redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (me drinking tea)
( Nov. 2nd, 2008 05:34 pm)
The local tidying process is about equal parts removal of actual stuff (books, fanzines, clothes that don't fit, comic books, shoes that have worn out, odd containers of spices…) and removal of dust. The dust is physically annoying, certainly. The stuff is sometimes difficult: even as I know that I will never reread X book, or that if I haven't looked at those apa mailings in fifteen years, I'm not likely to, it feels a little weird to be recycling, throwing away, or in some cases giving away so much stuff. I'm keeping a few things, in some cases by category (issues of Bento and Hothead Paisan, for example.

There are some bright points: for example, I apparently bought a copy of John M. Ford's The Final Reflection sometime in the past few years, put it down, and then put something on top of it. And a few more somethings on top of that. It surfaced about a week ago, and I have now read it.

Also, in going through a box yesterday, I found some ditto'd zines, and I think there must have been a ditto master in there, because my hand came away with purple stains. Folks, I have not used ditto masters on a fanzine since the 1980s. The early 1980s. (What we kept from that particular box was three odd dice and one shooter marble.)

I am not going to list things discarded or recycled, except that I decided that I don't need large numbers of undistributed copies of my old fanzines, because such lists would bring only regret.

ETA: Yes, having a cleaner and less cluttered apartment is a good thing, but the absence of random zine I hadn't thought of in years isn't a specific bright point, it's a very small piece of clearing, say, a pile of stuff off a table.
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redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (me drinking tea)
( Nov. 2nd, 2008 05:34 pm)
The local tidying process is about equal parts removal of actual stuff (books, fanzines, clothes that don't fit, comic books, shoes that have worn out, odd containers of spices…) and removal of dust. The dust is physically annoying, certainly. The stuff is sometimes difficult: even as I know that I will never reread X book, or that if I haven't looked at those apa mailings in fifteen years, I'm not likely to, it feels a little weird to be recycling, throwing away, or in some cases giving away so much stuff. I'm keeping a few things, in some cases by category (issues of Bento and Hothead Paisan, for example.

There are some bright points: for example, I apparently bought a copy of John M. Ford's The Final Reflection sometime in the past few years, put it down, and then put something on top of it. And a few more somethings on top of that. It surfaced about a week ago, and I have now read it.

Also, in going through a box yesterday, I found some ditto'd zines, and I think there must have been a ditto master in there, because my hand came away with purple stains. Folks, I have not used ditto masters on a fanzine since the 1980s. The early 1980s. (What we kept from that particular box was three odd dice and one shooter marble.)

I am not going to list things discarded or recycled, except that I decided that I don't need large numbers of undistributed copies of my old fanzines, because such lists would bring only regret.

ETA: Yes, having a cleaner and less cluttered apartment is a good thing, but the absence of random zine I hadn't thought of in years isn't a specific bright point, it's a very small piece of clearing, say, a pile of stuff off a table.
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