Paul Graham usually writes about programming and the business of technology, but his most recent essay is one a little more everyday: it’s about stuff. Many people have written on the topic before, but since I’ve been doing a fair bit of decluttering lately, it caught my attention.
Here’s how the article starts:
I have too much stuff. Most people in America do. In fact, the poorer people are, the more stuff they seem to have. Hardly anyone is so poor that they can’t afford a front yard full of old cars.
It wasn’t always this way. Stuff used to be rare and valuable. You can still see evidence of that if you look for it. For example, in my house in Cambridge, which was built in 1876, the bedrooms don’t have closets. In those days people’s stuff fit in a chest of drawers. Even as recently as a few decades ago there was a lot less stuff. When I look back at photos from the 1970s, I’m surprised how empty houses look. As a kid I had what I thought was a huge fleet of toy cars, but they’d be dwarfed by the number of toys my nephews have. All together my Matchboxes and Corgis took up about a third of the surface of my bed. In my nephews’ rooms the bed is the only clear space.
Stuff has gotten a lot cheaper, but our attitudes toward it haven’t changed correspondingly. We overvalue stuff.
2 replies on “Paul Graham on “Stuff””
I often wonder about this… we just moved and my gods the amount of crap we have! We had to clear out a whack of stuff into a 10×10 storage locker just to be able to show our old house to prospective buyers, and it’s going to take weeks to sort through the locker to decide what to keep and what to sell/toss – we’ve actually come to appreciate having less stuff around so I think a lot of it is going to go!
I know this is one of those Andy Rooney everday-quirk-stuff articles, but I find it kinda hard to identify with because I am pretty minimalist.
I don’t accumulate that much stuff, and what I have accumulated, I get rid of on a regular basis. Living in a condo or apartment will do that to you — you just don’t have the room to accumulate too much crap.
And aside from that I kinda like the ghetto chic of having the stereo sit on the cardboard box it was unpacked from (also labelled “STEREO” in black marker). =) It ain’t pretty but it makes me laugh.