What Will You Save?

I have a confession to make. I recently found myself in a position I never expected: burning books.

The experience was disturbing at a gut level, at least to me. But it made sense. And we didn’t burn everything.

Allow me to explain.

We were in the process of cleaning out a house and needed to sort through decades worth of material. There were a lot of interesting memories involved, woven across continents and generations.

There was a lot of random stuff too. 

In this case, the “random stuff” included a lot of dictionaries.

Out of date dictionaries, falling apart dictionaries, duplicate dictionaries, dictionaries that would be picture perfect examples of what organizations mean when they put up notes that say, “Thank you for your donation. No dictionaries, please.”

So we were stuck. If we tried to donate to a library or second-hand store, the books would be sent straight into a landfill. (I get the appeal of pretending that they would be shipped to a nice farm upstate, but there was no happy ending, and foisting a problem off on someone else doesn’t mean it’s not still a problem. It was still hard, though!)

We were warned. Fair enough.

So instead, we decided to be warmed (heh).

The house had a wood stove. It felt wrong but there we were, burning what was once of value but was now at best trash.

Sad, yes. But as we learned in the Day After Tomorrow, there are books, and then there are whole shelves on tax law (for example).

And we didn’t burn everything. 

There were many other books, interesting journals, photos and letters and keepsakes that still spoke to both the past and the future.

Like a poem from French Surrealist Paul Éluard, which was published during World War Two and became a hymn to freedom. 

“Liberté… J’écris ton nom”: Eluard’s poem and the Cambridge UL Liberation collection

Translated, it begins:

On my school notebooks,

on my desk and the trees,

on the sand on the snow,

I write your name

On every page I’ve read,

on every blank page

Stone blood paper or ash

I write your name.

The poem was published outside of Vichy-controlled France to evade censorship. British pilots dropped copies into occupied territory to encourage the Resistance. And we found a copy that had been transported from (we’re guessing) a charming museum shop in France to a quiet corner of Canada decades after the war, its pages still bright with color and intensity. 

Reminding us what was lost, and what was won.

A lot falls by the wayside of life. Receipts, old bills, dictionaries. I have a history degree and I haven’t met a bit of ephemera that doesn’t interest me, but I also believe that we shouldn’t keep everything. 

Life is short. I don’t want the past to bury me before my time.

Still, the dictionary dilemma was an unusual case. Not everything should be returned to the fire.

My typical solution? When dealing with items I no longer want that still hold memories I’d rather not lose, I take photographs. Then I can pass those items on without losing the stories that made them precious.

Choosing what to keep and what to remember is an art in itself, a way of curating what we value in order to make our lives, and our futures, better.

When it’s your turn to decide, what would you sacrifice? And what will you save?

* * *

Seriously, though. Not pleasant. Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash #365Ways #365Ways2026 #adulting #confessionTime #poetry #thatWasHard #Thoughts
I'll also admit that I'm ashamed at how many people I found who ARE still active and I simply failed to notice because I'd not turned on notifications, or at least not the "full bell." Further admission: I mostly read my notifications, and not the home feed. I usually don't hit that unless it's slow and I'm bored, and I'll see something good from somebody and think, "Why don't they post more?" Stupid, stupid, stupid.
#mastodon #socialmedia #stupidUserTricks #confessionTime
I have been using #Facebook quite a lot for years. Mainly for staying connected to contacts near and far, getting information from local folks and interest groups or being notified about events. I checked it a lot, it took so much time off my days. A week ago, I deleted the app from my phone and only every now and then used it on my pc. I did expect to miss it more or experience #fomo. But nah. I am using #mastodon a bit more though, in a more reasonable manner. #socialmedia #ConfessionTime

Confession time: I can't tell if it's Joe Davis or Stephen Nelson in the Dodger broadcast booth by their voices alone. 😵 My apologies to both!

#ISuckAtTellingVoicesApart #ConfessionTime #JoeDavis #StephenNelson #Dodgers #Win4Vin #MLB #Baseball #ITFDB #LosAngeles #LosAngelesDodgers

#confessiontime

I smoked my first joint when I was 14. Turned into a weekly stone head with a buddy called P.

P. my straight friend from highschool was your typical ♈️: outgoing, humorous, adventurous and buddy in hazy time for quite some time.

All those ritual we developed during our stone nights. I remember certain jokes, huge bags fries, cult and horror movies and music of course.

We usually started out at around 8pm and he went home around 4 am in the morning hardly able to bike home.

#confessiontime I'm now two and a bit episodes behind on Critical Role.

@JayM

#ConfessionTime I can't think of anything to confess. I'm really dull.

@JayM #confessiontime I'm the world's worst selfie taker which explains why you're not likely to see one anytime soon.
Ok, #ConfessionTime.

I really like Joshua Kadison‘s music.

Please chime in if you have a „confession“ to make as well. I‘m curious.
I have been farting all the way home from the cinema (12+ times) and as I have headphones in I have no idea if they're loud or not 🤷‍♂️
#ConfessionTime