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Health & Fitness

Freelance Retort: Trashing the Past

Sometimes when you open the attic door, you begin a journey into the past... To keep or not to keep? That is the question....

Sitting here on my big back porch, on a lazy summer afternoon I can’t help but think that the smell of my neighbor’s BBQ’d chicken smoking on the grill is designed to make me feel pathologically insane. But then again, imagine how the chicken feels?

But I digress…already…and I just got started.

Is that even possible?

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The neighbors are having a family party—birthday I think—or else they just love that song. It must be for one of their kids, since aside from the pre-requisite grandparents, aunt’s uncles and family friends, there are about 800 kids, ranging in age from 1-10, running around about 20 feet from my big back porch.

I know it’s not much further than 20 feet because that’s just about the range limit that I can reach them with the hose. But that’s mostly ineffective since it only makes them scream louder, and their parents don’t seem to mind.

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So where’s the fun in that.

The reason I’m sitting here on my big back porch, right now, is because Z and I have just returned from lugging a couple of old twin mattresses and box springs up to my mom’s attic, which is about 240 degrees this time of year. Do you know what a human being looks like after all of the fluids have been drained from his body? Not pretty…

Anyway, in order to make room for the heretofore mentioned large, awkward, heavy clumsy items, we discovered we had to remove about 40 years and 20 tons of accumulated attic “artifacts”. You know…the stuff you stick up there when you don’t know what to do with it, and it’s not actually too broken…too much….and it seems a waste to just toss it.

Some of our artifacts included a 20 inch RCA color TV that hasn’t worked in more than 10 years, but was kept just in case someone needed a TV and was handy with tubes. A 5,000 BTU air conditioner that once cooled off Thomas Edison’s lab while he was inventing the electricity he sorely needed to run the thing.

Edison finally got rid of the dinosaur when he realized he would never be able to keep up with the energy demands it was making. Plus it wanted meals as well.

There are about 1,000 empty shoe boxes, leading one to wonder just what happened to the shoes. And why were the boxes retained in the first place…in case they needed to be returned?

There was my first, pre-internet, computer monitor, first dot matrix printer, some old window fans that Columbus used on the trip over, some Christmas paraphernalia and even some cool Mets “decorative” items that once hung in my old apartment, but somehow mysteriously got forgotten in the move to our house. But don’t worry; they now reside in the basement, right next to the treadmill.

Yeah… I know. 

But the toughest decision I had to make was what to do with my circa 1965 Motorific Torture Track, which I found tucked away in a dark, dingy attic corner.

Now I know how Howie Carter must have felt when he discovered King Tut’s
tomb… or at least how parched he was.

I spent hours playing with this thing. It took up my entire bedroom floor, and was a permanent fixture, much to my mom’s delight. It used these little battery operated cars—which I still have in my old fold down desk, along with about 15 years of fall preview TV guides, which I’m certain will be worth about gazillion dollars apiece, one day soon… real soon.

These little, pre-super cell, battery operated cars, which ranged from a black and white '57 Chevy Impala to James Bond’s Aston Martin, would run around this “Torture Track” crashing through brick walls, navigating zig-zagging roadways, undulating highways and even a jumping ramp… just like rush hour on the Cross Bronx Expressway. The batteries usually died after about two minutes of use, unless you just parked the cars. Then they lasted about three.

So there it was, sitting untouched, just where I had left it some 40 years
earlier. How forgotten it must have felt after these many years. How…tortured

You know, we always think our old junk is going to be valuable someday. That there's a “collector” out there willing to pay big buckos for such things. And there are, but they’re usually....

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