Short Circuits: A Life in Blogs Volume 1
Untread Reads
Excerpt:
MISS
PIGGY'S NOSE
For the past 10 days or so,
I have been spending part of every day at my now-dead friend Norm's
condo, trying to do all the things that are necessary following the
death of the owner/occupant. Norm had lived there 40 years, and has
40 years of "things"…some
quite valuable, others just the "things" one accumulates
over the course of the years.
I touched on this in another
recent blog, and remarked that I had already packed and given away
all his clothes. Aside from the time it took to pack the 13 garbage
bags and 2 or 3 cardboard boxes, it was a fairly straightforward
task.
But what do I do with Miss
Piggy's nose? It's a perfectly good nose, made of pink rubber, and
has a thin elastic strap that fits over the back of the head to hold
the nose in place. It was in a drawer in his den, along with several
decks of playing cards, a lint roller, the remote control for a
long-gone television set, a couple rolls of film, six crystal
balls of varying sizes apparently once part of a chandelier, a badly
dog-chewed tennis ball, and a number of other things, most of which I
was unable to identify. Not one of these items simply appeared in the
drawer out of nowhere. Norm put them there for whatever reason, and
they all once belonged somewhere, served some purpose, meant
something or nothing to Norm.
In the bookcase I found a
Day Planner for 2002, apparently never opened, and a like new
two-volume Funk &Wagnall's Dictionary. There was also a very nice
brick, apparently used as a door stop. There are several shelves of
gardening and horticulture books, some of them obviously quite
expensive when purchased. The fact that Norm enjoyed plants and at
one point went to school for some sort of degree in horticulture is
not coincidentally reflected, for those who have read my Dick
Hardesty Mystery series, in Dick's partner, Jonathan, having an
associate's degree in horticulture.
Probably as a reflection of
his interest in plants, various closets held four huge and expensive
ceramic planters, along with at least a dozen others of varying
sizes. There are walkers and seats for the shower and bathtub which
have never been used. One tub chair still has the price tag ($145)
attached.
And yet what am I to do with
them? A yard sale in a 35th floor condominium is a bit impractical,
and even if it were practical, the time to price each item would be
unimaginable. So I plan to call in an art appraiser to give me an
idea of the worth of some of the more valuable pieces, and hope the
appraiser might direct me to a source of potential buyers. When that
has been handled, I'll look for estate buyers—those
people who buy the entire contents of a home or apartment—to
handle the rest. They pay only a tiny fraction of the value of what
the items would bring if sold separately—literally
pennies on the dollar—but
again it spares the time and expense of trying to sell everything off
piece by piece.
Wanting to get as much as
possible for his things is not a matter of greed on my part. I'm
merely the executor, and all the money, of course, goes into the
estate, as will the money from the sale of the condo itself, and
there are at least six worthy charities named in the will. I know
they will appreciate and make good use of every dollar they can get.
But I never forget that ever
single thing I am charged with disposing of was Norm's, not mine, and
I can't help but feel as though I were somehow…what
words to use?…"taking
advantage of him" certainly doesn't fit, but there is an element
of that feeling…treating
it all as if it didn't really matter; as if it all were just a bunch
of things. It's as if each item had existed in some sort of
vacuum and had nothing to do with the real person who bought and
enjoyed them. And it is true, of course: a book is just a book, a
planter is just a planter.
Dorien's blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday and Thursday. Please take a moment to visit his website (http://www.doriengrey.com
4 comments:
Very said but it's true, "The nose knows..." Think that's in a mystery thriller.
I would keep Miss Piggy's nose as a reminder of a friend - it can't be of any intrinsic value, so you're hardly robbing the estate. Besides, Moi would think it chic.
Nice bit of nostalgia, Dorien - I've never actually served as an executor but I have had the experience of going through the belongings of someone deceased - it's like a last connection to them.
Well said, Dorien. There's more than just words in that excerpt. Depth of feeling and much more.
Good work.
Joe DeMarco
A nice piece of writing, Dorien. Told from the heart and given life and depth. Well done.
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