A great reminder to all of us that what matters most in life is the people in it, not the “stuff” we accumulate over the years. This article may make you pause and think about all the “stuff” you work so hard to attain. Can you take it with you? Does it really contribute to your happiness as much as you think it does? Houses (and all the stuff in it), cars, clothes etc are nice but what will you be thinking of on your death bed? Probably not stuff!

People, not possessions, matter most
Saturday, Sep 04, 2010 06:00 am Dee-Ann Schwanke
St. Albert Gazette
It’s called “oniomania” and it’s a disorder that afflicts far more people than you might imagine. No it doesn’t refer to fanatics of Onoway, but rather the craving to acquire possessions. Together with the unhealthy habit of hoarding, these two disorders torment people into believing that they need stuff — lots of it.
My father-in-law was well known for repairing almost anything — telephones, radios, plumbing, hairdryers, vacuum cleaners, you name it. In fact he refused to throw something away if there was even the remote possibility of fixing it or finding a useful part from it in the future. His basement and garage became overrun with items needing repair and junk that just accumulated over the years. For decades, his wife and children pleaded with him to go through it, but to no avail. He held on to it until his death. His children cleaned out most of his stuff with the bulk of it ending up in the dump. Now, two years later, they still have a storage unit full of items. They know some of it would be of value to just the right person but everyone feels guilty because no one has the time needed to go through it all and find a home for each item.
Our culture is addicted to possessions. Thrift stores and dumps are overflowing. Traffic on sites like Craigslist and Kijiji helps move items from one household to another. We work hard to collect stuff and we use it to help define our self-worth. But using possessions to measure our worth is like performing heart surgery on the image we see in the mirror. It’s not real. Nonetheless, every day people make up new excuses to keep items they no longer use or buy things they don’t need.
Our addiction to possessions seems to stem from a search for happiness, but ironically every item we own begins to own us, sucking the joy out of our lives as we have to maintain it or keep moving it around. Then when we are utterly spent by it, we leave it behind to our children who must then fight over who owns it or who will dispose of it.
My parents nabbed my upright grand piano from a local church for $100 when I was nine. I’ve played it for thousands of hours. Although that piece of furniture has enormous value to me, my children will not see it the same way. They are less enamoured of the object and more with the person it represents and the memories of me playing it. If I were to leave it behind for them, they would inherit the burden of deciding what to do with it and the natural concern that disposal would be disrespectful to me. Why would I want to give them that as a parting gift?
People mistakenly assume their children will warmly welcome items of sentiment. There are items we keep because they remind us of those we love. But in many cases we hang on to things because we feel guilty about getting rid of them. Or we think that cleaning out our keepsakes somehow disconnects us from our past. People, not things, are what matter.
Studies indicate that once individuals acquire the basic necessities of life, their accumulation of wealth and property brings little satisfaction and minimal joy. In fact, excessive wealth is a Petri dish for entitlement. And much to the dismay of rich people, entitlement is not a value. It is a disease.
Even if the one who dies with the most toys wins, he’s still dead and as we can all remember from kindergarten, it’s never fun cleaning up someone else’s toys.
Dee-Ann Schwanke and her husband think taking junk to the dump is a fun date.

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