Among the dust and cobwebs
by chuckofish
True to my routine, on Saturday I went to a couple of estate sales. One was in a lovely home on a street down by my old church, a neighborhood I am very familiar with and which is one of my favorites. It was the home of a former professor and his wife, the home they raised their three children in. The children are my age and went to the other private school (the co-educational one) in this flyover town.
It was a beautiful three-story house, probably built in the 1920s, with a wide front-to-back front hall, a lovely staircase, and back stairs from the basement to the third floor. The kitchen looked virtually untouched with an old-fashioned pantry. The basement, although not “finished” to today’s standard, had terrazzo floors and a fireplace. Such a wide and airy house, full of lovely things, and books, and evocative testaments to lives well lived–canoe paddles, skates, skiis, pictures taken out west. All I could think, however, was how the next family to buy this house would undoubtedly feel the need to gut-rehab it, ripping out walls to make a huge kitchen with granite counters, and all the rest. Sigh.
I also could not help wondering why the three children did not want all their parents’ stuff! No room for their childhood twin beds? Trunks from dad’s days at summer camp? Their mother’s St. John suits? Her sewing baskets? There were even some family pictures and engraved teaching awards! I suppose things are never what they seem.
I bought a couple of books. Mostly this outing made me very sad. It was a little too personal I guess. Much as I love estate sales, I hope my own children do not have one. The idea of people pawing through my things! Just give it away! Or throw it away! Have a big bonfire and burn it (probably not legal, but somehow preferable)!
Time marches on; obviously some people have a much easier time moving with it than I do. The past is prelude and all that. So true, Will Shakespeare, but for some of us, the past is always with us.


My favorite part of Antiques Roadshow has always been hearing people say “Oh, I’d never sell it. That’s a family heirloom.”
It warms my heart to read that!
Some people don’t appreciate the past — even their own. I probably live too much in it, but I do think it’s important to remember and I can’t abide the way people toss aside beautiful old things in favor of modern cheapo stuff. That said, it takes more than the age of an object to make it worth keeping. Nice post!
And that is why we must work at making a wonderful ‘present’ so then we will have a great ‘past’ to look back on!
We’re going to be fighting tooth and nail over the twin beds and trunks! And all I’ll get is the wax fruit…
I enjoyed reading your blog entry very much. I know exactly what you mean about the house: I do estate sales for a living and I have a friend who works for me. Every house we work on, she says something like: “I’d knock out that wall and….” Also, please, please, please don’t encourage your children to throw your stuff away! I understand how you might feel about having people paw through your belongings (and they’ll probably make a few snide remarks, too), but I’d rather my family pull out all they want and sell the rest to make a bit more money. You can always designate who must take the important family history pieces (I have an old clock that had been my grandmothers. It doesn’t work, but my father made me promise to take it.) and let them pick out whatever else they want. Just try to remember to get rid of any incriminating evidence. Thanks for sharing.