lizbee: A sketch of myself (Random: Bacon)
lizbee ([personal profile] lizbee) wrote2010-05-29 05:48 pm

This is the worst part of moving

We signed the lease this morning, so I guess we really are moving. Next weekend. So I've started the packing process, which is to say, I pulled out the box where papers and official letters and things accumulate, and started throwing out the rubbish. As usual, I can't bring myself to throw out a single old notebook or sketchpad (there's one that contains fic in fandoms from Harry Potter through to Doctor Who! It's like my own personal fannish archaeology!) I think I'm going to put them all neatly in an archive box and find a nice, safe, out of the way place for them.

This is a problem that comes up every time I move.

Photobucket

Judging by the hair and clothes, I drew that in 2007, when I was packing for the move to Melbourne. Who knows what else will turn up?

[identity profile] renae.myopenid.com 2010-05-29 08:03 am (UTC)(link)
I moved three times in just over a year. I lost stuff (things like one shoe, my maglight torches, one glove etc) simply because I had far too much stuff in the first place. I held onto it all thinking I'd have room for it once I moved into my own house. Not the case - I ended up being ruthless getting rid of a lot of it. My advice; get rid of what you can before it eats you!

Good luck with the move :)

[identity profile] renae.myopenid.com 2010-05-29 08:59 am (UTC)(link)
It is hard. I never really managed it until moving here. Plus I still have loads of things other people would get rid of - I have a bookshelf devoted to stuffed toys! (and let's not even talk about all the clothes that will fit 'one day')
geek_anachronism: (Default)

[personal profile] geek_anachronism 2010-05-29 10:04 am (UTC)(link)
I can lend you my husband. You may then lose half of your wearable clothes, kitchen goods and art material, but you certainly end up with less stuff.
neadods: (Default)

[personal profile] neadods 2010-05-29 11:45 am (UTC)(link)
I just always feel terrible for throwing things away, even things that are really of no value, not even to me.

That is the worst. I've been going through my house for two years now, with the goal of reducing everything by half or more, and I keep messing myself up. "This ink is perfectly good! So what if you haven't used in in 25 years!" or worse "But you were *really* into that 10 years ago! If you throw it away now, you were either wasting your time then or being dumb now because it's supposed to be important!"

Is there any variation on Freecycle where you live? Giving things you don't need away can be less wrenching than tossing 'em.
neadods: (Default)

[personal profile] neadods 2010-05-29 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
So my new rule is: fannish artefacts are keepers.

Extremely wise choice. It's easy to get new clothes, but replacing OOP books is a pain!
copracat: a woman, head thrown back, laughing joyously (glee)

[personal profile] copracat 2010-05-29 08:12 am (UTC)(link)
The expression on cartoon-your face is priceless. Though I think my favourite thing is either rock'n'roll squid or the lever arch binder that appears to be precariously in the middle of the stereo tower.
neadods: (Default)

[personal profile] neadods 2010-05-29 11:41 am (UTC)(link)
I feel for you; I hate going through and packing up my stuff.
rj_anderson: (Faery Rebels - Knife)

[personal profile] rj_anderson 2010-05-29 12:51 pm (UTC)(link)
My family moved every few years as I was growing up, so I got very good at throwing stuff away. Unfortunately, in one of those movies I threw away every single story and novel draft I had written between the ages of twelve and nineteen, and most of the illustrations that went with them as well. I am still cursing myself over that now.

On an unrelated note, if you do not know this already, you need to know that Flora's Dare by Ysabeau Wilce is not only delightful, but has the rescue of a giant squid as an instrumental part of the plot. I read it yesterday and loved it, but then I'd loved Flora Segunda too.
melyanna: (Failure)

[personal profile] melyanna 2010-05-29 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
When I went to college, I threw out the notebooks I'd written in as a teenager (and a little younger) for fear that some nosy family member would find them. Boy, do I regret that, even though everything in them was awful.
tree_and_leaf: Peter Davison in Five's cricket gear, leaning on wall with nose in book, looking a bit like Peter Wimsey. (Books)

[personal profile] tree_and_leaf 2010-05-29 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I am appalling at throwing things out, and am already dreading moving (less than two months now! Ack!) The fact that my flatmate has just moved most of her stuff, which was really just a few boxes (she used to be a nun), all the while complaining that she didn't know why she had bought so much stuff, didn't make me feel any better.


I blame second hand book stores (it's not the whole problem, but...)
idella: (amy pond)

[personal profile] idella 2010-05-29 09:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I spent all day today packing for my second international move in three years (there was an additional move between islands in there, too), and I still have at least four boxes of notebooks and journals and other bits of writing.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/__kali__/ 2010-06-01 01:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I own so much stuff that the idea of moving house fills me with fear. I'd rather build an extension than have to pack everything up to move house.