You never know who will pick up on the vibes of the Great Awakening, so treat everyone like potential frens
(media.greatawakening.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (39)
sorted by:
Personally, I hold on to everything. It's part of my life's story.
I once inherited an entire library of classical music on vinyl from an acquaintance. It was their friends grandfathers and they had no clue what to do with it. I took care of it, learned how to clean it, and enjoyed it. I felt honored to carry someone's collection into the next century.
As far as Satanism or the occult goes, I own those books for reference, and I will keep them for reference. I never got rid of my Bible when I left the church for the same reasons. I still own my first bible from when I was a kid.
I own all my New Age books even though they bring up haunted memories of abuse. I have the notebooks from when I was homeless, and all the emotions that come attached to it.
Sometimes I go through my old things and remember where I came from. I feel the emotions that I felt back then, and I don't run from them. It grounds me and reminds me of the path I'm on.
I suppose books only have the meaning we give to them.
As for me, when it comes to things that I used to like but now understand differently, I only keep things that have reference value, or if they are collectibles or have a special meaning.
As an example, the most shameful possessions of mine are the books by Bolton, Comey and Preeth Bharara. I am planning to burn them when the storm hits us, as a celebration. Sure, they probably have some reference value, but very little and not worth wasting the space on my book shelf.
I have an Al Franken book from my Democrat days...