much. Whatever happened to, Christine or Jim or Michael or Sarah would
ask, my guitar, train set, tennis
racquet, collection of A.A. Milne, hockey stick, Girl Scout sash, sewing machine?
“I don’t know, it’s all in storage!” My father would roar. “No one was here to help me so I sent it all
away.” It wasn’t particularly accurate
to that we hadn’t tried to help — I had offered to pack and label, others had
offered to come in to sort — but the charge that we weren’t there was, in a
larger sense, true. We wanted to shed
such clutter and its obligations and attachments and set out unencumbered on
adventures. And then we wanted to come
back and find our treasures waiting for us, carefully tucked away, seasoned
only by a thin veneer of dust, like the sturdy rocking horse tucked away in the
nursery in a sentimental English novel.
We wanted to put away childish things, but we wanted doting parents to
preserve them until we were ready to take them up again.
It didn’t seem like much to demand. Our college friends had it — repositories of
the trophies won in high school, the clay handprints crafted in grade school,
the prom dresses and varsity letters, preserved in a tissue-paper softened, cedar-scented
trunk in an abandoned bedroom.
We, on the other hand, had a unit in a
storage warehouse in Earth City, Missouri, which is as bleak as it sounds and
was built on a flood plain. The mere
mention of the word “storage” set off the same lonely lament: “Nobody was here to help me. Everybody was scattered all over East Jesus...”
Until the day came when we were there, too
late to help him, but nevertheless there,
with all the junk, in the warehouse
in Earth City, my sister and brother and me, nearly a year after our father
died. We had put off this chore that
long because during the week of the funeral we had had to tackle his apartment
(since none of us lived in town, but in the various ex-burbs of East Jesus) and
that ordeal had been, quite frankly, rough enough to hold us for quite
awhile. My father’s last domicile was
his mother’s apartment, which he moved into when she took up residence in a
nursing home. He left her things in
place and merely covered them with a topsoil of the meager possessions to which
his life had been reduced: cigars,
disposable lighters, the daily crossword puzzle, his fountain pen, his glasses,
the cap he wore when we drove . . . alongside my grandmother’s Hummel figurine
of lederhosen-clad children, her few and well-preserved pieces of
Depression-era glassware, and the sundry Bibles which formed a cliché-realizing
stack when I gathered them all together and yearned to swear something on them.
The prized possession of her household was
bric-a-brac by anybody’s definition, a 6 inch high figurine of a baseball
player. Someone had made him for my
grandfather. Despite the fact that the name
“Phil” (my grandfather) was painted on the base where he stood, that he was the
wrong age (a child), dressed in the wrong color of uniform (pale blue and tan)
and batting from the wrong side of the plate (right), he was meant to represent
Stan Musial and had Musial’s number “6” painted on the back of his blue
uniform. He had watched us from a
knick-knack shelf through the hams and turkeys and angel food cakes of
countless holiday and birthday dinners, so rosy-cheeked, so wrong, so
benign. I strode over and claimed
“Phil.” My brother and sister sighed
with disappointment. They’d wanted him,
too. Most of the other stuff in the
apartment, despite its value, was just junk.
Less than a year later, we were back at it,
sorting through the stuff of a lost household.
We stood in the warehouse in Earth City, gazing at various pieces of
this and that, notably a structure that had once been a couch before my
father’s cats had turned it into a litter box and scratching post (if he’d
indulged his children the way he indulged his cats, we’d all be in jail.) Boxes of age-stained baby clothes, acres of
dusty crystal goblets for specific sweet liqueurs no longer in vogue, rickety
chairs from “antique” shops, ashtrays commemorating vacations and sports
victories, all this had to be either trashed or shipped. My stepsister Sarah had worried that my
brother and sister and I would fight like the heirs to a kingdom over the last
of our inheritance (hey, Sarah! Found your sewing machine!) but our bickering was motivated less by greed
than by weary repudiation.
“I don’t want it.”
“I don’t want it, either.”
“Somebody
has to take it.”
“What movie ends like this?” my brother asked, surveying the crates and
garden statues.
“Citizen
Kane,” I replied, although for once I wasn’t thinking of movies but of
Buddhism and its renunciation of attachment to material things. The call of nothing was so appealing. I wondered if Buddhist nuns were allowed to
have sex.
We finally got through most of it, although
much of the stuff I was compelled to take — the tarnished silver coffee
service, my mother’s tiny twee hand-crafted casserole dishes — still sits in
storage. It’s just a smaller unit a
thousand miles away from Earth City. I
can’t get rid of the casserole dishes; they stand as a permanent reproach for a
life I chose not to live, the household arts I haven’t mastered. And I can’t get rid of the coffee service, because
nobody wants someone else’s old silver.
Except, apparently, for my mother.
At my sister’s yard sale, some years later,
my sister and I debated the worth of her boxes of junk. I took the position that it was better to get
rid of the inventory than to have to ship it, while she upbraided me tearily
for not being “sentimental.”
“This.”
I displayed without sentiment a corroded egg beater. “A dollar, at best.”
“Five!”
she retorted. “People collect those
things.”
“People collect other people’s rusted kitchen
utensils.”
“It’s Americana.”
“Then I would like the names of those
people, so I can find them something better to do.” I pulled out a silver serving spoon inscribed
with my initial and surname: E Frank. “I guess I’d better keep this.”
“Yes, she was so pleased when she found that
in that antique store.”
A ghostly sigh breezed between my ears.
“Antique store?”
“That antique store in Canada.” My sister sorted through a heap of old
coffee-stained linen napkins.
“She didn’t have this made for me? She didn’t buy it new? It’s somebody else’s spoon? Some other E Frank? Some Canadian?”
“What difference does it make.”
“The difference is I don’t have to keep it
if it wasn’t meant for me.”
“It was
meant for you. Why else would she buy
it?”
How would I know? Why do people buy anything in antique
stores? Why do people buy anything at
all that isn’t meant to perform a task or to hold something else, or to be
consumed, eaten, worn, read, listened to or to organize smaller, useful
things? What were all these people doing
in my sister’s yard, ready to fork over money for the few geegaws she was
willing to part with? Why do people buy
any thing that has no purpose except to be a thing, to sit on a shelf and be
looked at? Since the trauma of clearing
out the warehouse in Earth City, I had had trouble with this concept. I have had to leave gift shops, even while a
friend was holding up some decorative object and asking, “Do you think she’ll
like this?” I have had to leave Pottery
Barn and Williams-Sonomas where I was expected to buy a wedding gift; I have
been found just outside on the sidewalk, hyperventilating at the thought of the
future burden of these items. These
potential “keepsakes.” These things.
The junk. The little carvings, the useless additions to
the useless collections . . .
Why did it matter that this spoon I had
always thought was created for me was merely recognized as something similar to
me? When I thought that my mother had
commissioned its creation, it was one thing.
When it was left behind in a junk store to commemorate some dead
Canadian, it was entirely another. Just
because my mother had seen and touched it, that didn’t make it a holy
relic. Who cares. What’s the point. Of course, I still have it. But I’m not proud of keeping it.
You think I exaggerate. Oh, you think, E Frank is no Buddhist, she
has her little treasures, too. The
things that remind her of childhood, of the trips to London and Paris and Prague
and Salt Lake City, of those ex-boyfriends.
And yes, I do. My pre-war
apartment building has built-in bookcases and mine are filled with the amusing
objects that those bookshelves were meant to store the crystal baseball from
Orrefors, the wooden kangaroo named “Kangaroo,” the reliable doll Becky who
survived the warfare of my nieces, the figure of a nymph washing her foot (a
housewarming gift), and of course, “Phil,” the baseball player meant to be Stan
Musial. But I would love to surrender
them and not experience searing hurt for doing so. They are just things. They are not my friend Donna, my mother, my
friend David, my grandfather. They don’t
“remind” me of these people. I don’t
need reminders. I think of Donna, Mom,
David and Phil all the time. And when I
die, the meaning of the crystal baseball, of Kangaroo and Becky and “Phil,”
will die with me, even if they end up in those breakfronts in the lobby of my
building.
Rainier Maria Rilke wrote:
“We need, in love, to practice only
this: letting each other go. For
holding on comes easily; we do not need to learn it.”
holding on comes easily; we do not need to learn it.”
I can quote Rilke because my built-in
bookcases hold — aside from bric-a-brac, photographs of long-lost pets and
other people’s children and old silver — two shelves of books of poetry. I’ve learned I need to keep these books close
at hand, because at one point in my life they were in storage for six months,
and I was unaccountably depressed almost every day until I was able to unpack
them.
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE ESSAY
I was watching my superintendent
unlock the doors to one of the breakfronts in the lobby in order to add another
porcelain statuette of happy peasant child to the collection when I remembered
the phrase “humble figurine.” Years
earlier, when I managed a small matrimonial office as a day job, I took a call
from one of our heartbroken clients, complaining that his kids had called him
to tell him that his wife was packing up all the things in the living room,
“The vases and ceramic things, and the humble figurines. Half that stuff should go to me, right?” I knew he meant “Hummel figurines,” but what
I said, gently, was “Do you really want it?”
What he wanted, of course, was the marriage back the way it was, but he
had displaced his yearning onto the objects they (most probably she) had
accumulated. And so the essay was born.
*****
ABOUT ELIZABETH BALES FRANK
Elizabeth Bales Frank is a
novelist and essayist who lives with little clutter but
too many books in New York City. Her
work has been published in Glamour,
Cosmopolitan, The New York Times, The Sun, Post Road, Elysian Fields Quarterly,
Compass Rose, Under the Gum Tree, and The
Writing Disorder. Her new novel, Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me, is looking
for a publisher. Her website about the
literature of World War II is http://www.somuchsomanysofew.wordpress.com
Please, pass the tissue - I lost it at the rocking horse. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThose of us with a lot of year mileage can appreciate the farewell to JUNK. I converted to Buddhism years ago but my wife collects things as if that is the purpose of life: collect as much stuff as you can. Thank you for the insight.
ReplyDeleteJerry Miller, born Cedar Rapids 1936
This is so beautifully written. I absolutely loved it.
ReplyDelete"Why do people buy any thing that has no purpose except to be a thing, to sit on a shelf and be looked at?" That made me laugh out loud.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great essay on a topic that torments many of us. Thanks for putting many of my feelings into words so that I might be able to free myself of more junk if I re-read it a few times. Why does it get harder as we get older, even though we value it less and less? Maybe because processing the feelings and then conquering through logic takes quite a bit of effort, and we're more tired than we used to be.