I have a problem: a storage unit full of stuff in Hilversum that we don’t want. I also have no phone, only Skype, which does not make the local equivalent of toll free calls; no car and no friend with a truck that we can borrow; no ability to talk to the man who answers the phone at the equivalent of the Goodwill, whose website promises to pick up your unwanted furniture and household items for free, but not, it seems, a whole lot of stuff.
I am the one who created this problem, which isn’t a big problem when compared to famine, war, or homelessness. This is a first world problem: a storage unit full of stuff that one neither wants nor wants to keep paying the storage cost on.
How did this happen? How did we get the storage unit full of stuff?
Rewind six months.
“Have you decided where you are going to live next year?” my colleagues asked.
“No, not yet,” I replied.
Colleagues asked this question after they read my sabbatical proposal in the fall of 2012. They asked after they read my tenure file in January of 2013. They asked in March as the end of the term came into view. They asked in May and June, whenever they saw me on campus during the quiet Spring/Summer term. I kept giving the same answer. Every time.
“No, not yet.”
In June, at least I could add a second line to my reply.
“Have you decided where you are going to live next year?”
“No, not yet; but I’ve been invited to be a guest scholar at the University of Amsterdam,” I felt relieved to add.
By June, our departure felt imminent, and all of the space before it was occupied with teaching an intense four-week National Writing Project institute. We still didn’t know where we were going to live. I was emailing back and forth with international schools, trying to find and hold five places for our group of American kids, without really knowing which school we would choose. I felt like a college applicant, filling out paperwork, knowing that despite my sincerity on each application, I would in the end only choose one school.
That’s when Ann emailed.
She and her husband and two kids were returning to Canada after a year’s sabbatical. They had rented a house that that was wonderful. It was within walking distance of the international school. The next-door neighbors had children. They also had a bunny, and Caroline loves bunnies. Last year, when I asked Caroline each afternoon of pre-school, in Montessori lingo, what “work” she chose to do that day, she invariably replied that she “held Chester-Uno.” Two years of private preschool tuition gave her the chance to hold the bunny every day, the bunny whose hyphenated name honored the two final contestants of their classroom vote.
Ann’s house would be up for rent again. It was unfurnished when they moved in, as it would be again, unless we wanted to rent the house with all of their stuff still in it. She would send me an Excel spreadsheet of everything that they had bought.
And she did.
It is a lovely Excel workbook with several spreadsheets, one for each room. Each of the six spreadsheets has seven columns: item name, item description, item color, item age, link to sample item online, cost of item to her, cost at which they would sell it to us. Fifty items listed for bedroom use, eighty for the kitchen. My eyes began to swim as I read:
Bread knife
utility knife
cheese slicer
Food chopper, manual
plastic mixing bowls
colander
cutting boards
more cutting boards
salad spinner
stainless steel mixing bowl
clear plastic mixing bowl
metal mixing bowl, whisk and flour shaker
Pyrex baking dish
Pyrex loaf pan
popover baking pan
no-stick baking pan
cooking pot with lid
strainer
potato masher
bowl scrapers, 2
small frypan
Cheese grater
Skimming it, I imagined myself in Ikea, trying to buy what we would need for the year. I felt dizzy. Wouldn’t it be so much simpler just to buy it the whole set from a family who was leaving?
I couldn’t imagine keeping a spreadsheet of everything that I bought, with links to similar items for sale online for the future buyer to review. With organizational skills like that, I trusted Ann implicitly.
She had been given my email by the University of Amsterdam international office, which was responsible for trying to help us find a place to live. Ann immediately shouldered the task, not only explaining over email and Skype the virtues of their neighborhood but also offering cross-city comparisons to the other locations of international schools within a train commuting distance from Amsterdam.
“Hilversum is a wonderful place…” she insisted.
As mentioned, Steve did not want to live in Hilversum. I tried not to feel awkward about my woman-in-the-middle status between these two people with strong opinions.
Not only did it seemed easier to have Ann’s stuff waiting for us than to buy each item at Ikea and elsewhere when we arrived, but it would be cheaper too, because the column of prices to us was generally half of the column of the items’ original costs.
We were indecisive.
Weeks ticked by.
In mid-July Ann and her family were leaving. They needed to know whether to sell their belongings piecemeal, to leave their belongings in the house for us to rent, or to pack everything up in a storage unit for us to retrieve when we arrived.
We still didn’t know where we were going to live. We were debating two unfurnished places in Utrecht–one with lots of square footage in the attic space of a building, the other with great windows but only two real bedrooms and a loft over the dining room.
It’s this moment of decision that we keep going back to. We had to decide. Do we buy their kitchen things, bikes, beds, and couches–or not? I’ve been thinking it through in terms of what it teaches me about my levels of optimism and pessimism. I was pessimistic–anticipating that it would be hard to get what we needed if we moved over with nothing to a country whose language we don’t speak. I was optimistic–anticipating that it wouldn’t be a problem to sell it all again to some other expat family arriving with nothing or to some college students in the city.
So I said yes. Steve said ok. We’ll buy it. $3,000 for everything. Six bicycles, three couches, four beds, an LD HD tv, printer, computer monitor, dining set, desk and shelves, chairs, bedding, a complete kitchen. We had pictures and links to description of most of it. Done.
But we ended up renting a furnished house, not an unfurnished house. We have retrieved and used the bikes, the printer, the twin beds, the tupperware, some sheets. We’ve got the flatscreen tv and widescreen monitor in neat boxes in the corner of our living room–for sale on Markplaats. But we still own a storage unit full of couches, a queen bed and dining room set. I created this problem because it seemed so easy and accommodating to go ahead and say yes to the expat family’s plan to move their belongings into storage for us, with an arrangement with a local Dutch woman to move it into our new house before we arrived, to give us a “soft landing.” Everyone was very caring and forward-thinking: “You don’t want to arrive into an unfurnished (REALLY unfurnished as they are here) house with just your suitcase. We will have a few groceries in the fridge for you, even.”
And the monthly rental cost of the storage unit is going up. And no one is calling about the ads we have placed in the Dutch equivalent of Ebay and on Expat.com. And the Goodwill guys will maybe want it, and they will maybe email me to make an appointment, and in the meantime just wait. It may be two weeks.
It’s not war or famine, but it was a costly choice.