What Remains: When Objects Outlive Their Owners
The lamp still works. The chair still holds weight. The clock still marks time, though the hands that wound it have been still for years. When a person dies, their objects survive them with an indifference that can feel, depending on your mood, either comforting or unbearable. We do not talk enough about what happens to meaning when the person who made an object meaningful is gone. We talk about inheritance, about estate sales, about what to keep and what to let go. But the deeper question of what an object actually becomes when its original owner disappears touches something fundamental about how meaning works, and how rooms hold it. Objects as Memory Devices Human beings use objects to extend memory beyond the capacity of the mind alone. This is not new behavior. Archaeologists find grave goods in burials dating back 100,000 years, objects placed with the dead that carried relational meaning for the living. We have always understood, at some level, that things can hold what we cannot...