SALLYING FORTH: Spring cleaning . . . wishful thinking

Not all traditions can go on

By Sally Friedman
   It began right around now. My mother would get a certain look in her eyes, and then the frenzy would begin. It was simply called “spring cleaning,” but there was nothing simple about it.
   Mom would become a whirling dervish, straightening, then deep cleaning, then organizing and ultimately digging out the slipcovers that were then magically locked in place over the living room’s upholstered furniture.
   And the final signal that spring cleaning was over at last? The placement of the “summer rug” on the porch floor. It felt like straw, and my sister and I hated it.
   My mother did all this by rote. No excuses. No outside help. And no mistaking the earnestness of the mission. “Spring” and “cleaning” were inextricably linked.
   Alas, the ritual has skipped a generation. But while I surely don’t tear the house apart at the sight of the first robin, those sense memories do run deep. And on a recent early spring weekend, I found myself almost mystically driven to get my life in order.
   We have no slipcovers, and no summer rugs. Nor do I have the drive Mom had all those years.
   What I do have is a house so cluttered with debris that I cannot fathom from whence it came. Never mind that I haunt flea markets, yard sales and church rummage sales. Those don’t count.
   My single goal: to thin the herd. To finally, no-excuses-accepted, get rid of the junk in at least two areas of the house: the den and our bedroom.
   Ah, optimism.
   The den has become the repository for things quite un-denlike because it happens to have built-in drawers and shelves. They bulge, now, with the weight of magazines we’ll never read, letters we’ll never answer, photographs we’ve been swearing to paste into albums since the Clinton presidency.
   Ceramic pots and cute little tchotchkes from my rummaging hang on for dear life inside the den drawers, not quite fit to be seen, not yet classified for disposal. Therein lies the problem: we’re a household that just can’t say goodbye to junk.
   During the recent den spring cleaning drill, we also found one of our daughter Amy’s notebooks from third grade; her sister Jill’s college paper on comparative religions; and our granddaughter Hannah’s socks.
   When it became clear that the den was too powerful a foe, we pushed on to the master bedroom, another major disaster area. When we moved 11 years ago, my husband and I vowed to get rid of the “glass-half-full” clothes, the ones we believed, in our cockeyed optimism, that we’d fit into again.
   But each garment that was poised in mid-air to go into the Goodwill bag somehow landed back on a hanger, living proof that the “diet starts on Monday” mentality lives on. So as it turns out, we paid movers to transport the size sevens of my past life, and my husband’s hopelessly outdated — and outgrown — sports jackets. They nestle, still, among the clothes that we really wear, the ones that actually button and zip…
   My mother would have been horrified to watch our “spring cleaning” as we once again vacillated between true commitment to a purge, and a sentimental hour-long detour to look at those old photos in the jumbled heap and to try on clothes that reminded us of exactly where those extra pounds had landed.
   The alien invader that took over our space decades ago lives on.
   Our adult children will never reclaim their stuff.
   And we’ll probably never get those photos pasted into albums.
   But for one long, optimistic early spring day, we pretended to do a really efficient, really effective spring cleaning. And once again, we failed to cleanse our souls by cleansing our household. Once again, the accumulation of bloat beat us at our own game.
   No, my mother would not be proud.
   But we still tell ourselves that come fall, the deed will be done. Come fall, every last closet and shelf and drawer will be in pristine order.
   And if you believe that, you’ll also believe that the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy will visit you.
   And have we got a bridge to sell you!