The garage was fucked. The garage, that dumping ground for all our excess, for all we could not process or endure. The garage was the physical manifestation of our gluttony and waste. The garage was bombastic in scale: a proud boat slapped on the face of our mint-green suburban home. The garage would hold three cars but with such vertical height, past owners had built a set of upstairs lofts, creating the effect of four chambers. Because it had spiders and bad smells and was dark I endeavored to make the garage my own, like the den. I adorned it with rock posters and tapestries, a throwback to old dorm rooms and apartments. But with everyone’s things crammed in the garage the space was fucked. Like the chambers of a heart it was clogged.
I had a set of vintage bookshelf speakers rigged to an old stereo and music sounded especially good in the garage. The more dank and gritty, the better. Like Captain Beefheart’s Trout Mask Replica or anything by the band Can. Neutral Milk Hotel sounded good too, on cassette. The form factors, cassette or CD, were all original so that was an added benefit. It was like a horcrux, fragments of my soul anchored to these prized physical objects.
We had not reconciled the garage since the lead-up to our nine-month tour of Europe that started 10 years ago this week. The garage was now an overgrown garden choked by weeds. Unwanted things gone amok, mostly the kids’ things.
I commandeered Lily to reconcile her stuff by pulling all the bags and boxes down to the bottom chamber, so they might be judged in the light of day. I threw open the bay doors and blew it out with the leaf blower. And then I got a foldout chair and sat with her as Lily went through it all. She found a necklace with a coyote tooth she made in wilderness therapy, also a photo album from that same era. So naturally the hard part of all this is the nostalgia, the cloying feelings of the past, confronting all we may not have the space or energy to confront (which is why we have the garage).
I emptied a bag of my old T-shirts, so many things I’d forgotten I had. Same with the art: old pictures we’d hung in past houses, now buried in the upstairs loft. Board games from long-gone Saturday nights, unplayed records with faded covers: it could choke you too.
I backed our Honda Pilot by the mouth of the garage so we could just load anything for donation right into it. From one container to another. Lily worked at the thrift store down the road, the same one we would donate her things, and wouldn’t it be funny if she wound up having to process and price her own stuff, we joked?
It didn’t take more than a couple hours. Soon Charlotte joined in, and started with her Barbie dolls. You could see a kind of melancholy settle in and I felt maybe I was being mean, making them do this. Part of me wanted to say “you can keep anything you want,” but Dawn pointed out the foolishness in that. I did suggest to Charlotte she save some of her favorites in case she has kids some day; she hadn’t thought of that.
And when they were done I was surprised by how I felt: not as much joy and relief but more a melancholy too, that all our stuff could disappear so quickly. I didn’t feel the joy of reclaiming our space, it just felt emptied. It was not only a manifestation of all our gluttony and waste, the garage was a keeper of the past, and held lots of our love and memories too. You could haul it all up the road, unload it, and be back in 15 minutes. That felt surprisingly real. Like moving out, or moving on.
Categories: Creative Nonfiction, Memoir

Oh the stuff of STUFF. How it weighs in weighs us down. Good job though with the final despatch.
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It is our stuffing, for sure. Doesn’t look so good exposed in the light of day! Thank you Tish, hope your weekend is all that, as we say.
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Part of the ephemeral quality of life, no? Makes me think of all the times I’ve helped friends or family empty houses, either when moving on or after someone dies. After reading this, it is amazing how quickly a lifetime of memories can be transformed into a staged environment, where a buyer can envision their new life within. In the words of the Mandalorians, it is the Way.
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A staged environment exactly. That’s our lives right? Thanks for the Mandalorian ref too (and again for that Gary Snyder comment recently; for my poetry mojo working again!). Be well Carl, thanks for reading.
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All the world’s a stage, I guess.
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That “staged environment” is the IT talking in you! Ha! You’re channeling your dev self.
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Has it been ten years since that trip? Wow. I enjoyed that nine month sequence of posts, living vicariously through your adventures. And I’ve enjoyed the garage stories too as they’ve surfaced on occassion. As much as getting out in nature is natural, and hunkering down in the garage is comparatively unnatural, the garage is still somehow refreshing and restorative, in an entirely unnatural way.
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Ten years yesterday! Remarkable I remembered that I think, just struck me. Like your toggling between the natural and unnatural, damn straight. Caves.
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As our gut has a microbiome, so does our garage; both exude the unique musk of our consumption. Whilst the smell of each garage is probably unique, I suspect an acrid bite somewhere up around the adenoids is common to all.
Thus we can all relate.
Thanks, Bill.
~
Be well and do good
DD
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Beautiful 🤩 thanks DD love that.
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The garage as a repository of the unfinished, or perhaps the avoided… that’s a strong idea right there.
Shedding things. As someone weighed down by ‘stuff’ I’m certainly not one to preach, but with items that have historical/emotional mass, I reckon if it makes you feel bad to discard it you’re probably not ready to.
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Good point on that…if it feels bad to discard it you’re not ready to. I’ll apply that.
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