Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: clutter

    • Scraping By

      Posted at 3:04 pm by kayewer, on July 12, 2025

      I have been pulling up some old carpeting in a bedroom, and it’s the slowest and most painful task I have ever undertaken. It wouldn’t be such a tough process if the flooring had received more attention in the past, but sometimes a situation makes it impossible to do, and this was the case here. My parents laid the carpet themselves from a large remnant, a long time ago. The carpet itself is a no-pile teal colorway with rubber backing.

      Well, at least in the beginning it had rubber backing. Time disintegrated it into a combination of brittle mats and dust, all of which I will need to pick up. Some of it is stuck to the hardwood floor and needs scraping. This means that the old lady needs to go on hands and knees and deal with the flooring, foot by foot. Along with a sturdy pair of carpet shears, my dustpan and brush, a trash bag and sheer force of will, I have made progress, but age and the summer heat are battling me.

      Also, my parents’ and my old clothes found their way into this room over the years, and now I need to work my way around piles of things which should have been discarded ten diets ago.

      My social media feed is filled with self-help posts posing questions such as “how are clutter and trauma related?” I can tell you; when your family dynamic changes, such as when somebody passes or moves away, all of the things don’t always follow them. Some of the old clothes will fit me now, but I’ve moved on to other garments. This will mean bagging them up and arranging for pick-up to free the space I need to continue handling the carpet. The next phase will involve moving the entire bed to get the carpeting underneath. More scraping and cleaning.

      In the process of bagging the old clothes, the memories of their time decorating my body will come to mind. The years I wore gowns like prairie folk, and those I wore pajamas looking like Katherine Hepburn. The move from polyester to denim, nylon to cotton, bright to muted colors, and size large to. . . .well, you get the picture. And so the trauma continues.

      Decluttering and changing a living space can be a cleansing ritual, but modern décor gurus seem to want us to aim for a minimalist surrounding, with little on the flat surfaces and walls devoid of much identity. I already broke some unwritten rule by buying a tufted headboard for the new queen bed in the room. I like the look and, if I were to be graded, would gladly take the zero. It is neutral in color and offers something soft to sit up in bed upon. What more could one want in a bedroom?

      So my plan for the next phase of cleaning is to place old summer clothes in one bag, and old winter clothes in the other, and make a phone call for a charity to pick up the bags and remove them forever. Somebody should enjoy the items, as the clothes succumbed to outsizing or boredom after years of use, rather than actual wear and tear.

      Which brings to mind another kind of trauma; being told in social media that most donated clothes wind up in a landfill. That’s a guilt trip nobody wants to burden themselves with. I do, however, also have a back-up plan involving a set of bags in which I can donate clothes which are guaranteed to be repurposed instead of going to a cloth mountain in some forsaken back corner of the world, and in return I will earn points for shopping online.

      I promise to not shop for more clothes with those points. I have enough to wear for now, and it’s time to say goodbye to the past.

      After I scrape one more foot of that carpet backing away.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged carpet-removal, clothing-donation, clutter
    • Demonic Possessions

      Posted at 1:54 am by kayewer, on August 3, 2014

      A thought came to  me while at Wal-Mart today: another junk season is here. The summer junk is half price and the new junk is ready to roll. I saw racks of summer clothing, brightly colored plastic tumblers, pool noodles, iced tea mixes and flip flops, interspersed with back-to-school notebooks, multi-packs of dorm supplies and the first of the long sleeved tops.

      We are a society obsessed with our seasonal collections and purges, when we throw out the notebook with thirty good pages in it into the trash because the new one at the store is only fifty cents and a bargain. That is, if you find the old notebook. It may be in a pile with some old comic books or hiding under the old model I-Pad. When you have too many of these things–clothes the kids may have outgrown, but you can’t get them to sit still long enough to try them on, the remaining books on the “to read list” from last year, the six cosmetics you tried before you found one that worked–you wind up with clutter.

      Whole reality programs are devoted to clutter. It seems some of us can lose control of our homes’ cleanliness because of clutter. A need to keep things ready for use someday can become an obsession which is bad for one’s mental health and can grow into a health hazard. Yet I have seen a strange phenomenon in our public spaces in which a container or wrapper, the second after the product within is consumed, becomes untouchable and gets dropped to the ground instantly, whether a trashcan is within reach or not. When you see a bag from a fast food place sitting in the middle of a parking lot, you know what I mean. If we could apply that philosophy to our indoor lives, life would be simpler and less likely to become a hoarder’s paradise.

      There is something sad about hoarders. They can often be forgotten individuals with no human contact outside their homes and/or enabling family members or a few close friends who overlook the problem. The hoarder wants to still be useful, and thus so does their clutter. The hoarder won’t throw out the notebook with thirty good pages in it, because somebody could use it. Somebody who can’t afford fifty cents would love to have that used notebook for free, and the hoarder would be able to serve a purpose by having it available for them.

      The middle ground between the throwaway society and the hoarding society is such a tenuous expanse, and our earth is filled with more clutter than a million hoarder’s houses, yet we still want the new thing and still want to get the empty soda cup out of our hands at once.

      A great family project would be to do an annual purge party, in which the old stuff is donated or thrown out if it really can’t be used, the useful can be refurbished (that notebook might look great with some craft tape or some pictures and glue) and you can save money you don’t need to spend on new stuff.

      As for hoarders, they need to feel important and useful. They are, after all, taking charge of all the junk others might throw away. Clean-out crews often just throw everything into a truck and take it away, and hoarders tend to get upset because they feel their collections are being wasted. We need to take a better look at how we deal with our stuff, not throw it out haphazardly, not waste it  nor let it collect and draw dust, bugs or worse. Things do have a purpose, so donate, recycle or buy new with that in mind. Don’t be ruled by the trendy, and don’t take the old for granted.

      And take that soft drink cup those ten steps to the trashcan.

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      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged clutter, decluttering, hoarding, possessions, shopaholics
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