Tag Archive | Mom

Trashing My Dad (or What’s Left of Him)

Trashing My Dad (or What’s Left of Him)
David R. Weiss – May 28, 2026

Honestly, this has been a hard piece to write. Hagiography (saint-making) comes easiest with the dead. To be faithful requires something more. I intend to be faithful.

Now, I’m not about to pick a fight with a dead man. I love my dad. He remains one of the clearest measures of character for me as I live my life. However—

And let me say this as gently as possible: he left a lot of trash behind for us kids to clean up. That’s maybe more blunt than gentle. Let me soften it a bit. My dad was no hoarder. I spent several years working for a nonprofit, delivering groceries to homebound elderly persons. I’ve been in several homes where hoarding was afoot. Dad was no hoarder. His home was probably typical of many elders who’d been in the same home for decades (six decades for my dad). Stuff happens.

Still, as I helped clear out closets, drawers, and boxes—and especially as my sisters and I emptied his attic, backyard shed, garage rafters, and the garage itself—I was stunned by how much stuff had happened. Accumulated. Piled up. Things held onto and never revisited, never relinquished.

We rented a dumpster and, even while recycling most everything we could, the dumpster filled with all the stuff that had happened over the years and now had nowhere else to go. Had it been dealt with “on time” bit by bit over the years, I’m quite sure much of it could’ve been repurposed, redirected, or more easily recycled. But with Dad dead (Mom died in 2022) and the house needing to be emptied and sold, that dumpster became destiny for too much stuff … reduced to trash.

I was frankly exasperated by some of the stuff we found. The well-used, flattened-down, back-in-its-original-box luggage carrier from the station wagon Dad drove … probably three decades ago. Monthly IRA statements, three-hole-punched and in binders, all neatly boxed … going back forty years. A baby crib, disassembled and stored in the garage rafters for close to forty years as well. Really, Dad? Really?!

Despite my title, I’m not really out to trash my dad. In fact, it’s the very strength of his character that makes the amount of his stuff that became trash both tragic and teachable. The stark contradiction here tells me that even good—even remarkably good persons can have their actions, their habits, their attitudes distorted by the slow but inexorable press of societal norms.

And in our society, the norm is strong to deny finitude. Close kin to our denial of death, this denial of finitude reaches further, subconsciously shaping us to live as though limits have no claim on us. And so even the best among us (like my dad) live … shop … accumulate … store … and finally trash … all manner of stuff. The norm of denying finitude—carried by our ads and our societal attitudes and aspirations—is to live as though unlimited consumption, accompanied sooner or later by unlimited waste, is simply the way it’s meant to be.

This norm has guided the present dominant version of humanity (there have been other versions) for several centuries, of which global industrial extractive exploitive consumptive capitalism is simply its most extreme, tragic, deadly expression.

And, as we filled that dumpster out in front of my parents’ house, this was the unavoidable damning truth: even persons with remarkably strong character get pulled into—and misshapen by—the irrepressible current of this worldview.

Let me be clear, neither of my parents were excessive consumers. By most measures the stuff they accumulated was pretty modest. And it was likely the virtue of frugality that held on to all that stored stuff—just in case. Death just arrived before “just-in-case” ever came calling. And, unlike my dad’s IRA, even after he crested 80, there was no required minimum distribution of his stuff.

But there are two more things to say. (Well, three.)

First, this world (our world, the human world we inhabit, which is seamlessly—perilously!—interwoven with the natural world in which we dwell) has arranged itself structurally, systemically, socially, and economically through a cascade of choices small and large (most of them driven by profit, convenience, or the consolidation of power) into a flow pattern that require a garbage dump as part of the consumer “circle of life.”

Except this garbage dump (ubiquitous around us, though usually unseen by us) is so out of balance with the planet’s capacity to safely absorb waste and renew it. Additionally, much of what gets sent there is stuff utterly orphaned from its place in nature—deprived of its ability to break down. Our established flow pattern becomes, in fact, a circle of death. A slow death, to be sure. And we keep our dumps mostly out of sight, so they don’t unsettle our sensibilities. But eventually all the stuff-turned-trash will trash us.

Second, my parents had little option other to live and die (that is, purchase and waste) within that system. It enveloped them, making it extraordinarily difficult for even remarkably good people to live in ways that didn’t deny finitude. But for the few days we filled that dumpster my sensibilities were unsettled. Profoundly. My gut churned with each load of stuff I unloaded into the dumpster where it became trash in the unholy alchemy of this world. Our world. My world.

I do not blame my parents. Forces far larger than their best intentions framed their lives—though it makes the amount of stuff left behind no less tragic. No less deadly on a planet that is decidedly finite. I suspect my nearness to them, my love and admiration for the life they built together, is precisely what deepened my pain as I filled that dumpster. Thus, tragic—and teachable.

Which brings me to my third learning. I, too, live inside the same death-dealing worldview that my parents did. I, too, am tempted—kettled* is not too strong a word!—to live as though planetary limits do not apply to me. This stuff-becomes-trash is an intergenerational dynamic. (You could easily argue that the denial of finitude has only amplified itself as we get closer to crashing up against it.)

Margaret and I are deeply invested in being good partners with the planet. We recycle religiously. We compost conscientiously. We push back against consumptive practices, rituals, and habits that are intrinsically ungreen. But we are far from perfectly green, entangled still within a worldview that whispers to us daily this mantra: no limits. And those whispers have done their work even on me.

If I were to die tomorrow, my kids would be renting a dumpster for a bunch of my stuff. From that perspective this piece is less about “trashing my dad” than challenging myself to double-down on my efforts (kettling be damned!) to repurpose, redirect, and recycle my stuff while I still have the time to do so. And to deliberately weave the truth of finitude into every choice I make.

Trashing my dad was painful. I hope I can turn that pain into action.

*To “kettle” (from the German kessel: cauldron or kettle) is a police technique that constrains the free movement of protesters until they are “boiling” on top of each other. Used for crowd control (or entrapment) it seeks submission through a show of irresistible force. Our worldview is so all-encompassing, that any persistent choice against it can precipitate an experience of being kettled: constrained by systemic-structural forces into acting as they desire.

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David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind atwww.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.

Stamping Around with Mom

Stamping Around with Mom
David R. Weiss – March 3, 2025

Mom was nothing if not frugal. This was not her most striking trait. I suppose that would be caring or listening. Long before it became a named thing, Mom was “holding space” for each of us in her own unique way. That was her foremost superpower.

But right there in the background was frugality. Making clothes, patching clothes, taking waists in, letting waists out. Fixing meals from scratch, with simple basic ingredients. Hanging the laundry out to dry whenever possible. Washing out and reusing plastic bags until they started to fall apart. And trimming stamps from unused return envelopes.

I’m not sure I realized the extent of this frugality until recently when we were cleaning out a desk drawer in the kitchen and found a little wooden box filled with trimmed stamps and a few decades old altogether unused stamps. Mostly small denomination: 1¢, 2¢, 3¢, 5¢, 10¢, but some as high as 42¢. But all of them firmly glued to the backing of trimmed envelopes.

On Friday I reaped the harvest of that particular frugality.

As you might guess, I have a zillion things on my mind these days, among them the impending radical prostatectomy set for Wednesday morning. “Radical” is such a jarring word. My politics are radical. My theology is radical. But my prostate? Well, the point is it’s coming out—completely. The whole damn thing. That’s what that radical about it.

But my prostate is not what’s had me in a frenzy these past few days.

I have a friend, Philip, who’s in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. (You can read more about his story here: “Philip Vance: Freedom is Calling,” an essay I wrote back in July 2023.) Philip has been fighting for justice ever since he was tried and convicted for murder—and sentenced to life in prison. That all began in 2003, and he’s been trying to clear his name—and regain his life—ever since.

But I’m not writing about Philip today, I’m writing about Mom—and her long-ago trimmed stamps.

See, I was trying to write about Philip. On Thursday he and his attorney filed a new and promising “petition for post-conviction relief.” In his case, it’s a petition for a new evidentiary hearing in the hopes it will finally bring him justice. Which would be freedom.

And, as part of the group of volunteers on the outside who are supporting Philip in this struggle, I’d offered to write an op-ed explaining the petition. In plain English. And compelling prose. In a well-respected Twin Cities online news source. To a waiting public.

I’d spent Thursday night well into Friday morning reading the petition and the accompanying memorandum, as well as the affidavits, other supporting exhibits, and several legal articles explaining some of the key concepts bandied about in the brief. My head was swimming.

So much to digest. How could I even begin to organize my own thoughts with so many of them racing about this way and that? And a very real deadline, demanded both by the timeliness of the issue, but also by my fast-approaching surgery? I needed to get this done by Saturday. But—the question that taunted me: how could I possibly do justice to the complexity of the petition in just 1000 words? And, in counterpoint: for Philip’s sake, how could I not?

This is where the stamps enter.

I walked by the desktop in our living room where the stamps sat in a couple waxed post office envelopes. I’m sure my breathing was shallow and my pulse quick because I could feel the anxiety rising in me. I needed to slow myself down. So I could think. So I could write.

And then the stamps called my name. Inviting me to just soak a few in a bowl of water to loosen the long-dried glue and soften the paper so the stamps could be peeled away. Distraction? Maybe. Procrastination? Who cares!

I put some warm water in a shallow bowl and pulled out a dozen 1¢ stamps, pressing them gently beneath the water. Ten minutes later, as I started carefully peeling them from their paper backing, fingertips and tweezers moving in slow steady motion, I began to feel my heartbeat slow down and my breathing deepen. I could sense stillness beginning to hold space for me.

I placed each damp stamp on a piece of paper towel to dry, then moved it to a plate for more drying. And I started the process again. And again. But in between rounds of “stamping” I paused and listened for my thoughts. And they were there! No longer frenetically circling, but now almost coasting. Still a lot of them, but moving with invitation, so that I could begin to see connections and images and themes. So I could begin to find those 1000 words that would do justice to Philip.

I did this for more than two hours. Not because there were that many stamps, but because I found myself pausing between rounds to capture thoughts and phrases so I could come back to them later.

Eventually I had several dozen stamps … shall we say, liberated. That is my hope for Philip, after all. Liberation, after all those years. I meticulously flattened the dried stamps and clipped them together in small bundles, then slipped them back into their waxed envelope ready for use. True, they won’t amount to much postage. It takes a good handful of 1¢, 2¢, 3¢, or 5¢ stamps to cover the gap from a 73¢ one-ounce stamp to the $1.01 for an additional ounce. Before I know it, all those “liberated” stamps will be gone.

But in the meantime, every time I use a glue stick to affix them to an envelope, I’ll be connecting with Mom all over again. Her whimsical frugality, but also her caring, listening presence. The stillness she held out to others.

And that op-ed piece? Thanks to the slow quiet time I spent soaking stamps, when I finally sat down on Saturday to write, the words flowed fiercely and freely. The confusing complexity met the passionate clarity of my words and an essay worth of Philip’s cause rolled off the same fingertips that had so tenderly parted stamp from paper the day before.

During the afternoon I spent “stamping around with Mom,” somehow, from across the grave, she held space for me and all my muddled thoughts until, in her stillness, they settled themselves into words, sentences, paragraphs with purpose. More than this, though, Mom also held space for Philip. For his story. His long years of anguish and hope. His refusal to settle for less than the truth about himself. His determination that there could be—will be—for him, a future in which the freedom that he still harbors in his heart blooms across the whole of his life.

What are the odds on that? I can just imagine Mom smiling and saying softly, “You can put on a stamp on it.” And I will.

Two notes. I’ve been part of the Free Philip Vance Campaign for about two years now. (1) Once my piece, “Broken Scales: Seeking Justice for Philip Vance,” runs (hopefully!) in MinnPost later this week, I’ll post it to my blog as well. (2) Seeking justice can be costly. Philip needs to raise $50,000 to cover the costs of legal representation for this petition. To date, we have raised over $43,000. To help us get to the finish line, you can donate here: www.gofundme.com/f/Please-support-philip-vance. Thank you!

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David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind at www.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.