Here's The Down-Low On Down-Sizing

My husband and I followed our realtor's recommendations, cast aside our personal feelings and scrubbed the condo clean of any personality, going so far as to paint the entire thing white. Update: our home is presently under contract. Say no more.
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Not long ago I wrote about trying to sell a home in order to simplify life and move to a smaller place. Those of you who have sold homes in the past few years know that the process can sometimes involve "re-staging" your entire property so that it appeals to that mystical, but always "neutral," buyer out there.

My husband and I followed our realtor's recommendations, cast aside our personal feelings and scrubbed the condo clean of any personality, going so far as to paint the entire thing white. Update: our home is presently under contract. Say no more.

Which brings us to the next challenge in our quest to simplify our lives: downsizing.

Fresh from the pages of "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo, I was armed with a new philosophy that seemed certain to make the process a breeze. If a possession does not give you joy, according to Ms. Kondo, there is no need to hang on to it. Piece of cake!

The problem is that the definition of joy gets narrower the further you go into the process. Where in the beginning, I joyfully held my 38-year old's kindergarten ceramic project tight to my breast, days later I would throw her first baby tooth down the trash chute.

For my husband, the process is far more cut-and-dry. This is a man who has answered to the name of "Chucky" ever since he famously chucked his brother's shoes that were inadvertently left behind one Thanksgiving. My husband takes no prisoners. He loathes clutter. He was rubbing his hands together in eagerness.

First came the big stuff, the furniture. We were blessed with buyers who wanted to purchase much of what we had, but even so my heart recoiled. Though most of it had been purchased during the past 40 years or so -- there is no ancient rocking chair that channels a great great great grandmother who fended off wild Indians on the frontier -- I was certain our children would long for my French writing desk or that charming bamboo etagere. What planet was I living on?

Our children, like so many of our friends' children, opt now for the clean, geometric lines readily available at IKEA or Pottery Barn. They worship the "50's retro" era, complete with dinette sets and vinyl accessories. Ball-and-claw footed dining room chairs? You're kidding, mom, right?

And so, after a few calls to local consignment shops, we move on to our closets. My husband looked wistfully at the row of navy blue and brown suits, lined up like soldiers, all the wooden hangers facing the same direction. They abut the rows of Brooks Brothers dress shirts, organized by color and pattern. And, then, the racks of shoes: loafers, tasseled and non, wingtips, golf shoes, all mindfully supported with shoe trees.

It was a painful thing to watch, so I tried to talk him through the process. You have been retired for eight years, I reminded him. You wear a suit to weddings and funerals, period. Your go-to shoes are those comfy Rockports. Oh, I talked a good story.

Because then I looked at my own closet and came face-to-face with my own mortality when I contemplated the future of my very high heels. Hear me out. They were nothing short of fabulous, satin and snakeskin and suede. But I broke my ankle this year wearing an athletic shoe and I'm noticing that ads for "air step insoles" are mysteriously showing up on my FaceBook feed.

I lay my head down on the French writing desk. It was officially over. I was reminded of a friend who has survived several moves because she always insists on one box marked "Don't throw this stuff away EVER!" She's definitely on to something.

But, believe it or not, our downsizing mission was eventually accomplished, thanks to a lot of compromise and a willingness to ask no questions. At some point when I argued that he was trying to toss out my memories, my husband responded that it seemed I had a lot of memories that pre-dated our marriage 12 years ago. I know when not to say a word but, between us, I've watched a small porcelain skunk etched with the words "I am lucky!" go from home to home to condo. I'm sure it refers to his luck in the business world, but more information is strictly "need to know", and I don't need to know.

The closing on the condo is just a couple of weeks off and we have transferred much more than we intended to our smaller home in the mountains. There are consignment shops in the mountains, we assure each other as we lean on the rear door of the SUV, willing it to lock shut. There are lots of charities that will love these clothes if we don't use them.

For now, we're happy in our downsized home, even if it looks a little bit like a furniture store. Yesterday, however, I caught my husband pushing folded dress shirts into a drawer in our entry hall table. He looked up at me with a face I've seen on puppies after they've grabbed a hot dog off a toddler's plate.

But I'm not saying anything because my "mother of the bride" formal is hidden in a heavy garment bag in the guest room closet. Is it my imagination or did the "I am Lucky" skunk wink from his new perch on the bookshelf?

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

"Master Class" Activities For A Successful Retirement
Genealogy(01 of14)
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"I have over ten thousand names in my [genealogical] file and am hooked on not just the facts, but the story-writing. I reconnect with cousins I haven't seen since I was a teen. I meet new relatives online and in person, even fifth cousins, who I never know I had... There's nothing like knowing that you had an ancestor in the Battle of Saratoga..." -Jean Benning, 75 (credit:Alamy)
Cultural Immersion Travel(02 of14)
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"I traveled with the Hershey (Pennsylvania) Community Chorus to sing in Wales. When you visit the valleys in the east it's like going back in time; people aren't attached to their computers and mobile phones. I started renting an apartment in the city of Pontypool for six months a year. Now I have a lot of friends there and even volunteer at a shop where the proceeds support cancer research." -Judith Emmers, 69 (credit:Alamy)
Exercise(03 of14)
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"I'm lucky enough to live across the street from a gym. I go over there two mornings a week and work out for an hour at 5:30 a.m., and then see a trainer for another hour. I also do water aerobics three times a week. I do it so I can keep doing the things I love, not because I love the exercise. I didn't start exercising until I was sixty-six." -Corinne Lyon, 74 (credit:Alamy)
Travel(04 of14)
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"I spent my seventieth birthday in a hot tub six thousand feet up Mount Hood. I didn't want my kids to think they had to do something special." -Carolyn Rundorff, 71 (credit:Alamy)
Group Bicycling(05 of14)
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"A group of us organized a trip along the Natchez Trace from Nashville, Tennessee, to Natchez, Mississippi. We researched stops and places to stay, and every day one of us was the designated driver to haul the gear. You want to know the people fairly well before you set out on something like this. We covered 444 miles in less than a week." -Bill Dunn, 65 (credit:Alamy)
Book Clubs(06 of14)
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"We started the Canetti Literary Society in December 1981. [Elias] Canetti...had just won the Nobel Prize for Literature. I have a Masters in Literature and had never heard of Canetti. So I thought it was a good time to read his work, and the best way would be to have a book club with other women who might be interested in reading good literature. We are still in existence." -Anne Richtel, 95 (credit:Alamy)
Volunteering As A Docent(07 of14)
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"I'm training to be a museum docent at the Bishop Museum in Honolulu. The training to be certified is rigorous -- six hours a week for six weeks, then shadowing a certified docent, then delivering your spiel to two different staff members in two different areas of the museum." -Therese Wilkin, 63 (credit:Alamy)
Dancing(08 of14)
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"I began morris dancing in 1984 and long sword dancing in 1989. These forms are English and date back several centuries. I get exercise; a very close bond with a group of people of both genders and a variety of ages; the challenge of learning and performing a wide variety of rather complex and demanding dances; and the satisfaction of helping keep ancient traditions alive and growing." -Robert Orser, 79 (credit:Alamy)
Gardening(09 of14)
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"It is lovely to come to this physical and spiritual, scientific and creative body of knowledge at this point in my life. When I talk over the back fence with my gardening neighbors or give someone a bouquet of flowers from my garden, I know just how my grandmother and mother felt when they did the same thing." -Ally McKay, 68 (credit:Alamy)
Singing In A Choir(10 of14)
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"We had one piece that we were doing at a festival, which we had only a short time to learn, and we rehearsed on the bus to Abilene. We were the last to perform, and our director was very nervous. We rehearsed one last time before going on, and everyone in the choir got every note right. It's a pleasure you can't understand if you haven't done it. It really keeps you going." -Mary Roberson, 70 (credit:Alamy)
Community Theater(11 of14)
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"The best part of community theater is that no one cares about your politics, your religion, or your money. Everyone's on the same bus. I've gotten so much out of it. My closest friends come from there. The ones I depend on, the ones who have my back, come from the theater." -Ellen Kazin, 71 (credit:Alamy)
Writing(12 of14)
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"When I retired I took several Road Scholar watercolor trips and subsequently read everything I could find on Winslow Homer... My wife suggested that I had uncovered so much material on Homer that I should write a book... The rewards are beyond my fondest dreams...I believe that has brought me as close to the Master as one can get." -Robert Demarest, 83 (credit:Alamy)
Learning A Foreign Language(13 of14)
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"I started [studying Italian] when my husband and I were planning our first of four Road Scholar trips to Italy. I have found other people -- over two hundred of them, to be exact -- in an organization called Il Circolo Italiano on the Philadelphia Main Line, who come together to speak and promote the Italian Language and culture... They are the warmest people you would every want to meet." -Jean Benning, 75 (credit:Alamy)
Volunteering With Habitat For Humanity(14 of14)
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"I wanted to do something in retirement that would give back to the community and to people in need, and this seemed to be an excellent candidate... The major reward is seeing families that are living in great need...partner with us in building first other people's and then their own homes, and then move into what in most cases is the first home they have ever owned." -Robert Bond, 75 (credit:Alamy)