Packing a house where you’ve lived for more than 20 years is a bit like an archeological dig into your own life. It can stir up a lot of buried thoughts and feelings.
Looking at the past version of yourself can sometimes tell you something about the present.
I moved last week, so I’ve spent a lot of time lately going through drawers and boxes, trying to figure out what to save and what to throw away. Each layer of things from the past seemed to represent something different.
When it comes to paper, I’m a bit of a packrat. I keep my notes, records, random ideas, cards, letters and dozens of other types of things too difficult to categorize. And with each bit of paper or file or box, there’s a story that comes with it.
I dug up many relics of the days when I was in business for myself, back when I owned a couple of small publications and a typesetting company. There were also plenty of things related to my community newspaper days working for other companies in a series of small cities. There were detailed profit-and-loss statements from newspapers 25 years ago, along with lists of story ideas and design concepts for some of the newspapers. There were faded awards and paste-up sheets and even a pica stick. (Hardly anybody even knows what a pica stick is anymore.)

Let’s reconnect with each other, not fall into dystopian Metaverse
Check out my re-runs if you’d like, because I’m on vacation for a bit

Listening to our own inner voice can be the toughest thing we do
Is ‘galvanic skin response’ a way to measure how much kids learn?
Your narratives shape your politics, religion, friendships, relationships
I’d forgotten what I said about her necklace, but she hadn’t forgotten
‘The moment we begin to seek love, love begins to seek us and save us’