The last time I was pregnant
I went through a violent nesting phase. This is not uncommon. But whereas most
expectant mothers tend to hoard (food, diapers, blankets, etc), my “nesting”
went in the opposite direction. I wanted to Get. Rid. Of. Everything.
This purging instinct
was not always popular in my house. My husband and my toddler were prone to
revolt, so that often I was forced to resort to subterfuge.
I started reading
minimalist blogs when I should have been writing and making secret trips to
Good Will when I was supposedly running to the grocery store.
Much of this new
minimalism was a reaction to a real and overwhelming glut of stuff in our home.
You see, for the first five years
of our marriage we didn’t have that much stuff. There were the books, of
course. Okay, lots of books. But books aren’t “stuff” (right?). We moved to and
from Scotland with two suitcases. (I shipped the books.) And when we bought our
house I was overwhelmed with the vast and empty rooms, the cavernous basement. How,
I wondered, would I ever fill up all this space? Ha. Ha. Just a few years later
and I wonder at my own naiveté. During this time one of my grandmothers passed
away and the other downsized. And then truckloads of furniture, books
(more books!), linens, toys, and who knows what else descended upon us.
Don’t get me wrong.
These are lovely things. Beautiful and meaningful things. But THINGS. Things
that we must move, care for, clean, and (inevitably—we do have children after
all) repair. Things are a burden!—who knew! Even getting RID of things is a
huge task.
And this is just
“grownup” things. The kids are a whole other universe of things.
And if all of this is
making my palms sweat now, just imagine how I felt when I was 9 months pregnant
and roughly the size of a beached whale. I was tired of digging play-mobile people and single socks (socks!!) out from underneath the couch.
These were the better
motives for my new minimalism.
But there were other
motives, less noble.
Some nights I found
myself frantically searching online for images of minimalist homes: homes with
no toys, homes with hardly anything in sight. “There are no toys on the floor,”
I said to myself gazing on in awe and (dare I say it?) something like lust. And
then suddenly the observation changed. “There are no toys” became “there are no
children.”
And this was the
dangerous part. Because part of my minimalism was more than a mere rejection of
“stuff” and the burden of “stuff,” it was, in its worst moments, a rejection of
the people and relationships associated with the stuff. Because people are
burdens. Relationships are messy.
Part of me wanted to get
rid, not just of the things, but of the people attached to the things. “Why can’t
you people just leave me alone?!” All I want is to be alone in a white room
with nothing in it: no responsibilities, no emotions, no mess…and no socks.
I think it was the socks
that finally got me to recognize the darker side of my “minimalism.” I was
sorting socks. And there were a lot of socks. In a moment of frustration I
declared to my husband (who happened to be passing) that I was going to throw
away all of the socks. Then there would be no more socks to dig out from under
the couch, no sweaty socks to wash, no single socks to match. Just think of it!
No Socks! Devin looked down at the pile, skeptical. “But we need socks!” he
said. And I knew he was right. We need socks: dry socks, clean socks, matching
socks. The only way to get rid of the socks is to get rid of the people who
need socks.
Minimalism can go wrong
when it forgets that we are human and humans need things--because we *are*
things: fleshy, physical, relational. We aren’t just souls, meant for
contemplation and solitude. We are bodies and families and we need to eat and
sleep and play. We need houses and food and beds and toys. And socks.
This meditation is timely
because (if you haven’t noticed) we are now deep in the Holiday season, when
things (and things and things) are what everyone is doing and thinking about.
Our consumer culture insists that “things” are what it’s all about: lots and
lots of things under the tree and in the stocking so GET TO THE MALL! And I
think we all can agree that this is a perversion of the Christmas
spirit.
But no matter how we
feel about materialism and greed, there is another kind of “thing” which comes
with Christmas:
There is the advent
wreath, lovingly decorated with greenery from the garden, the candles lit night
by night as the family sings together (though sometimes out of tune).
There is
the tree, brought home with much pageantry, installed with wailing and gnashing
of teeth (at least in my house), yet a thing of beauty, wonder; the children
lie underneath it and look up through the lit branches.
There are the
ornaments, some passed down through several generations, some made with
macaroni and glitter, but all meaningful, all embodying a memory, a person, a
relationship.
Things are not evil. And sometimes
things can be more than things: they can even be sacramental.
There are lots of
stuff-objects-things to deal with at Christmas time, and I think it is an
appropriate time to think about things, and the physical nature, the
thingy-ness, of our own human reality. Because this is the time of Incarnation,
when we celebrate the fact that God became a baby, that Spirit became…a thing.
If God did not scorn “things” then neither should we. God became a child and
played with toys. God became a carpenter and worked with tools. He made breakfast
for his friends. He gave bread, wine. He rode a donkey. He wore sandals (if not
socks).
That's wonderful!
ReplyDeleteThought provoking - thanks.
ReplyDeleteLoved reading this!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely beautiful. As I sit here just two months away from my next child's arrival, I, too, am wanting to get rid of things. Thank you for the reminder that although there is beauty in simplicity, there is also beauty in what we have and why we have it. Have a peaceful remainder of Advent and a blessed Christmas season :)
ReplyDeleteWe live in a house which is basically a basement with an attic on top, and we're getting ready to have my father-in-law move in with us. He needs a first floor room, so we either have to give him our room or add on a room. As our house is already weird, the Holy Spirit has finally suggested that we just raise the roof, and move upstairs with the kids! Do you know that they take the whole roof off your house? For days? While they hurry up and build walls so they can hurry up and get a new roof on before the next round of storms rolls through? Eight children and eight children's stuff to clean up and move out of the upstairs! Gah!
ReplyDelete(And yet, I'm secretly looking forward to it, because twenty years of marriage to a soldier has taught me to embrace moving, and I've lived here for two long. It's going to be fun!)