Like Mr. Sun, I also suffer from
Annual Organization Disorder, though my takes a slightly different format. I'm already well organized and documented (Clie and special event notebooks at home, the blog - Notebooks and Lotus at work), but every couple of months I feel the need to purge. I don't mean in the eating disorder sense, but in the "Oh-my-god-I-have-too-much-stuff-too-much-clutter-I-am-going-to-torch-my-house" sense. I walk through the house looking for things I can give to good will, throw away or re-organize.
It's during these times of trimming that I am faced with some very upsetting and emotional decisions. I like to think that being an adult with a job, bills to pay and the prospect of an aging body I can let go of the emotional attachments that I clung to in my youth. Sometimes I'm really good at doing this. I've been able to part with most of my teenage obsessions (sorry Donnie, but you just had to go), but there is one group of things that I just can't let go of.
Vienna
My stuffed animals.
I've done a decent job of letting so of some throughout the years. A mouse that nested in the body of one while it was in storage in Kingston, made letting go of a few a really easy decision. What I am left with is the creme de la creme. 14 stuffed animals which are almost all Gunds.
Spartacus the 9-Volt Pig and Leo
Last night I was so sure that I would be able to pack the ones in good shape up and send them off to GoodWill and the others I would throw out. I then walked into the guest room and almost started to cry.
Spock
I can't betray these wonderful stuffed buddies of mine who made sleeping possible so many nights, who made the sting of stupid boys and scraped knees hurt a little less. I have an unusually strong attachment to my animals. The two below got me through about 10 or 12 years of my life.
Vienna & Basil
I'm 28. I should be able to let go of these things. I have lots of live things to hug and to help make things sting a little less, but I just can't let go of these toys. When I think about what I would grab if the house were on fire the list goes like this: M (though he should be able to handle himself, Zeus and Bundy (I'd say Dee, my double bass, but practically speaking the odds of getting a double bass out of a 3rd floor apartment in a fire...). I'm totally not kidding. I go nowhere without Bundy and it's been this way since I could walk and go places. My parents bought Bundy for me just before I was born. Being the second child Mum wanted to be sure that all my toys weren't hand-me-downs. He's more than 28-years-old now, but I still sleep with him at my bedside (much to M's chagrin, as a 28-year-wornout stuffed animal is admittedly not in the best ascetic shape possible).
Bundy
He's my stuffed animal and I think I just have to accept that there is a part of me that will always be a child and will need her stuffed animals.
HRH