Dick Whitman
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- May 1, 2009
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Some interesting nuggets in this op-ed in today's NYT, though I don't necessarily care about the main premise, something about how we still won't fill that void even after we finally tidy up our houses.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/16/opinion/the-clutter-cures-illusory-joy.html
The nuggets:
Anyway, clutter. It sucks, especially when you have little kids.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/16/opinion/the-clutter-cures-illusory-joy.html
The nuggets:
- A few years ago - she dates it as 25 years ago - **** got really cheap, and the amount of **** that each of us owns skyrocketed. I agree with this.
- There's a bit of a pushback to this now, where people are proud not to buy things. I agree with this, too. Remember CDs? Remember DVDs? Remember books? Remember ****ing calculators?
- Robberies have declined because it's not worth it any more when you can just buy a nice TV for $150. This is interesting, too. My wife is always worried about home break-ins. We live in a reasonably nice house in a reasonably nice neighborhood. I ask her: "What the hell would they steal?" Seriously. I don't know what we have that is valuable enough to go through the effort to haul out of there. A bunch of toys, I guess.
- I also think this is a perceptive passage: But the more stuff I shed, the more I realize that we de-clutterers feel besieged by more than just our possessions. We’re also overwhelmed by the intangible detritus of 21st-century life: unreturned emails; unprinted family photos; the ceaseless ticker of other people’s lives on Facebook; the heightened demands of parenting; and the suspicion that we’ll be checking our phones every 15 minutes, forever.
Anyway, clutter. It sucks, especially when you have little kids.
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