"Yes, Adrian," I say. "My entire life."
I only say this because that's what people always say when they pack up their physical possessions, but I don’t really believe it. I'm more romantic than that and I like to think my life fits in footprints on mountains and in pictures I took in the desert — not in fifteen cardboard boxes jammed into the back of a Nissan Micra.
But it does, of course. I slam the boot shut, say goodbye to Adrian, and shift my entire life over the river to the other side of town. Then I sit down on my new bedroom floor and pick through the boxes. I have too much shit, I think, for someone who moves house once every six months. Definitely too many books, anyway. People love giving me books. They mistake me for a reader because I'm so great at spelling. I can spell pretty much anything right first time — even 'accommodation', which was the most frequently misspelled word of last year, according to a survey in the New York Times — but I can't read a book from start to finish.
Here's one now: a tattered yet never-read copy of The Grapes of Wrath. Inside the front cover someone has written:
With love forever, John.
Forever! I only vaguely remember him. Hmm. Yeah, I vaguely remember him eventually getting together with another girl in college named Summer.
"One person's forever is another person's summer," I say out loud, throwing the book back into the box and laughing at my own joke.
The house is quiet. I pull a blanket out of a bag and curl up with it on the floor between all the boxes. This is my usual response to having loads of stuff to sort out: take a nap. I can't sleep though, it's only midday, so I just stare up at the ceiling for a while and think about the future.
I've moved in with a lovely woman, as her lodger, in my favourite part of Dublin. It's only a temporary arrangement while I work on my temporary job, which is on a temporary TV drama about the building of a temporary ship they called the Titanic. They didn't realise while they were building it, of course, that it would only be a temporary ship: it was another thing on the long list of things that are meant to last forever. My screenwriting teacher, Mary Kate, says this is classic dramatic irony. And that just means the audience know the characters are fucked before they do.
Filming will last until November, then the sets will be torn down and the crew will go home and my equipment will be packed back up in to boxes. I'll take them to Adrian at Storage World again and then what? Go back to America, I think, and take more photographs of the desert. But when I'd said that to Megan she'd shrugged and said hey, who knows what'll happen between now and November.
There's an old fireplace in my room and I get up off the floor and start stacking some of the books up on top of it. Maybe this year I'll try to finish some of them — then I can give them away again. I have too much shit, I think, for someone who has no forever.
"One person's forever is another person's summer," I say out loud, throwing the book back into the box and laughing at my own joke.
The house is quiet. I pull a blanket out of a bag and curl up with it on the floor between all the boxes. This is my usual response to having loads of stuff to sort out: take a nap. I can't sleep though, it's only midday, so I just stare up at the ceiling for a while and think about the future.
I've moved in with a lovely woman, as her lodger, in my favourite part of Dublin. It's only a temporary arrangement while I work on my temporary job, which is on a temporary TV drama about the building of a temporary ship they called the Titanic. They didn't realise while they were building it, of course, that it would only be a temporary ship: it was another thing on the long list of things that are meant to last forever. My screenwriting teacher, Mary Kate, says this is classic dramatic irony. And that just means the audience know the characters are fucked before they do.
Filming will last until November, then the sets will be torn down and the crew will go home and my equipment will be packed back up in to boxes. I'll take them to Adrian at Storage World again and then what? Go back to America, I think, and take more photographs of the desert. But when I'd said that to Megan she'd shrugged and said hey, who knows what'll happen between now and November.
There's an old fireplace in my room and I get up off the floor and start stacking some of the books up on top of it. Maybe this year I'll try to finish some of them — then I can give them away again. I have too much shit, I think, for someone who has no forever.

Passed Stoneybatter yesterday and remembered getting lost while trying to find your launch.
ReplyDeleteLovely part of town, hope you're happy there. I miss the proximity to it.
That makes it sound like I had some kind of rocket launch. Thanks, Radger the Badger.
ReplyDeleteIt's official.
ReplyDeleteI am getting a Radger the Badger t-shirt.
Stuff accumulates even when you try to let it all go.
ReplyDeleteYour job sounds so cool and even though it is only temporary I am ever so glad you are back home for a while.
I started reading the grapes of wrath at one point too. "The Peal" and "Of Mice and Men" are much more finish-able books!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely post. Philip K. Dick coined a good word, kipple, for the stuff that accumulates in our lives despite our best efforts to ignore or get rid of it.
ReplyDeleteBest of luck in your new place.
This is it, exactly, 15 boxes of pure kipple. I want to have a jumble sale.
ReplyDeleteNeal... needless to say, I haven't read any of them.
Radge, you could just get a t-shirt with a picture of a badger on it, and everyone would know what it meant.
Mona, see you soon :) x
Stoneybatter seems like the kind of place you could have a yard sale outside your door in. More fun than a car boot. Tell me if you do and I'll come sell some cupcakes :)
ReplyDeleteErotic cupcakes ftw
ReplyDeleteAnnie, when you get married, I am going to give you three icecream-makers. See, it could be worse. Welcome home.
ReplyDeleteThis is brilliant:
ReplyDeleteIt’s only a temporary arrangement while I work on my temporary job, which is on a temporary TV drama about the building of a temporary ship they called the Titanic.
And so is this:
My screenwriting teacher, Mary Kate, says this is classic dramatic irony. And that just means the audience know the characters are fucked before they do.
You're welcome.
Thank you and yes I feel welcome!
ReplyDeleteMise I love you <3
I enjoyed reading this, thanks. All my friends borrow my best books and I never get them back. New friends come into my home and look at the denuded bookshelf and think I only read crappy books, 'cos they're the only ones left. Good luck with the temporary job, temporary room, temporary home.
ReplyDeleteYou are brilliant. This made me laugh and miss you (and I will take Megan DOWN in a duel for Annie, you mark my words). You're coming back. Period (SWIDT?).
ReplyDeleteYou can never have too much stuff. My old housemate tried to make me feel 'uncool' for having belongings, but i think just as long as you CAN fit them in a car when you need to, you don't have too much stuff.
ReplyDeleteHi Annie! Enjoy your kipple before it goes back to Storage World (Warning: this is a temporary greeting. It will automatically biodegrade in a week's time.)
ReplyDeleteI dread my 'under the stairs'. The one in my head that is.
ReplyDeleteThey mistake me for a reader because I'm so great at spelling.
ReplyDeleteClassic.
Another beautiful post, Annie. Good luck with all your temporary things, and incidentally for what it's worth, I agree with Megan. You can never know what happens between now and November.
Are you certain all these trips to foreign shores are really necessary, Annie? Or are they merely an excuse for another trip (or two) to chat up that Adrian guy at Storage World?
ReplyDeleteLovely post. I'm surrounded by too many THINGS that I don't like and don't need, yet don't somehow manage to get rid of. Must be a message there somewhere.
ReplyDeleteI, along with Adrian welcome your return, as much as I will miss the wonder that is america through your words both gritty and graceful they are. Yes, you can have gritty grace and you got it! I may actually bump into you now, I am a friend of Anne and Ferg and have heard about your adventures for like, ' forever' ; ) I decided at some point I was going to have to try and follow this super blog I kept hearing about and here I am hooked, delighted to have discovered your words. I feel enormous sympathetic joy for your art and free flow( as it seems) of your expression. Its really is quite something. Welcome home x E
ReplyDeleteFucking books, you spend money on them and they manage to own you, somehow. The durty bastards.
ReplyDeleteYou could become the mad temp woman who leaves books lying around randomly with the inscription "I saw this and I thought of you, whoever you are."
ReplyDeleteOh, Annie. You've seen the boxes in my place on 18th Street; the remnants of the Celtic Tiger. I felt so displaced looking at them. This has inspired me. I love this post. Another classic!!! X
ReplyDeleteReedin's fur stewpud peapulls.
ReplyDeleteHiya Annie, miss ya loads. When will you be back blogging again? D
ReplyDeleteGood to meet you greet you and read you in blog world,i came here from your twitter
ReplyDeleteI feel like I'm missing my bedtime stories! No more blog...?
ReplyDeleteShe is beautiful as well as extraordinary! :)
ReplyDeleteSign: DXF File
that's cute
ReplyDelete