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It really is amazing what things turn up when you start clearing away the debris that accumulates in the home of a moderately lazy housekeeper.
I'm working on diminishing the piles of recyclable cardboard - mostly boxes, from Amazon and other such dealers - and the dinner table is beginning to be visible again. (I normally eat standing up in the kitchen.) So far, I've discovered the chopsticks that came with my wok, a number of books (including G. H. Hardy's A Mathematician's Apology and a Library of America volume of Ben Franklin's lesser-known works), and a solicitation from a charity, dated Feb. 16, 1999. There was also a CD-ROM drive that I never got around to installing; it was already creakingly slow by the standards of the day when it arrived, and would be an embarrassment to any self-respecting computer today. Old wall calendars, set-up instructions for computer games I haven't played in years, and an assortment of keepworthy magazines round things out.
If I can keep this up, I may have the chaff out of the house by the end of the year. The next step will be to get some more bookcases and storage for tapes and DVDs, to get all of those off the floor and tables. Then and only then will I be able to think about actually cleaning the place.
Five-Year Plan, anyone?
I'm working on diminishing the piles of recyclable cardboard - mostly boxes, from Amazon and other such dealers - and the dinner table is beginning to be visible again. (I normally eat standing up in the kitchen.) So far, I've discovered the chopsticks that came with my wok, a number of books (including G. H. Hardy's A Mathematician's Apology and a Library of America volume of Ben Franklin's lesser-known works), and a solicitation from a charity, dated Feb. 16, 1999. There was also a CD-ROM drive that I never got around to installing; it was already creakingly slow by the standards of the day when it arrived, and would be an embarrassment to any self-respecting computer today. Old wall calendars, set-up instructions for computer games I haven't played in years, and an assortment of keepworthy magazines round things out.
If I can keep this up, I may have the chaff out of the house by the end of the year. The next step will be to get some more bookcases and storage for tapes and DVDs, to get all of those off the floor and tables. Then and only then will I be able to think about actually cleaning the place.
Five-Year Plan, anyone?
no subject
Date: 2007-02-06 04:51 pm (UTC)Not exactly either. I'd broken them all down, preparatory to recycling, but they have to be bundled or bagged, thus requiring other supplies (twine or paper bags) that I don't always have available. Throw in my standard procrastination, and the Murphyesque Law that the time needed to deal with a problem is proportional to the square of the time you've been putting it off, and, well...
As for bookcases: I've gone the blocks-and-planks route before, and I've used cheap bookcases too. But the former are ugly and the latter break. I want good sturdy hardwood cases. There is - or used to be - a good furniture store in Collinsville that I patronized after I first bought my house, but I haven't been down there in years. I'll check there first, when the time comes.
Thanks for the cleaning suggestion!
no subject
Date: 2007-02-06 05:03 pm (UTC)Ah, bookcases only their mother could love! That's what I've just done with the rescued shelves from the family room. They are now separated by concrete blocks and live under Kipper's window. They don't look *too* ugly to me, but perhaps it's because I just see the books in them (g)!
no subject
Date: 2007-02-07 07:54 pm (UTC)Just sayin'. :)