Why do people spend money to store their stuff?
‘œYou can’t take it with you but you can certainly find a place to stash it away.’ ‘“ Tom Vanderbilt
I’m captivated by the self-storage industry. More notably, my business sense is boggled trying to understand the demand for it and why people waste money to store their stuff. Sure, there are good reasons’¦ most are temporary like moving and you’re caught in between homes. With one in ten households renting a storage unit, the reasons for most have nothing to do with being in transition but rather choosing to store items we no longer need or want.
I’ve written about this before when I linked to this excellent article in Slate. But this weekend, The New York Times Magazine visited the self-storage self with fresh eyes noting that the ‘œnon-economic use’ has been purged by the recession:
But the collapsing economy created an opportunity, and in some cases an ultimatum, for Americans to reassess the raft of obligations and the loads of stuff we accumulated before things went wrong. We’ve been making difficult decisions, and for a lot of us, that has involved rolling up the door of a storage unit and carting property in or out. The storage industry’s expansion in the first flush years of this decade was both enabled by, and helped enable, the extreme consumption that defined America then. The people coming through the gates now are defining who we will be when this turmoil is over.
The article winds down with this:
Maybe the recession really is making American consumers serious about scaling back, about decluttering and de-leveraging. But there are upward of 51,000 storage facilities across this country ‘” more than seven times the number of Starbucks. Storage is part of our national infrastructure now. And all it is, is empty space: something Americans have always colonized and capitalized on in good times, and retreated into to regroup when things soured. It’s tough to imagine a product more malleable to whatever turns our individual life stories take, wherever we’re collectively heading.
The trade magazine, Inside Self Storage captured the essence with this summary:
What makes it good, though’”and I do think it’s good’”are the stories it shares about our tenants. ‘œThe truth is, there is no typical storage customer,’ Mooallem writes after poking into the lives (and units) of a few renters, peering at the emotional/mental mechanisms that drive their storage choices. Why they had stored, how they felt about it, the delicate pros/cons balancing act many are doing in their minds to justify spending on storage’¦ or finally giving up the ghost and moving out. In short, it’s the tale of how America fell in love with self-storage and how, now, with the economy sagging perilously like a wet cardboard box, people are asking themselves if storage is ‘œThe One’ or a co-dependency gone sour.
So what are your stories of self-storage? When is it okay to pay for a place to store your stuff?
Photo credit: Flickr.
I used storage for a year while I stayed at a relative’s house, to save money to move across country.
A friend has used storage while she traveled out of the country for a year or two at a time.
I would only pay for a storage unit if I were taking a temporary job overseas (like teaching English, or working in the PeaceCorp). I know couples who have moved in together, and one or both partners keep some of their stuff in storage. To me, this seems to be so pessimistic – as if you’re expecting the relationship to end, so you’re holding onto your single life.
Make the purge – and get rid of your stuff. If you haven’t used it in the last three months – take it to Goodwill. End of story.
Tizzle: Your examples are exactly what storage was intended for… transitional periods and “life events” as the article mentioned.
Serena: That’s a great point about holding on to your single life. Thinking back now, I recall knowing a few people who did just that.
Also, making the purge vs. clinging to the past is really important throughout life. At one point when I was writing for BlogHer, I interviewed The Thoughtful Consumer and this is what she had to say about clutter:
Q: I read somewhere that when you hang on to things, you stop the flow of abundance in your life. Do you agree that clutter can be a negative force, financial or otherwise in our lives?
I wonder what this all means for people who stuff their clutter away in storage units.
I’m currently obsessed with minimizing clutter and I can’t wait to have our garage sale to get rid of it all. I might even skip the garage sale and donate to make it all happen quicker. Even though we have a relatively small place now (900 sq ft) and thankfully cleaned out our storage unit a year ago, I still feel like we are paying rent to house our stuff. Now I’m working on convincing my wife that her “stuff” is clutter too!