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Mark Morford on de-cluttering (and the SF reuse culture)

Why Do You Have So Much Junk? / Oh yes you do. And there are TV shows to prove it. Question is, what are you gonna do about it?

The always-enjoyable Mark Morford has a cure for the clutter in your life that doesn't involve gnashing of teeth or the intervention of a TV show. He calls it getting rid of stuff.

The cure is simple, so graceful that it will make you feel lighter and healthier and good the minute you start, and of course you can start right now and you don't even need any drugs or wine or nudity, though those always, always help.

This is what you do: You throw stuff out. You go through your closets and you fill up garbage bags and you even grab stuff you've clung to for years for no apparent reason, and you haul it all down to Goodwill or Salvation Army or (in the case of San Francisco) leave the usable stuff out in the street overnight and let the urban recycling phenomenon work its magic, as some lucky passerby scores your old futon and the three grungy frying pans you haven't used since 1987.

San Francisco's culture of "urban recycling" is real and it's very cool. Obviously, stuff left on the street gets picked up, but don't delude yourself Sister Suburb: it's not just hobos, methheads, and The Sand People snatching up your goodies. We all pick stuff up off the street.

Madeline and I know people whose whole (fancy overpriced) house was mostly furnished by "junk" from someone's curb. And the beauty part is, when you tire of it, you just stick it on your own curb, and the music goes round. You lose your clutter, gain some space, and make some anonymous Citizen a little happier.

I suspect there's a reason Craig's List started in San Francisco; it's a social city that's just not afraid to deal with other people's junk. (Sure, you can read that several ways; my pleasure.)

Nick's picture

I sold 80% of my...

I sold 80% of my household furnishings before I went to China, and have had to replace that stuff since returning last year.

I like older stuff coz it means I'm not worried about scratching it or whatever, so most of my furniture is 2nd hand.

My printer stand that sits under my computer desk is a 70s TV stand with castors- which works great. It cost me $6AUD at a 2nd hand furniture shop.

Isn't reusing stuff kinda like bricolage?

GoogleSearch "define: bricolage" gives: to use something that is easy at hand for a tool it was not designed for. A brick used for a hammer, for exaple, is bricolage. Postmodern authors talk about the way language grows by the means of established terms being used as a kind of bricolage, as a brick might be used for a hammer. return

www.california.com/~rathbone/local2.htm

French term for 'putting together different articles', as in punk fashion eg a safety pin is taken out of its practical context and turned into a fashion accessory.

freespace.virgin.net/brendan.richards/glossary/glossary.htm

Bricolage – from the French-language verb bricoler, meaning "to tinker" or "to fiddle" – is that language's equivalent of the English phrase "do-it-yourself".

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bricolage

 
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