Dresser Drawer Archaeology

When I was working at a church in Buford, Georgia one summer I helped some people clean out a house of an elderly woman who had recently died. I do not remember the circumstances completely, but I do remember going through drawers, closets, and boxes full of paper, letters, greeting cards, and sundry items this lady saw fit to keep. Fact number one: People save stuff. Fact number two: Said items have meaning for the saver and possibly a small group of people. In this case, I was on the outside. These personal memories held no significance for me. That's the way it is. The things which are meaningful to us, do not hold significance for many others.
So I got to thinking. In a never ending quest to develop new blog genres I pulled the small handkerchief drawer from my bedroom dresser and paroused the contents. What would an archaeologist conclude from this sample of my life's belongings? This could be an entire blog series. My desk at work, my shed, other drawers, closets, and corners in my house and in my life all tell a story. This post tells one such story. The story of my handkerchief drawer.
Drawer Contents:
26 business cards, most of them mine
16 handkerchiefs
6 folded up pieces of paper with phone numbers and other info
3 paris of gloves used for running
3 pennies
3 band aids
3 credit cards
3 ball point pens
2 Packages of collar stays
1 jewelry box containing, 1 set of cuff links, 4 tuxedo shirt studs, my high school class ring, a ring that belonged to my step father, a gold bracelet that belonged to my step father, a key chain of the Greek god of fertility
Priapus, with an over sized penis I bought in Turkey.
1 estimate sheet for our new roof August 02
1 piece of paper / crude story board for a video I was thinking about making
1 Office Depot gift card, probably $6.00 left on it
1 post it note with a chart detailing my weight and dates from a couple of years ago
1 House key from our old front door
1 alcohol prep
1 round silver pipe trim
1 plastic bag containing a watch band link
1 plastic bag containing 6 X 3'' #12 screws
1 plastic bag containing 4 buttons
1 plastic bag containing 1 ceiling fan bolt
1 Saints vs. Falcons ticket stub 10/21/01
1 Saints vs. Rams PLAYOFF ticket stub from 2000
1 House of Blues ticket stub for Peter Frampton 10/30/2000
1 Ticket stub for the Titanic exhibit at Union Station in Kansas City
1 restaurant receipt from 11/08/01
1 Audubon Zoo admission receipt from 03/25/01
1 heart rate monitor
1 Working Timex Indiglo watch
1 Whoopee cushion
1 US Army stainless steel pocket knife
1 white sock, probably Barbara's
1 Craig Wilson baseball card, who????
1 broken "bolt puzzle"
1 medal I won at a run
1 Fossil watch owner's manual
What would an archaeologist conclude from this dig? If he/she tried to posit a logical explanation for these items being gathered in this spot, they would be wrong. At least I cannot think of any intended purpose for collecting these items in my handkerchief drawer. The main reason this stuff is in the drawer is because I empty my pockets on the dresser and I throw spare parts and tools up there if the bed is already full. Barbara gets tired of the clutter and moves it to my drawer. Once in the drawer it stays. These items would stand a better chance of getting out of a black hole than my handkerchief drawer.
I know where each screw came from and the ticket stubs conjure good memories. I have so many handkerchiefs because my mom gave me some of my step dad's after he died. Looking at the cuff links makes me think about going to Mardi Gras balls. The high school ring was a prize at one time in my life, but now it resides in the darkness of the jewelry box in the handkerchief drawer.
I suppose the archaeologist would conclude that I had a sinus problem, and liked to collect hardware and phone numbers. He/she might note that I occasionally got out to sporting events, restaurants, concerts, and the local zoo. They would theorize about the groups of three. 3 gloves, band aids, ball point pens, pennies, and credit cards. Perhaps they would believe I was a soldier because of the US Army knife. The heart rate monitor could indicate cardiac problems, probably developed after winning a race. The key chain with the Greek god and over sized penis might represent a dark side to the owner of these things - perhaps he worshiped penises they would guess. What of the whoopee cushion? Is this another perverted fetish of some kind? Why did he have a Craig Wilson baseball card? What did the key unlock? The poor devils would theorize themselves to death. Cockamamie theories are the stuff good books are made of and my archaeologist would no doubt hit the lecture circuit and answer questions about the god with the big weenie.
Look around your abode. What would the archaeologist think about your artifacts? Is your stuff as random as mine? Our stuff tells a story, what story does your stuff tell?
Until the next time
John Strain