Jan Heirtzler (
jan_andrea) wrote2005-10-29 11:13 am
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Cleaning quandry
As part of the Clean Basement Initiative (CBI), we're trying to pare down stuff that hasn't been used in some time, or won't be used in the future. Mostly I have no problem with this. My class notes from college are taking up a good 2 shelves which could be used for, you know, useful stuff, and in theory, I am happy to recycle them. But in practice... I just opened up a couple of random notebooks (Evolution, Ecology -- stuff for my major) and read through them a bit... and I don't know if I can do it! I can get rid of the Education stuff no problem -- that was mostly woo-woo garbage anyway -- but the biology notes... I know I can get the majority of it through Google should I want to know how photoreceptors have changed through time, not to mention that it's been 10+ years since I took these notes, so a not-insignificant amount of the information is out of date. Yet, those notebooks represent so many hours of my life -- they're pretty much all I have left of my college education. Since I haven't really used my bio degree at all, most of that knowledge is long gone from my memory.
So there's my quandry -- I can chuck the stuff from the Gen Eds and education courses, but I'm so torn about the Bio stuff. I took good notes, darn it! I was a good student... at least for classes later than 10am. (Had a tendancy to nod off in earlier classes, alas.) I don't know. Should I toss them, nostalgia be damned, or just pare down to the "essentials" and chuck the rest?
So there's my quandry -- I can chuck the stuff from the Gen Eds and education courses, but I'm so torn about the Bio stuff. I took good notes, darn it! I was a good student... at least for classes later than 10am. (Had a tendancy to nod off in earlier classes, alas.) I don't know. Should I toss them, nostalgia be damned, or just pare down to the "essentials" and chuck the rest?
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(I am at the point in my life that if I think I don't need it and that you guys will just toss it when you are forced to clean out your parents junk, then I try to toss it now.)
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Also, we don't really use the bread machine very often. Do you want a second for your place?
Also up for grabs: deep fryer, small slow cooker, electric skillet (the square kind, w/lid), faux-stone fountain. More to come, I'm sure. Sibs, nearby Friends, even far-away friends are welcome to these things if they don't mind paying postage. All are in good shape since they don't get used very often.