When a Crutch is a Good Thing.

Remember your first apartment? We all started out with nothing. We had no “stuff”. At 22yrs old, I was shocked apartments did not come equipped with sheets, blenders, pots and pans, etc. Rude awakening…… I was so naive. The acquisition of stuff comes slowly. As we move from home to home, we weed out items no longer needed. We have garage sales when the kids outgrow baby gear or leave for college. By the time we retire, we wonder, “Where did all this stuff come from?”
I remember my first apartment well, and I needed a lot of “stuff”. The budget could handle $100 at every pay period for shopping at Zayre…. for ironing boards, a pitcher for iced tea, knives, cutting boards, a coffee pot, plants for the balcony, shelves, books, shoe trees, a vacuum, and lots of pots and pans. Still, on a budget, I became a garage sale queen. Along the way, a little guy in Miami beach taught me the power of buying wholesale. By the time I cashed out and moved home to New Orleans, my dad mocked my quest to make a silk purse from a sow’s ear……. born from necessary thriftiness……… he swore he would bury me with a can of white spray paint…. Yet, I was comfortable with my little pile of stuff and had enough stuff to at least be comfortable.
When we moved into the big house, the need for “stuff” was overwhelming. It took decades to outfit the house. The scale is bigger. Everything a home would normally need …. put a zero behind it. There are 13 bathrooms here, 14 couches, 6 refrigerators, and on and on. Still, being the thrifty chic, a shopped many flea markets, auctions, garage sales………. until one day, I came home with 12 used wooden crutches, $.25/piece, $3.00 total sale. That was 1994.
Husband helping me unpack the car: “What the hell are you going to do with used, POS wooden crutches?”
Me: “Oh, not to worry, I’ll find something to do with them.”
Husband: “The attic is going to cave in! You have too much stuff  up there.” 
While I agreed with my first husband’s fiscal prudence, it was the stuff in the attic which paid our bills and afforded us a nice lifestyle, while we banked money for his construction company to grow. He scoffed, shook his head, and endlessly debated every small purchase, wondering how my mind worked.
Wouldn’t you know it? 25 years later, I gave away my last crutch this weekend, for a retirement party, the crawfish boil this weekend. I dressed up the crutch with a big bow and FEDEX logo. It was my girlfriend’s gift to her husband. Her speech was beautiful. He was her crutch, little bit of extra help, holding her up for the 46 years they have been married. They raised beautiful and successful children. He mentored hundreds if not thousands of executives in his career. He helped to make his community better through boy scouts and his church. He served his country through military service. Truth is, if he died tomorrow, his eulogy would take 2 pages in the local paper…… but he’s onto something else, another chapter, mentoring troubled kids. Yeah, the truth us, he didn’t need a crutch…….. HE WAS THE CRUTCH to so many, throughout his life.
She cried, he cried, we all cried. Perfect gift…. cost me $.25. Her speech made it priceless.
Now, I need more crutches. I’m out. I started thinking about all the things we did with those crutches over the past 25 years.
Because we live so close to the school, teachers would often grab me for help. Quite often I would look out the window to find a class of kids “taking a field trip” in our backyard. I didn’t mind and encouraged the idea…. with chocolate chip cookies, etc. We never had to worry about broken windows or vandalism because the kids viewed our house, in a way, as their house. One time, a frustrated history teacher and his class appeared in the field out back. It was a gorgeous spring day, and the kids were restless. The teacher decided to stop fighting and let them outside, but they needed something to do. I bounced down from the attic with wooden crutches and we ran relays…… fresh air and exercise…… for an hour…….. back to class…. with a cookie… Easy peasy.
As a thank you to the girls basketball team for acting as my brides for a bridal show, we hosted a small party for them. We blindfolded the girls and made them run relays with crutches as one event.
Had a girlfriend, dying of cancer, with young children. Girls got together to cheer her up. I spray-painted a wooden crutch, all white, put fake flowers and a bow on it. No reason she should not look special while she could still go out. She was loved.
A young veteran came home, injured, part of a huge family. I painted one crutch red, white, and blue stripes, with a big red bow. He’s gone now, of suicide, but I was in the home recently. His parents left his room undisturbed….. crutch in the corner as a memory from a happier day.
Son of a dear friend was at St. Jude’s for an extended stay. It was a sad time for us all. My first husband had one of his carpenters cut down a crutch and reconfigure the arm rest to child size. I decorated it. The child was endlessly optimistic, not understanding how ill he was. He showed his crutch to everyone, proudly. It made my heart break.
Mother-in-law broke her ankle and was prescribed a “specialized” crutch for $350+. She passed. Called me when she got home, requested a crutch “in her size” (like I was a local distributor), and added…… “But I want a pretty one, dress it up a bit.” and finally, “I wear a lot of purple, blue, and reds”…… so…. her crutch was supposed to match her wardrobe. Got it.
We had retirement parties at the house where we hung crutches from picture molding with bright streamers…… in the formal dining room. People wondered, “How did you get that idea?”……”Oh that’s a clever idea”. Me, “Oh, just something we had in the attic.” Necessity really is the mother of invention.
Every 40th, 50th, 60th birthday party or retirement party (Fire chief, police, Mayors, teachers, and a nurse) beget a special crutch and a warm tribute. Sometimes we hung a wreath in the middle of a crutch and placed it on a front door… grand entrance, for a retirement party. One by one, all the crutches found new homes.
But all the crutches are gone now, and gee whiz, I might need one in a few years. Ha! 25 years worth of good memories….sad times…. shared together……. all for $3.00. The attic bares a slightly lighter load, a little bit less “stuff”.
We’re going to have to find a way to give away refrigerators…..
 

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kinthenorthwest

I’m 70 and this really hit home…
This year I finally made a resolution…one hour a week just digging out areas of the house. So far done it about 75% of time.
I keep a big black garbage bag by garage door for donations & just keep on trucking. At least a dozen bags of blankets, drapes, knick knacks, shoes, purses, & you name it has gone to stores.
Will I finish this year, who knows. Would be neat that when my kids have to do something with my home that they are not screaming over and over “Mom was such a pack rat” LOL..
Oh & I also go into the thrift stores ONLY to donate or get decent cheap clothes due to weight I can only seem to gain versus shed(yes I do tread mill 4 days a week…hate 70–lol)

grandmaintexas

Same here. I’m about 20% done.
My dear mom had hundreds of pounds of magazines (she was borderline hoarding). Closets stuffed with them.
First thing to go after she died. How many Better Homes and Gardens can you keep? 😄

Exfiltration of Wealth

kinthenorthwest and grandma; thank you for the excellent suggestion! I am struggling to get my dad to “declutter” after the recent passing of my mom…………and your posts have inspired me.
Thank you all for making this one of the most welcoming “rest stops” on the internet.
I love you all…………….sincerely.

grandmaintexas

❤💜

ozzytrumpster

Exfiltration works. But can sometimes backfire. My parents had a set of bed lamps that my mum loathed so one accidentally broke. She wanted to get rid of the other but dad was no, we’ll just keep an eye out at garage sales. She finally disposed of it to a school jumble stall for fund raising only to have the horror of him bearing it home in triumph to match the one they still had. And he’d fucking PAID for it.

kinthenorthwest

oh my word…used to be saving the recipes from them…but there is a point that you really don’t need a ton of interesting recipes that you probably will never cook.

kinthenorthwest

LOL—i hardly cook the big things anymore since its just me…sometimes for pot lucks, but other wise the recipe files & cook books just gather dust

GA/FL

I once had 20 years worth of Martha Stewart, Consumers Report, Bon Appetit in a cupboard. It hurt to have to get rid of them. Now I’m dealing with other clutter issues. Need to get a grip and deal with it!
You all inspire me to get cleaned out so I can enjoy a more spacious environment.

GA/FL

You could frame a few favorites. Very decorative. :8-)

ozzytrumpster

Or put them up.

ozzytrumpster

Never get between an artist an his vocation

cthulhu

I got the first 100+ years of National Geographic on DVD. No need for paper copies.

grandmaintexas

It feels good in the end. Having to make decisions gets you thinking about it. I started asking myself, “Would this be meaningful to pass down to my kids or grandkids?”
That right there will get rid half of your stuff. 😂

GA/FL

Thanks from another grandma!

grandmaintexas

We gotta stick together!👵

GA/FL

A dire necessity!

cthulhu

Consumer Reports are particularly bad…..when you go to buy a new vacuum and consult them, they always have Recommends and Best Buys that are last years’ model and not available today. Prior year recommendations are even worse.

olderwiser21

My brother is married to a hoarder – says the first thing he is going to do when she dies (assuming he out lives her) is call 1-800 Junk and have them come get everything! Pretty funny. Delightful article, DW. Thanks for that:)

olderwiser21

Pretty funny……

Cuppa Covfefe

13 Bathrooms, 14 Couches…
Where’d you put the extra couch? 🙂
(ducks flying cushions and towel holders…).
Great story. Also as how important it is sometimes to help other people stand up, when they need help… and I’ll bet every pair of those crutches, when you originally bought them, had interesting stories behind them too…

smiley2

recycling, repurposing and restoring.
😀

Alison

Great story, Daughn. Full of normal folk and loving gestures.

BAM

When my girls were in 4-H, the superintendent of the dog program rounded up old trophies, removed things from them, cleaned them up a little and put a new dymo label on them. The kids were all happy with their “new” trophies, as the trophies were for actual achievements.

Wolf Moon | Threat to Demonocracy

LMAO!!! Love it.

Garry Smith

Wonderful idea….I love it!!

Teagan

Very much enjoyed your story and thanks for allowing us to tag along those 25 years of crutch gifts.
I have a friend who at the time out of necessity would drive through their little community early in the morning on trash days. People would put out in the curb items they no longer wanted. My friend would spot a “possibility “, stop and load it into the car. For the uninitiated…it’s called “trash picking”…LOL.
Very creative,unafraid to tackle something totally new…she furnished their very modest home, with 4 children, for years with other people’s throw always.
Had another friend who was equally talented and had the most beautiful coffee table, the top being a utility grate once in a Chicago street that was discarded by the city.

redlegleader68

God knows I love your stories, Daughn.
Keep ’em coming …. we are here …
… one day I WILL reserve a room, but –at some point— I’ll need to know where. Whenever that time comes, I’m pretty sure that you and Mrs. RedLeg (a Chipmunk [think of the school to the west of you]) will talk all night long … long after my last call. 🙂

Plain Jane

Fun thread DNW.
Although I am not a collector, I have VERY often bought things I didn’t have any idea what I would do with them. I always just went with the nudge when the price was right. Generally, within a year or two, the items would be put to good or even great use.
I do have one white elephant still lingering around…a whole bolt of purple, black and silver plaid taffeta fabric that would have been great for Thanksgiving feast tablecloths to cover 5 six foot tables when entertaining the whole clan. That feast didn’t take place. The kids took over making the celebrations at their homes.

Plain Jane

I completely get it. When we had our homr built 51 years ago, we were completely “out of our league” financial wise.

Plain Jane

Opps, didn’ mean to hit send yet. Wanted to financial wise in trying to furnish it.
Six months pregnant…Crawled the LR floor pulling threads to cut the fabric on grain for a 144” ceiling to floor pinch pleated drape…then on to the DR windows… by the time I got to the master bedroom, the baby was born. We splurged and had them made.
We then had the other bedrooms plastered because theey were just roughed in. Did I tell you I know how to install hardwood floors. 🙂
It all goes on from there.

GA/FL

Well Daughn – I’m sure your crutch collection were nice laminated or solid bentwood….but a few years ago, I stepped funny off of the edge of a driveway and broke a bone in my foot which meant a cast and a pair of crutches and hiring someone to drive me everywhere.
I LOVE and will never part with these crutches (aluminum with nice foam arm pieces and handle grips. Very useful for when I twisted my knee badly climbing off a chair. Or when I hurt my foot getting all the heavy stuff off the porches and patios before the last big hurricane threatened the area. Crutches are also useful to prop under a door handle after a burglary, when you are feeling extra vulnerable at night even with the alarm on.
Nope – I consider crutches a household necessity along with ankle and knee elastic bandage wraps, Lomotil, Benedryl, Zantac, Motrin and Azo (and their generic counterparts). For a while, I carried them in my car wherever I went. Just when you don’t have them is when the need will arise.
Being prepared is better than not. Once I rode with a travel/camping toilet in the back of my minivan for months after getting stuck in traffic on the interstate one night for hours due to a wreck and an urgent need arose.

GA/FL

That night, I had to utilize a small cooler and a pack of kleenex. Thank the Lord for them and dark tinted minivan windows.

ozzytrumpster

Would have hated to be the trash picker that opened that one

GA/FL

Ozzie! The cooler was not disposable – a little Coleman type cooler. Washable/bleachable and I lined it beforehand with a couple of small grocery sacks, and the emergency was of a liquid, not solid, nature. If you must know all the details.

ozzytrumpster

Thankyou. Not tmi but I prob would have chucked it

GA/FL

Old women who drive minivans have an abundance of supplies therein. I’ve carried bushes, bags of soil, bales of pine straw, a pallet of sod, lots and lots of groceries, building supplies, etc.! All the seats let down and I can carry sheets of plywood. It’s a woman’s truck.

Plain Jane

We travel with the backseat camping potty.
Daughter dearest was in the van that was pulling their camper. She used a fast food iced tea cup while a police cruiser was parked behind their camper when the camper broke down on the freeway in NJ.

GA/FL

Females are at a disadvantage fer shure!

GA/FL

I can just picture it….remembering Grandpa’s chickens.

Plain Jane

About 20 years ago: Day trip in rental car to Mt. St. Helen from Daughter’s suburb of Seattle. No rest stops to be had. Told DH he had to pull off the highway at the first opportunity to let me go.
I am doing the old open door for hopeful semi privacy although no one was around….totally desolate. Aaahhhh! At last!
UNTILL, in mid stream, a helicopter appears and hovers over our car. Daughter thought we were near a military installation. I have a feeling I may have been a subject of laughter for some time after.

CoffeeBreak

Lovely post, daugnworks247. Thank you!

trumpismine

Got my back and some glut muscles injured when I took a bad step fishing the Maumee River on the annual walleye spring spawning run up the river from Lake Erie.
Really painful for me to walk more than a 100 yds or so without stopping to rest. PT did little or nothing …. so I broke down and got a cane.
Another bruise to my aging ego but it helped a lot.
Well, I’ve been collecting canes for a while and have found some very interesting ones including walking sticks(some quite old) from garage sales and people who like making them.
And they’re cheap! How many families have had a member of the family that have been injured or just got old that had a cane laying around they don’t need?
Just a thought something might be useful down the road for you Daughn as you make the people around you happy!

trumpismine

I got an tin ornate umbrella holder that is stuffed with canes by the front door. Catches most everybody’s attention that goes by admiring them.
And they have so many other uses besides just strolling along all stately like. HA!

Garry Smith

Was just thinking of walking stick and wondered what might work. Never been to a garage sale but may look there. Knee replacement last winter and other knee to be done this winter. Those ice tea cups come in handy. Fun story.

singingsoul1

When my mother – in- law moved in with us I wanted her to feel home and I brought to my home a lot of her stuff.
I got rid of some of my used living room stuff and brought in her stuff. The first thing she said was” I never had those chairs whose are they?”
When we moved her out of her Queens NY home we discovered what a hoarder she was. I would work though the night in the attic while she slept clean out make garbage bags took them out and paid the garbage men to take all the stuff. We ordered a big dumpster and neighbors wondered where all the stuff came from and it could not have been all in their home.
I have an eye for antiques I kept those and took them with me. My kids took furniture and am still waiting for my son to take the bedroom set.
I have to much not that I am a hoarder but because my husband’s mother threw nothing away.
My attic is full from her stuff and from kids who ask if we could save their stuff but never came to collect it. My husband has a problem to let go of things I do not.
I gave much away to my children when they had their own place and friends when I visited and knew they were collecting some stuff I had. Still I have to much. Every year I go through my cupboards clean out and donate it to an no kill animal shelter. My granddaughter said ” when she goes to college she is going to shop in my home.” I hope she will.
I have to much linens antique linen.
One thing I am responsible for is my husbands silk tie collection he has sorted out over 50 years and added to that of his fathers antique ties.
I have ideas for them. I am very creative know how to work with a needles and sowing machine I might make pillows or quilt out of them. I have hundred of them.
My beads for jewelry making is another issue and yes home spun yarn to knit and much paint and paper for painting and designing mandalas. I used to make jewelry for the local museum and to me creating it is like praying the rosary.
Good linens are my weakness. I love them good fine Damask table clothe have to many some at least 90 years old, Irish linen napkins and old lace. I used to play house ironing starching.

Brave and Free

Daughnworks247,
Your stories put a smile on my face every time I read them! 😊
God Bless you

ozzytrumpster

Great read
Also this from Brian this am
https://threadreaderapp.com/user/drawandstrike

rayzorbak

“Where did all of this stuff come from?”
After 20 years in our former house……..
Time to move to the new one I built last year.
3 TONS….. yes, TONS of stuff went to the dump.
(And I still have too much – my new shop is already FULL)

rayzorbak

Yep…. in those 3 Tons……. were 3 sets of crutches.
This year I needed a set because my knee acted up.
Had to buy a new set.
Maybe I keep stuff because you never know when you might need it?

singingsoul1

I have same problem Daughn I have an event and I look for that specific platter or cup and then I remember I gave it away. Funny though I get buy without it and find something new somewhere in the house or attic.

rayzorbak

So True!
Don’t need it for 20+ years……..
Throw or give it away and…………..
POOF!
I need it 🙂

cthulhu

We live in the midst of plenty, but many of the people around us fail to see the value that surrounds us. Whenever they want something, they want something “new”; whenever something misses its original function, it becomes “garbage”.
But American ingenuity is largely about repurposing. When you make a break room into an office, its microwave isn’t “garbage”, it can be someone else’s tea kettle. When you think you want a tea kettle, you might be better served with an old microwave. For those obsessed with pollution, repurposing doesn’t involve additional energy, packaging, or landfill — while the “new” and “garbage” paradigm provides both.

cthulhu

I’m preparing to move and loading-up a 1-800-PACKRAT container with stuff……and have been forced to confront some of the things I’ve had around forever (we’ve lived here for 22 years).
As a CPA, I have several reference works around — e.g. “United States Master Tax Guide 1997”. Being that only the last 6 years are open to challenge (unless fraud is involved), this is just……old.
Back in the days before pdfs, the IRS would send “Package X” to tax practitioners who requested them. They would contain tax forms for a specific year that could be photocopied and used for filing. Yeah, I need a couple of decades of those…..
Everything the Feds had, California also had. Being that I’m moving away from California, those should come in handy — NOT!
I was an early adopter of a slew of software. I’m sure my guide to MSDOS 2.11 will come in handy. I have a large tome about things available on the internet….most of whom have long-since failed. Compuserve Unleashed will make a comeback Real Soon Now.
I’m sure I’ll need the specific software to drive a 14,400 modem, or a 1200, 600, or 300 one.
Long ago, I decided that Microsoft Office had peaked in 1997, and every release since had been about 95% gimmickry. Imagine how I felt when I discovered that I owned manuals for Microsoft Word and Excel that recommended Windows 3.1.

slowcreekno

Great story! Makes me think of all the stuff that is lying around here — some of it is useful, other not so much, and the really hard part is determining which is which.
It also changes over time. Just as it is in the song about the gambler: the secret is knowing what to throw away and knowing what to keep.
Case in point: I made a tire swing for the kid this weekend, with him helping out. Only needed to buy chain, shackles and M10 threaded lifting eyes — the rest of it, notably the tire itself, M10 bolts and pieces of 25 mm OD iron pipe and chunks of garden hose, were already lying around the house, garage and yard. And as there was another, plastic-bucket type swing there already, the supports and hooks were already in place for continued use.
Now, the most obvious junky parts of this were the iron pipe and the tire, the tire is from a car that I sold some 15 years ago and the iron pipe is surplus from house construction work that happened in the late 1960s … but the nice-to-have factor was sufficiently large that they were kept around, I guess.

patfrederick

i enjoy your threads so much!!
we have a smaller home now and no attic, but we do have limited storage space in the basement. Whenever I have anything I no longer want or need, I give the items to a friend. She and her husband are retired and on disability. They sell everything and anything at flea markets. it gives them “a little extra money” to spend.
when my mother-in-law passed and we had to clean out her house, wow, that was an experience! she had a dry sink in her dining room that was FILLED with every Christmas card she ever got! stacks and stacks of them! but she had a lot of family history saved too, which we gave to the “family historian” who was thrilled to have the pictures, quilts, chamber pot, and tins.