by Steve Pease/Michael Chandos
My father died last year just after his 103rd birthday. I inherited all his "stuff". He was a career Air Force pilot, starting in 1939 and WW2, and retiring in 1968. His first operational airplane was a P-36, essentially a pre P-40 of Flying Tigers fame. His last was the supersonic F-102. If you understand military aircraft, you understand the incredible range that represents.
Fortunately, in the last decade of his life, he worked at slimming down his possessions. Still, there were things I didn't understand. A grandfather clock and two 200 year old restorable clocks. His hunting clothes. Photo albums filled with black and whites of people and places I didn't recognize. Two leather satchels and many boxes filled with the paperwork from a 29-year career. And all the years after. Things that were important to him.
I offered anything and everything to my two younger brothers. They took a few things, but I still have all the boxes, dozens of framed photos and art, and records of relatives that I never met and who are strangers to me. There was a box from his mother, an Italian who immigrated to the US around the turn of the century. The turn of the previous century. There are letters in Italian, written in a beautiful hand script no one raised with computers will ever replicate. And family group photos.
I can't keep it all. With respect, I boxed a lot of it up for the trash. (My heart jumps a little as I type that.) Goodwill didn't want it. I have dozens of framed art. Some of the art might be valuable, but some of it is a relative's very amateur painting. Memorabilia and photos from his career. I have his Air Force Mess Dress with medals and six uniform jackets. And that box of Italian memories. They must go or ? this year. Tough decisions ahead, again.
As I swivel around in my writing chair, I contemplate. My writing "Lab" has two walls, floor to ceiling bookcases of books, mysteries, science fiction, literature, non-fiction writing books and general reference. Another wall has two tall Lawyer's bookcases of Sherlock Holmes. Books on my second career as a private investigator. Books from my fantasy career in theater and film. Coffee cups, photos, movie posters and stacks of books, papers, magazines. My Stuff.
My father wouldn't know what to do with my stuff. My kids understand, but they aren't into piles of things. Their generation is minimalist. The grandchildren are too young to have an opinion yet, other than it's Grandpa's stuff.
I'm a selling writer, but I don't think the University of Texas-Austin will accept the donation of my writings. That destination is reserved for the likes of Dashiell Hammett.
As I cruise thru the seventh decade of my life, I contemplate. Will whoever handles my stuff be kind to it? Will they recognize what is valuable and what is precious? (Not necessarily the same thing) Do I leave them a memo?