“It’s a loving addiction,” said my poet friend, about our
shared passion for buying books.
Over the years, I’d collected thousands of books. I outgrew
one house, using up every inch of wall space, and when we moved into another house,
I preplanned to accommodate my copious collection, building floor to ceiling
shelves. At one point, it was a $100+/month habit, during and in the aftermath
of my creative writing MFA.
As a teacher, I felt compelled to buy not only books for
myself, but for my students. I’ve taught childbirth classes, parenting and
breastfeeding classes, creative writing classes, and yoga classes, so I built
up libraries in all these fields. When I threw myself into the anti-war
movement, I had to build up a library of peacemaking, social justice, and
post-colonial studies. I developed a passion for primates, and what apes could
teach humans about themselves, so built up another library. I worked at Woodland Pattern, a literary center
and the world’s premiere small press poetry bookstore, where I got the employee
30% discount, and could order any book on the market. My kids inherited the
love of books, and grew up with the best of children’s lit. And so on….
I joked that I’d never become enlightened until I got rid of
my books.
What had begun as pleasure and education for self, family,
and community, had become burdensome. I couldn’t possibly read everything I’d
collected. They presented an organizing nightmare. I developed a dust allergy. I
recognized the unhealthy attachment, but didn’t cease my habit. Truthfully, my
books kept me from leaving my marriage. Part of me longed to live simply, to
forsake home ownership and the middle class life, to live modestly in one room,
in intentional community. But what would I do with all these books? How would I
move them and where would I put them?
Ultimately, I did end up leaving my marriage, my house and
gardens and other middle class trappings, including my books. After a year’s
separation from my books, I gathered them up to build a community library in
the housing cooperative I had helped start in Milwaukee, only to decide I
had to move to Detroit.
Since 2010, I have moved 7 times, and my books 4 times,
sitting boxed in basements when I didn’t have the capacity to take them with
me. Finally, on my 52nd birthday, last week, I decided the time had
come to dissolve my library. I refused to ask my friends one more time to help
me move my books. I had burdened them one too many times, bagging and boxing
and loading them into cars over and over. No more! Besides, books didn’t belong
in basements. They had already been water-damaged once, and I wouldn’t risk it
again. I knew I never wanted to be a householder again. I knew I never wanted
to live in more than one room, making a small footprint, so I could travel back
and forth to Korea, India, and wherever else I felt called.
Decades of yoga practice helped me recognize the false ego
identification I had invested in my books. They represented all the parts of
myself I valued and wanted to present to the world. You know, a Frantz
Fanon-reading, Anne Carson-carrying inter-genre poet, and a school of bell
hooks radical feminist mom, cooking vegetarian gourmet, standing on my head as
an Iyengar yogi healing justice activist. I had mistaken my books for myself,
the classic error of confusing the temporal for the eternal.
That thing I said about my books holding me back from
enlightenment? That was just a joke. But now I knew I had to do it.
A few years back, I had a yoga student who retired from his
position as an English professor. He spent months dissolving his lifelong book
collection. I was both shocked and jealous.
“How did it feel?” I asked him.
“Terrible,” he answered flatly.
“Then WHY DID YOU DO IT?” I asked, identifying with his
sorrow. My books were like my children. How would I live without them?
“I HAD to,” he explained. The only room in his house to
practice yoga was his study. His study was so littered with books, he couldn’t
even lay a mat down. It was his books, or it was yoga. And he chose yoga. He
only held on to 6 books, the books of BKS Iyengar.
I filed that story away and knew it was critical. I thought
that one day in my 60s or 70s I might do the same.
But as usual, that day came a decade or so sooner than
projected. I do everything fast and a bit early. Like getting married straight
out of college, and becoming a mother right away, when all my friends were
backpacking across Europe. But then, I was in my early 40s when I became an
empty nester, when same-age peers were checking out kindergartens. So by 52, I
was ready to take the next step of a yoga nun: radically lightening my load.
I started announcing this resolve months in advance, at
first with great trepidation, barely whispering my intention, knowing I had to
say it to make it manifest. Then with growing determination, I started telling
more and more people that I was going to be giving away my books. At first it
was a proposal more than a decision. But my friends received my announcement
with excitement, having eyed my library and taken interest.
I decided I would give away my books at my birthday party. I
laid them out on tables, shelves, and stairs, and invited friends to take a
stack. At first I recommended books to particular individuals, and told them
they didn’t have to take them. But soon I became giddy, matching up books with
friends, and insisting that they take them. Finally, I took a picture of each
friend with their stack, as a commemoration of the books and the friendship. Some
folks I didn’t even know showed up, I suspect to check out the collection, and
I gladly let them take their fill as well.
So now I am one step closer to enlightenment, and literally
lighter by a ton. I made one more inroad to the sharing economy, and made a lot
of people happy and excited. In the spirit of sharing, we also had a potluck,
open mic, and jam session. It happened to be the evening of Grace Lee Boggs’s memorial service,
so we got to honor Grace by building beloved community, and sharing knowledge
and ideas through the power of books and conversation.
Read, write, talk, and pass it on. Thank you, friends, for
generously receiving my books!
2 comments:
Thanks so much for sharing this experience. Beautifully written and much appreciated.
Hey Gwi-Seok, this is a brilliant idea, thanks for sharing! I have a bday coming up in January, thinking of doing the same
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