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View attachment 30527 Cooper says hi [emoji1]
I collect a few things, but I had never intended to end up with so many soft toys. If I see one I get sort of fixated on it and I have to have it, but it has to feel nice to touch and be really soft. Kevin was actually from a jumble sale and my sister was like "why do you need that" and I'm "because it's a shark, I don't have a shark". Yeah my Mum thought it was weird too but thankfully my husband doesn't care. I used to collect keyrings when I was younger, but now it's Pop figures and bloody craft supplies![]()
Anyone else get attached to inanimate objects? Such as Keychains, pens, pencils, bags or purses, etc.
View attachment 30222
What crafts are your thing mines greeting cards, a few gift boxes ,adult colouring, tiny bit of cross stitch ,embroidery,Christmas /hanukkah decorations
I have trouble letting go also. I have hundreds of e-mails I know I'll probably never read. But, just in case I should find the time, they are there. And many I have read, yes, in case I might need them for some purpose. I have drawings boxed away and photos in boxes and albums by the hundreds. Racks of pendent necklaces because each one tells a story as that is usually what I get as a souvenir of places I go and gifts from people I've known. They are time markers. Each has it's own memory. Any object that belonged to someone I cared for deeply that I can touch is like being in that moment with them again. The touch makes it so vivid compared to just the thought. So, yes, material objects mean a lot since most of my happy times are in the past of time instead of the present. Touching something with a memory that is attached to someone I loved who is no longer a part of my life can make feelings of happiness or sadness depending on the event.I'm quite the hoarder. All my old college stuff I hold on to, just in case I might need it in the future. Heck, I don't even delete most of my emails...what if I delete an email and then end up needing it as a reference? I know that's OCD, but that only holds true for some of my hoardings. I used to hold on to my childhood toys, but I grew out of that; I only have some left that I hold dear, but that's not due to OCD. The reason I kept my toys for so long is that I have trouble letting go. I knew I wouldn't play with them, but letting go is often a non-existent art to me, in terms of both items and obsessions. The zillions of drawings I've made as a child/teenager - they're all stored in big boxes, this time for memory purposes; revisiting childhood memories is always fun.
Wow.....! Time markers......! Thats a brilliant way to describe treasured memory's. I like thatI have trouble letting go also. I have hundreds of e-mails I know I'll probably never read. But, just in case I should find the time, they are there. And many I have read, yes, in case I might need them for some purpose. I have drawings boxed away and photos in boxes and albums by the hundreds. Racks of pendent necklaces because each one tells a story as that is usually what I get as a souvenir of places I go and gifts from people I've known. They are time markers. Each has it's own memory. Any object that belonged to someone I cared for deeply that I can touch is like being in that moment with them again. The touch makes it so vivid compared to just the thought. So, yes, material objects mean a lot since most of my happy times are in the past of time instead of the present. Touching something with a memory that is attached to someone I loved who is no longer a part of my life can make feelings of happiness or sadness depending on the event.