yukonsally: (Default)
[personal profile] yukonsally
In the past week or so, we've rearranged some rooms, moved some office things, organized some things. We were able to pull things out of storage that we needed, rather than having to go out and buy things again.

How do you, personally, decide what to keep "just in case" and what to send along?

What's the criteria? The deciding factor?



When Spouse and I couldn't find the office things easily, we thought they had been given away, but Spouse did find the things. I could see why we had thought we'd given the things away... and why we could have kept them. We could have easily never needed them again.
[personal profile] boundbooks
I had a stash of comics, Japanese-language manga, zines, and doujinshi which I didn't wish to throw out. Selling them wasn't an option I wished to pursue, as they had low re-sale value, not to mention the stress of trying to locate anyone willing to take them.

I'm sure that other people are in the same boat with comics, manga, zines and doujinshi, so here are some great resources.

A Way to Donate Your Comics and Manga

The Virgina Commonwealth University (VCU) is a public research university that has a comic arts collection. The Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards Archives is held with VCU, and Special Collections and Archives is actually open to the public five days a week.

VMU wanted my small number of issues (only 15 or so) and my Japanese-language manga (I didn't have any English-language translations, so I don't know if they're acquiring those, but you could ask!), so they're definitely interested even in small donations. Contact info, including a direct email address, for Special Collections and Archives can be found on their contact page.

A Way to Donate Your Zines and Doujinshi

The University of Iowa (UI) has partnered with the Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) for the Fan Culture Preservation Project, which "is a partnership between the OTW and the Special Collections department at the University of Iowa Libraries dedicated to preserving fan artifacts such as letterzines, fanzines, and other non-digital fanworks and memorabilia." They also accept doujinshi.

You can donate to UI by contacting the Open Doors project at the OTW.

Shipping Tips

I definitely suggest using Media Mail, if you're located in the US (I'm unsure if there are foreign equivalents). Media Mail is great for sending used books because it's designed for sending educational material. It's super-cheap, so you can save a bundle on shipping by using Media Mail.

It may also be worth asking if the institution you're donating to can pay for shipping, depending on your situation.

Cross-posted to [personal profile] boundbooks
all_adream: (Default)
[personal profile] all_adream
I began to write in reply to people who were going to move, and was in solidarity but also wanted to point out that I feel some of the articals (even ones that I posted here), may be too extreme or missing the point or simply have a point of "empty everything out" as opposed to fine-tuning it more. What do you guys think on this theme?


Yup, my partner and I are moving from some places that are not finished and bulging with stuff (my old house which still has a lot of my valued things in it, my boss's 150-year-old office building that he just sold to a really creepy person who is pushing us out ASAP, my office rented downtown that I haven't been to in a couple of years since I had an accident, etc.), plus this apartment we have been in for half a year maybe, plus the fact that my partner and I plan to buy a house together somewhere else, which will require pruning everything from at least the old house and this one and any incidental things that I may have stashed in the office I have worked at daily for over 15 years, etc. It is amazing the amount and categories of crap I have, and how a lot of it is pretty much "me saving it for smarter generations" or "for those who would appreciate it" or even as sort of magical talismans. To me, some of the unclutter articles are ruthless and maybe miss the point: sure, if someone wants zero crap or belongings, it can be done, but then is the person's life utterly impoverished of things that evoke good feelings and memories and actual links to other time periods? I firmly believe that, say, a coin from 1957 or 2009 or 1678 *has* some of the energy of that time, because it was around then. My body was not necessarily around for all those time periods, and so it does not have a material link like that.

Additionally, when I lived in a dangerous area a year or so back for a long time, I *intentionally* packed the house with clutter, so that if people came in to steal stuff (they did), it would be harder for them to see something of value, and also I hoarded disposable stuff like recyclables that I planned to get rid of sometime as an extra layer of energetic insulation, in a way. I didn't want the cootie vibes of people, their noise and the petty criminals that actually came into the downstairs of the house and yard, and whatever cootie vibes some people swore were from ghosts etc., just roaming around unrestricted. Of course, I had nice Buddha statues and stuff too to combat the bad energy and try to balance it out, but I actually felt that it served a purpose in its way.

Can anyone relate to this? To me, it's pretty much the same as having extra fat on your body to keep you feeling safer from other people's energy or intentions etc.

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uncluttering one day and one thing at a time

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