Delbert Trew
September 2002
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Stuff
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Webster's New World Dictionary describes 'stuff' as 'the material or substance out of which anything is or can be made.' I call it good stuff, pretty good stuff and junky stuff. An unofficial, private poll among friends finds that 96.9 percent are guilty of collecting 'stuff' of one kind or another. The greatest thing about stuff is that it requires no feeding, no serious cleaning or special care. It just sits there patiently, knowing that eventually its time to shine will come.
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All handymen know that 'honey-dos' are much easier to complete if you have the right stuff on hand. Rural people have saved countless expenses and trips to town by keeping the proper stuff on hand to accomplish repair work, and emergencies are never as serious with plenty of stuff at your disposal.
Amazingly, if you keep stuff long enough, it sometimes becomes collectible or even antique. People who kept their parents' or grandparents' stuff are now cashing in on these time-worn collectibles.
There is a downside to collecting stuff, though: It takes up space, looks a bit junky at times and has been known to cause irritation between spouses unless both are dedicated stuff-collecting people. My problem is not spouse irritation because my wife, Ruth, has a lot of her own stuff saved back. With several barns available, I have no storage problems, either. I simply cannot find the stuff I need at any given moment. I know I bought and paid for this and that, then care fully set them aside for future use. Sadly, now, I don't know where the heck I set them.