
Cleaning
Mother's House
Submitted
by: HOST
GFS
LynnB@aol.com
From DAR mailing
list
"Cleaning
Mother's House" by Michael John
Neill
It
has been nearly a year since
fictional genealogist Barbara
passed away. Her daughter
Charlene reflects upon that year
in a letter to her friend Karen.
Charlene truly has been busy.
Barbara is probably rolling over
in her grave.
************************************
Karen,
As
usual, my cards are late. It has
been a busy year.
We
spent much of the year settling
up Mother's estate. The house
sold well, but cleaning it took
longer than we
expected.
You
are probably the only person who
did not know Mother was a
genealogy buff. She told
practically every human she
encountered. I'm convinced that
genealogy "nut" was the most
accurate phrase. The stuff was
all over the house. The
inheritance would have been
enough to pay for my new Mercedes
had she not insisted on spending
money on that blasted hobby. I
don't know why she couldn't be
more like Tom's mother. Nadine
spends her day doing needlepoint
and watching reruns of 50s
television shows. Tom just does
not realize how lucky he is, but
men never do. My mother had to
run off to cemeteries and
courthouses. She even went to a
conference in Davenport, Iowa,
last year! Can you imagine?
Davenport, Iowa! After she got
back, she was so excited about
all that she had learned and all
the fun she had. She was planning
on going to another one in
California this year. Well the
grim reaper took care of
that.
Because
of my promotion to head of knick
knack sales at
Garbageforless.com, I had not
been home for several years. I
was appalled to learn that Mother
had converted my old bedroom into
her family history
"headquarters." My shelves of
Teen Beat and other magazines
documenting my adolescence had
been replaced with old family
photographs, copies of old
documents, and something called
family group sheets. She even got
rid of the pants I wore to my
first junior high dance. I cried
at the thought.
I
could not bear to go in the room
and be reminded that my childhood
had been stripped from me and
replaced with an obsession with
the past. I told the children
that if they would clean the room
and prepare the items for the
garage (should I say "garbage"?)
sale they could have the
proceeds. I learned what true
entrepreneurs they
are.
Kenny
stripped Mother's hard drive in
under ten minutes. I kept hearing
him say "GedCom is GedGone . .
.GedCom is GedGone . . ." I have
no idea what it meant, but the
computer fetched a good price.
Before he unplugged the computer,
he erased all Mom's floppy disks
and downloaded public domain
games. He sold these at a nominal
price.
Susan
took the old photographs to a
flea market and was able to sell
many of them. Some special labels
had to be taken off and we had to
take them out of protective
envelopes. Mother had written the
names on the back of many of
them. At least none of those
pictures of depressing old dead
people had our last name written
on them. I don't want to be
associated with such sour
people.
Mother
had some type of old plat book --
whatever that is. Kenny tore out
the pages individually and sold
them separately on Ebay. It was
so clever. His dad said he got
much more than if he had left the
book in one piece.
Susan
didn't tear the bibles apart
though. I thought that showed
tremendously good sense. She's
learning that not everything can
be marketed in the same way. The
1790 bible brought her a good
penny, but she couldn't get the
one from 1900 to bring more than
fifty cents. She donated it to a
local church, and here is where I
am so proud of her. We can write
if off as a charitable deduction.
Someone had written what they had
paid for the bible on the back
cover. Susan converted that to
2001 dollars and will use that
for our tax deduction amount.
I've already enrolled Susan in
tax lawyer summer camp this
coming August.
There
was some old large certificate of
written on heavy paper. The silly
thing wasn't even in English, so
why would Mother keep it? Kenny
used the other side to keep track
of the things he had sold. Waste
not, want not. When we were
finished we put the paper in the
recycling bin.
The
kids put an old wedding dress
from the 1870s in the washer to
get the stains out. It was
terribly filthy. The worthless
thing didn't even survive the
extra long cycle and the
half-gallon of bleach. It's
doubtful we can even use it for
cleaning rags.
The
dress was in some kind of old
trunk. I'm not certain what it
was for, but it had a name
stenciled on the front in huge
letters along with the name of a
town. Susan gave it a good
coating of red paint and sold it
as a toy box.
The
filing cabinets were emptied of
their contents, as were the three
shelves of binders. Kenny got the
bright idea to shred the paper
and sell it in bags as New Year's
confetti. The file folders were
too heavy to
shred.
The
baby did not react well to any of
this. She cried and fussed almost
the entire time. Kenny thought
she wanted tea, which made no
sense to me at all. As she cried,
it sounded like she was saying
"family tee." She can't even talk
yet and I think Kenny was hearing
things. The baby does look
exactly like my mother though,
it's the oddest thing. The
fussing didn't stop until she
spit up an entire bottle of
strained prunes on my junior high
jeans, which we did find in the
basement. They were ruined -- it
was the one real loss. Now my
past has really been taken from
me -- magazines and
all.
Charlene
***********************************************
Whether you have a child like
Charlene or not, have you thought
about what might happen to your
genealogy collection upon your
demise?

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2002 GFNEWS, a monthly
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