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Managing the retention or divestment of material possessions in the transition to retirement: implications for sustainable consumption and for later-life wellbeing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2021

Susan Venn*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK
Kate Burningham
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK
*
*Corresponding author. Email: s.venn@surrey.ac.uk
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Abstract

It has been argued that lifecourse transitions are transformative moments for individuals when lifestyles, habits and behaviours are potentially open to contemplation and change. Within sustainability research such ‘moments of change’ are regarded as offering potential to encourage less environmentally damaging consumption patterns. Research on consumption indicates that orientations to material goods and their affective significance are complex. Whilst sociological work understands attachment to things as integral to maintaining kinship relations, this is hard to reconcile with long-standing moral concerns about materialism and psychological research which indicates a negative relationship between the acquisition of material objects and wellbeing, and the environmental implications of acquiring and divesting ‘stuff’. Yet there has been little engagement with how older people orient to their material possessions and divestment, the implications of this for later-life wellbeing and for environmental sustainability. In this paper, we draw these different strands of work together to understand how retirees relate to their material possessions and their divestment. Drawing on serial interviews with individuals in the United Kingdom, we explore how the transition to retirement highlights the complexity of participants’ attachment to things. While some items had profound relational significance, others were experienced as troublesome. Decisions on what to divest were shaped by pragmatic considerations and levels of attachment, whilst modes of divestment were aligned with values of thrift.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

The transition to retirement is a well-researched topic within gerontology where it has been explored as a potential point at which to encourage later-life wellbeing through advice on maintaining an active and healthy lifestyle (Heaven et al., Reference Heaven, O'Brien, Evans, White, Meyer, Mathers and Moffatt2015), on pension planning provisions and financial security (Ginn, Reference Ginn2003), as well as on facilitating the shift in identity following loss of work status (Barnes and Parry, Reference Barnes and Parry2004). Retirement has also been examined as a portal into another transition of later, and much older age, or as suggested by Gilleard and Higgs (Reference Gilleard and Higgs2013: 368), a fourth age of a ‘feared state of becoming’ which is perceived as being defined by frailty and often increasing poverty. Retirement has therefore been established within gerontology as a point at which people pause to consider their present circumstances, their future trajectories and are likely to ‘confront their own mortality’ (Price et al., Reference Price, Arnould and Curasi2000: 179).

Lifecourse transitions are also a topic of interest within the literature on sustainable consumption, being tentatively regarded as promising ‘moments of change’ when individuals consider the lives they currently lead, and whether changes are necessary, or desirable, for the future (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011; Venn et al., Reference Venn, Burningham, Christie and Jackson2017; Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020). As individuals change from one role or situation to another, it is argued they engage in self-reflexivity and as a result are more likely to be open to suggestions for shifting existing behaviours and habits in a more sustainable direction (Giddens, Reference Giddens1991; Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011; Goodwin and O'Connor, Reference Goodwin and O'Connor2014). Yet within this work, the transition to retirement as a potential window of opportunity to encourage more sustainable patterns of consumption has only received scant attention, and indeed, older people in general are often absent from environmental sustainability discussions (for exceptions, on later-life travel practices see Fox et al., Reference Fox, Hitchings, Day and Venn2017; Hitchings et al., Reference Hitchings, Venn and Day2018; and on consumption, see Venn et al., Reference Venn, Burningham, Christie and Jackson2017; Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020). This is problematic given current projections that the proportion of older people in the United Kingdom (UK) is set to rise dramatically over the next 25 years (Coates et al., Reference Coates, Tanna and Scott-Allen2019).

More recently the idea that lifecourse transitions constitute a single ‘moment of change’ has been critiqued and it has been shown that they can be unexpected, incomplete and multiple (Grenier, Reference Grenier2012; Shirani et al., Reference Shirani, Groves, Parkhill, Butler, Henwood and Pidgeon2017; Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020). Retirement, in particular, is known to be an ongoing journey, and more frequently encompasses ‘complex flows between nonretirement, partial retirement and complete retirement’ (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011: 84). Retirement is likely to continue to be fluid and changeable as a result of the abolition of a fixed retirement age in the UK and the state pension age rising over the coming years (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011).

Retirement also differs from other transitions in that expectations for more leisure time, and a loosening of the formal daytime structure defined by employment, are known to create opportunities for engaging in more and different forms of consumption (Atchley, Reference Atchley1975; van Solinge and Henkens, Reference van Solinge and Henkens2008). More specifically, the current generation of retirees (referred to as ‘baby-boomers’ and born between 1946 and 1964), are regarded as distinct from other generations in that the cultural field by which they are defined ostensibly encompasses personal agency, individualised lifestyles and excessive consumption practices which seek to deny old age and which are said to represent the ‘good life’ (Schulze, Reference Schulze, Sulkunen, Holmwood, Radner and Schulze1997; Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard, Higgs, Rees-Jones, Higgs and Ekerdt2009). However, Leach et al. (Reference Leach, Biggs, Phillipson and Money2007), in their study of baby-boomers’ consumption patterns, noted that their orientations to consumption were more complex – whilst being critical of younger generations’ consumerist lifestyles, and respecting the frugal values of the previous generation, they had their own expectations for retirement which included travel, leisure pursuits, and home purchases and improvements.

In this paper, we bring together these different disciplinary perspectives as we follow participants on their journey through the transition to retirement. As we do, we explore within their narratives how the prospect and experience of retirement served to heighten their orientation to the objects they have acquired and which have accompanied them along the lifecourse, and how they distinguish between things of value and problematic ‘stuff’. In alignment with work that highlights how disposal is also a part of the journey of consumption, we include participants’ considerations of modes of divestment (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004; Gregson et al., Reference Gregson, Metcalfe and Crewe2007: 187). We commence with a review of the literature on the acquisition, collection and disposal of material possessions across the lifecourse, before considering two distinctive perspectives on the relationship between material possessions and wellbeing whereby, on the one hand, objects are demonstrated to provide comfort, meaning and enhance wellbeing (Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008; Miller, Reference Miller2008; Smith and Ekerdt, Reference Smith and Ekerdt2011) and, on the other, how acquiring, owning and the maintenance of ‘stuff’ is characterised as potentially problematic in terms of wellbeing (Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Wilkie, Kim and Bodenhausen2012; Isham et al., Reference Isham, Gatersleben and Jackson2019).

Acquisition, ownership, divestment – following the ‘material flow’

Objects are accumulated along the lifecourse in various ways; some are acquired as a result of engaging with the numerous consumerist messages encouraging the endless ‘acquisition and use of material goods’ as part of an ongoing cycle of replacing old with new (Brown and Vergragt, Reference Brown and Vergragt2015: 309; see also Smith and Ekerdt, Reference Smith and Ekerdt2011). Others are gifted and collected as part of making and maintaining relationships, as a way of presenting and securing a sense of self through their symbolic meaning, or as a means of recalling memories (Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton, Reference Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton1981; Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008). However they are obtained, they are carried along through the lifecourse as a ‘convoy’ of objects which fluctuate in size according to circumstances, whilst also requiring some form of maintenance or management (Ekerdt et al., Reference Ekerdt, Sergeant, Dingel and Bowen2004).

Arguments have also been made for the inclusion of modes of divestment as a part of the ‘material flows’ that take place within and outside the home as a further route to understanding everyday household consumption and waste habits (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004: 157; Gregson et al., Reference Gregson, Metcalfe and Crewe2007: 187). Trentmann (Reference Trentmann2018: 624), for example, has highlighted the need to include alternative forms of disposal when examining household waste practices, arguing against considering the act of throwing away in isolation from other means of disposal and for including ‘gifting, giving things to charity shops, or storing them in the garage’, even though this means unwanted items remain in circulation and continue to be part of the cycle of consumption. It therefore seems important, when considering retirement as a moment of reflection on material possessions, to also include retirees’ approaches to disposal.

Hitherto, when exploring how older people manage their accumulated possessions, the emphasis has mostly been on the transition in much later life from home to a residential setting, when family members are largely responsible for negotiating the management of the disposal or otherwise of items (Price et al., Reference Price, Arnould and Curasi2000; Stevens et al., Reference Stevens, Camic and Solway2019). Little research has been conducted on retirement as a transition point where individuals may reflect on the belongings currently in their homes, what to do with them and how. This omission is surprising given that retirement is known to be a moment of heightened awareness of all aspects of current and future life (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011; Shirani et al., Reference Shirani, Groves, Parkhill, Butler, Henwood and Pidgeon2017).

The current generation approaching or entering retirement also face contradictory discourses and movements relating to ways of consuming and divesting (Evans, Reference Evans2015; Ouellette, Reference Oullette2019). For example, retirees are strategically being targeted as a potentially lucrative market in areas such as leisure, travel and household goods and services, with the ‘increasingly older consumer market’ being encouraged to increase their rates of consumption, as part of their personal responsibility for contributing towards the UK's economic growth (International Longevity Centre UK, 2019: 11). Yet equally, there are numerous options for purchasing advice and support on how to divest and declutter in retirement (see e.g. https://www.evergreenlifestyle.co.za/; bystored.com). Marie Kondo's encouragement to the better off to embrace minimalism by confronting clutter in the home and removing things that do not ‘spark joy’, suggests individuals’ lives will then be magically transformed for the better, albeit with no consideration of where the ‘joyless’ items go (Kondo, Reference Kondo2011; Van Oyen, Reference Van Oyen2020). Margaret Magnusson's (Reference Magnusson2017) book on The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, or döstädning, has taken this movement further to specifically target older people and their families, encouraging them to sort through and rationalise their belongings, presumably before it is too late to do so.

These contradictory discourses are problematic in that there is an overemphasis on individual responsibility for change, with issues of household class, income and gender being ignored (Ouellette, Reference Oullette2019). They are also problematic in relation to sustainable consumption practices given that they privilege the throwing away of items rather than their repair or reuse, and ignore both the damaging environmental impact and cheap labour involved in producing them in the first place (Ouellette, Reference Oullette2019). We turn now to consider in more detail the ambiguity and complexity of relationships with material objects and their role in supporting or compromising wellbeing.

Material attachment and affinity

Work that focuses on the benefits of acquiring and owning items emphasises how their significance extends beyond their functional value, to representing the importance of our relationships with and to others, and with ourselves (Jackson, Reference Jackson2005b). The items we are gifted and those we gift demonstrate our care and love for others, and signify the essence of our relationships in a tangible way by bringing those relationships into the present moment through their presence (Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton, Reference Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton1981; Bourdieu, Reference Bourdieu1984; Jackson, Reference Jackson2005a; Miller, Reference Miller2008, Reference Miller2012).

Objects which are passed on to others, either through gifts or inheritance, therefore act as ‘receptacles for memories, reminders of family, past, present and future’ and are intrinsically valuable for wellbeing (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019: 175; see also Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton, Reference Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton1981). Yet these items need not necessarily be ‘keepsakes or heirlooms’ which are merely decorative, or those which appear to have extrinsic value (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019: 175). Practical, everyday objects that are passed on can also serve as reminders of the person who used them, and even of the experience shared during their use, such as items of kitchen equipment prompting reminders of a shared meal or of times spent baking together (Habermas and Praha, Reference Habermas, Praha C, Webster and Haight2002; Holmes, Reference Holmes2019).

Within the social sciences, the link between identity formation and ownership of material possessions is well established (Dittmar, Reference Dittmar1991; Shankar et al., Reference Shankar, Elliott and Fitchett2009). Giddens and others, for example, have highlighted how, in contemporary culture, identities are not static, but rather are dynamic and changeable across the lifecourse so that individuals partly rely on acts of consumption to create and communicate their identities and status (Belk, Reference Belk1988; Giddens, Reference Giddens1991; Shankar et al., Reference Shankar, Elliott and Fitchett2009; Ladik et al., Reference Ladik, Carrillat and Tadajewski2015). Thus, as identities shift across the lifecourse, those items that represent former identities or status may be disposed of, or put out of sight and into storage, and new ones purchased to reflect new identities (Shankar et al., Reference Shankar, Elliott and Fitchett2009; Ladik et al., Reference Ladik, Carrillat and Tadajewski2015).

In much later life, objects can have greater relevance in identity maintenance as they connect individuals to the past and may be used as a means of coping with experiences of loss of family members, work roles and help with the transition into residential care (Belk, Reference Belk1988; Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008; van Hoof et al., Reference van Hoof, Verbeek, Janssen, Eijkelenboom, Molony, Felix, Nieboer, Zwerts-Verhelst, Sijstermans and Wouters2016). Therefore, the constancy of an object's existence helps to act as a buffer against change and discontinuity over time, and to offer a sense of security in later life, even if the object itself is mundane (Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008; Miller, Reference Miller2010). Decisions on what to keep and what to dispose of may therefore be particularly challenging in later life (Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008; Ekerdt and Baker, Reference Ekerdt and Baker2014).

Clutter, stuff and ‘matter out of place’

There is, however, also ample evidence of the negative relationship between materialism, consumption and subjective wellbeing, which suggests there is a ‘wellbeing paradox’ whereby rising levels of income and consumption do not lead to a rise in individual and societal wellbeing and may even be harmful (Easterlin, Reference Easterlin1974; Belk, Reference Belk1988; Jackson, Reference Jackson2005a, Reference Jackson2005b, Reference Jackson2016; Dittmar et al., Reference Dittmar, Bond, Hurst and Kasser2014).

Having the means to purchase whatever is desired does not necessarily improve wellbeing, rather it is known to lead to a heightened awareness of the discrepancy between what is owned, and what is yet to be owned, as in the latest model, newest version or current trend (Norris and Larsen, Reference Norris and Larsen2010). Households in Western Europe contain more stuff than can easily be used, with duplicate or even triplicate items, like televisions, in households, so that ‘superfluity’ and ‘abundance’ have become the new norm (Schor, Reference Schor1997).

Material goods are part of the spaces people inhabit, and are part of the way domestic spaces are configured (Hand et al., Reference Hand, Shove and Southerton2005; Horne et al., Reference Horne, Malle, Lane and Gorman-Murray2011). An excess accumulation of ‘stuff’ therefore has the ability to impinge on idealised norms of what constitutes home in the eyes of those who live there, and of how visitors may perceive and judge how the home is configured (Gregson, Reference Gregson2007). Mary Douglas's (Reference Douglas1984: 35) work highlighted how the social world is ordered by categories, and that anything which contravenes that order is ‘dirt’ – not in the sense of disease or being unhealthy, but rather as that which transgresses order, and therefore needs to be put ‘out of place’. Therefore, unwanted items which threaten the social order, security and norms around comfort of the home are the equivalent of dirt, or ‘matter out of place’ (Douglas, Reference Douglas1984: 35; Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004; Gregson et al., Reference Gregson, Metcalfe and Crewe2007). The accumulation of things or objects in the home is therefore potentially a moral question, in that too much ‘stuff’ not only highlights the consequences of excessive consumption, but also allows for moral judgements on those who live in messy spaces (Löfgren, Reference Löfgren2017).

The stuff collected on life's journey, whether or not it ‘sparks joy’, is functional, or remains stashed in invisible places such as the loft, or shed, can be burdensome, requiring a labour of ownership (cleaning, arranging, storing) and ultimately its disposal (Kondo, Reference Kondo2011; Ekerdt and Baker, Reference Ekerdt and Baker2014). Accumulated quantities of stuff may be regarded as burdensome as individuals become aware of the need to tackle its disposal before a ‘more restricted lifeworld’ renders them unable to manage their removal or poses a potential barrier to a later-life transition into residential care (Ekerdt et al., Reference Ekerdt, Sergeant, Dingel and Bowen2004: S266; Kroger and Adair, Reference Kroger and Adair2008). Stuff can also be problematic for wellbeing if the quantity accumulated highlights the moral consequences of engaging in lifelong consumption (Ekerdt and Baker, Reference Ekerdt and Baker2014).

Following a description of our methods, we draw on participants’ narratives to illustrate how the transition to retirement prompted an evaluation of possessions within the home, and a consideration of what could be regarded as valuable and retained, or what constituted ‘clutter’. We then move on to consider preferred modes of divestment before concluding with some critical reflections on material orientations through the transition to retirement.

Study design

The data analysed in this paper are from a project which sought to explore individuals’ experiences of the transition to first-time parenthood or to retirement, and the potential for lifecourse transitions to encourage more sustainable ways of living. Ten participants planning to retire in the near future were recruited from each of four locations: South London, Kent, Lancashire and Scotland, but for the purposes of this paper we are drawing on interviews with participants from South London and Scotland (N = 20).

Each participant was invited to undertake three in-depth interviews in their own homes (N = 60 interviews), after which they completed a seven-day journal of what they did and how they felt. The first interview was planned to take place prior to retirement, and the two subsequent interviews at further eight-month intervals. The first two completed journals were used at the start of the second and third interviews as prompts for discussing what had changed since the previous visit. Participants ranged in age from 45 to 69, with an average age of 63, and were equally divided by gender. All were white British, and were recruited from a range of socio-economic status using the National Readership Survey social grading system based on the participant's occupation, although difficulties in recruitment led to a majority of the participants presented here being from socio-economic groups A, B and C, that is from those with managerial or supervisory occupational roles rather than from the skilled/unskilled or unemployed. Reflecting the current complex and fluid nature of household living arrangements, the majority of the participants were partnered and/or living in households with children or other family members. Only three participants were living alone (all female). Furthermore, and as noted in the literature, the transition to retirement was not always a straightforward longitudinal process, with some participants retiring earlier than planned, others moving in and out of retirement, and some not having retired at all by the final interview (Grenier, Reference Grenier2012; Goodwin and O'Connor, Reference Goodwin and O'Connor2014; Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020).

Interviews were exploratory in nature, broadly developed around understanding what was important to participants in their everyday lives, and were to reflect on aspects of change about which they felt positive or negative as they make the transition to retirement. Whilst an interview topic guide was used as a framework to ensure consistency across all interviews, participants were encouraged to talk freely and openly (Patton, Reference Patton2002). Questions during the interview focused on everyday practices deployed around themes such as what is important about their home, food purchase and consumption, modes of transport and leisure activities, and families and social networks. Participants were not recruited on the basis of their environmental beliefs, nor were questions concerning what might constitute a sustainable lifestyle asked until the final interview. This approach allowed us to focus on gaining an understanding of the participants’ everyday activities, without any undue emphasis being placed on the sustainability or otherwise of these activities. All interviews were fully transcribed and the software package versions NVivo 10 and 11 were used to support a thematic analysis approach (Evans, Reference Evans2018). Emerging themes relating to plans for material possessions and the home were identified within participants’ narratives of expectations for retirement, and coded by reviewing responses across the dataset cross-sectionally, and longitudinally, thus enabling us to observe commonalities and differences between participants and over time (Saldaña, Reference Saldaña2003). Discussions on the validity of identified themes were undertaken with other members of the research team.

To protect the anonymity and confidentiality of the participants, pseudonyms have been used and the location and interview from which the quotation is taken is indicated following the quotation (e.g. Christopher, Scotland, 2). All participants received a small honorarium in compensation for their time; confidentiality and anonymity were assured and ethical approval was granted by the University of Surrey.

We commence this paper by showing how the transition to retirement prompted an appraisal of a post-work future and a contemplation of how to remain productive. We move on to suggest that retirement opened up space for participants to consider the items that had been collected along the lifecourse and to evaluate them for their symbolic meanings and attachment, as well as for possible disposal. We then reflect on how modes of divestment for those items designated waste were shaped by pragmatic considerations, and alignment with values of thrift. In our discussion we highlight two ambiguities: firstly, the complexity of peoples’ relationships to their possessions and, secondly, how the messiness of lifecourse transitions can disrupt current and future plans. Finally, we consider the role of lifelong consumption and later-life divestment in terms of work in the area of sustainable consumption.

Contemplating retirement

The first of the three interviews with participants was conducted approximately eight months prior to the expected date of retirement. The prospect of retirement evoked two narratives involving time: firstly, it was anticipated there would be more time after stopping work, with participants either looking forward to having more time available and how they would fill it, or fearful of too much time, which would lead to them missing the structure and productiveness of a working day:

Interviewer: Are you looking forward to retirement?

William: I'm looking forward to doing all the things that you know, find the time to do things now. That's the most important thing, finding the time. (London, 1)

Interviewer: And can you tell me a little bit more about how you feel about, making that change between full-time work and retirement?

David: If you don't fill your days what are you going to do? I've decided that I really need to have a structured day because I know that if I stay in bed until 10 am or 11 am then I'd go to bed later. I'm not going to be one of those who retires and then does nothing and dies. (Scotland, 1)

I do know myself, I've got that terribly … protestant ethic about, really you've got to be working you know, it's not worthwhile if you haven't achieved something. (Veronica, London, 1)

Secondly, and paradoxically, narratives were also of the spectre of limited time with the approach of retirement signalling a further impending transition, to older age, frailty and even death:

Interviewer: That's what you think you have less of at the moment [time]?

William: You get to a certain age and you think I haven't got that many years left (laughter) … I know a few people that have died at sort of like an early age but as you sort of get to thinking, I don't know, and because the years go past so quickly, so you feel like you know hang on I might only have 15, 20 years left and that, you know, I want to be sort of reasonably fit … I think that's what it is, you simply run out of time. (London, 1)

There is known to be variability in the extent to which individuals plan for their retirement, and this was replicated within our own sample with some having clear plans and projects they would be undertaking, whilst others were less clear about what they would do with their free time (Moffatt and Heaven, Reference Moffatt and Heaven2017). Ekerdt (Reference Ekerdt1986) suggests that the adoption of a ‘busy ethic’ in retirement is necessary in order to authenticate non-work-focused activities, to defend individuals against judgements of ‘obsolescence’ and to legitimise a new retirement identity. Veronica's guilt about being unproductive and David's fear of doing nothing drew on normative expectations that in order to be successful at retirement, retirees should remain busy at home in order to replace being busy at work (Ekerdt, Reference Ekerdt1986; Lee and Law, Reference Lee and Law2004). Unsurprisingly then, many participants envisaged ways of keeping busy in the immediate post-retirement phase which included refashioning of the home by repairing, decorating and replacing old or out-of-date items (‘the main plan [in retirement] is actually finishing off the house’; William, London, 1) and reconfiguring the home to address their lifelong collection of items (‘I won't need clothes for work – so there's going to be a good clean out of the wardrobe’; Adele, Scotland, 1). The challenge in managing their homes and possessions, however, was in the ambiguity and complexity of orientations and levels of attachment to the accumulated items, with participants having a ‘material affinity’ with some (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019), while perceiving others as ‘matter out of place’ (Douglas, Reference Douglas1984).

Things matter

When discussing what may change in retirement and beyond, participants often spoke of alterations they may make to their home, or the prospect of retirement leading to moving home at some point in the future. These narratives also included commentaries of attachment to home, and to items in their possession – some of which had extrinsic value, whilst others were seemingly ordinary, everyday objects which gave pleasure when they were used. During Gail's first interview, for example, she explained how she had started the process of assessing her belongings because of a possible move when she retires, ‘I have slimmed down a lot but there are some things which mean a lot to me and I like very much, and I will always like’. This included a set of favourite saucepans which formed part of her own ‘material convoy’, ‘you collect them over time’, and which she was comfortable with to the extent they were not only useful but also redolent of a close family relationship (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019), ‘Certain pans, I like living with them, I like having them around me.’ She anticipated passing them on to her daughter in the future so that she may have the same material and relational connection with them, ‘I like to think my daughter will have them when she grows up’ (Gail, London, 1).

Items in the home were also significant because of whom they were gifted by initially, and because of the way they provided a connection to family histories and stories, and evoked memories of the giver of the item, or of other family members who may have come into contact with them. Margaret spoke of things of importance to her in the context of a possible future move once she and her husband were retired (‘We probably kind of imagine there will be become a time where it might be difficult for us, it might be expensive I suppose to keep it [their home]’) which would require her considering what things were most important to her:

The kind of things that might be important are the little things that have been given me, more than the actual big items. They are not important. We tend to keep things for as long as possible and change things as little as possible. There would be little things that maybe somebody gave you that you really like or that belonged to your mother or your father. (Margaret, Scotland, 1)

Margaret's use of the word ‘things’ for objects of importance, to differentiate from ‘items’ which are not, resonates with Ingold's (Reference Ingold2010) distinction between objects and things, whereby objects are perceived as matter that are inert, unused or out of sight, and things as being in use, tangled up with other things, and connected to family and friends. Thus, in using the term ‘thing’ when describing the items in her home, Margaret is imagining them with a past, present and future, in a ‘gathering of the threads of life’ (Ingold, Reference Ingold2010: 4).

The strength of the threads connecting things to family members intensified as the relationships they embodied also shifted over time (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019). Stella, for example, explained that she had plans to declutter her flat in retirement:

There are some things I would like to keep and some things I don't particularly mind about. And perhaps one of the issues is to sort those out [in retirement]. What do I really need to keep and what do I not need? (Stella, London, 1)

One of the items she explained she would keep was a fruit knife, ‘There's stuff I'd mourn if I didn't have it. But mostly they are small things like this fruit knife. It was a wedding present to my parents.’ At some point, the fruit knife was damaged and her brother became part of the layers of memory it prompted as he repaired it for her: ‘the original bone handle got burned or destroyed, so my brother when he was quite young, he put a new handle on it and bound it. And I still use it’ (Stella, London, 1).

At the second interview, Stella held the knife in her hands and reiterated its story, in the context of having painted a picture for her brother to make up for an argument they had had:

And it [giving the picture] was a way of connecting, reconnecting with my brother because I had a very unfortunate phone call with him. I was, you know, a bit upset about that [argument] … when he was a school boy he rescued a food knife that belonged to my mother that was damaged and he improvised a handle for it. (Stella, London, 2)

Sadly, by the third interview Stella's brother had died, and as a result of his loss, the possession of the fruit knife held even greater salience for her – the fruit knife was now symbolic of her brother and connected her to him, rather than to her parents: ‘I think if there was a fire, I would take my brother's fruit knife’ (Stella, London, 3).

The story of Stella's treasured fruit knife echoes Holmes’ (Reference Holmes2019) description of Diana's bread knife, also a wedding present passed on from grandmother to mother to daughter, in her work on the passing on of everyday objects, and with Dant's (Reference Dant2000) personal story of lifelong attachment to a knife he has taken with him on his own life journey. The connection between the knife stories of Stella, Diana and Dant is not only how people become attached to even seemingly mundane, easily replaceable things which happen to also be practical, but how those attachments can become more intense in light of shifts in relationships and loss, intensifying their significance for maintaining family connections. Such objects are therefore likely to remain within the household, and not disposed of (Miller, Reference Miller2008; Holmes, Reference Holmes2019).

Yet this is not to say that all of the threads of affinity between people and their things were similarly strong or clearly defined, and participants were at times ambivalent about things that were important to them for their symbolic connection to family and for the comfort they bring, because they impinged on normative expectations that a home should be neat, and free of clutter, ‘I like it to be kind of tidy and neat and fairly orderly and clean’ (Veronica, London, 1). In her first interview Keira explained how her plans for retirement included sorting out her home, ‘I'll probably tidy things up when I retire but not in the meantime’ (Keira, Scotland, 1). Whilst she had not yet retired at her second interview, Keira had given further consideration to excess items she had, ‘I want it out, it's too much, it's choc-a-block’, but also how to make space for those things she particularly cherished but whose presence was impractical: ‘the table in the kitchen was my granny's and it's far too big for the kitchen … that'll go through [to a cleared out dining room]’ (Keira, Scotland, 2).

One item Keira did not use, but which took up considerable space in her home, was a cocktail cabinet she had purchased: ‘I'd seen it and I thought what am I wanting a cocktail cabinet for?’ (Keira, Scotland, 2).

Yet, like Stella's knife, the cabinet held layers of meaning for Keira too which emerged within narratives of what was important to her in her home as she considered what to do with her possessions. Her appreciation for the skill of the maker of the cocktail cabinet blended with the memories of the day her son was killed:

I like stuff that's all been handmade, you know, that somebody's took time to carve and make. But I got that when my son died, but I didn't even know it was a cocktail cabinet, I thought it was just a cabinet. (Keira, Scotland, 1)

Whilst Keira had only just retired by the time of her third interview, her plans to keep busy whilst she still could and ‘tidy up when I retire’ were progressing: ‘I just get on with it. You might not be here at the end of the month. If you're going to do it, do it’ (Keira, Scotland, 3).

The preservation of possessions is also important for retaining a sense of self, especially in later life and when moving into residential care where they act as an ‘archive’ of memories and former identities from which to draw comfort (Belk, Reference Belk1988; van Hoof et al., Reference van Hoof, Verbeek, Janssen, Eijkelenboom, Molony, Felix, Nieboer, Zwerts-Verhelst, Sijstermans and Wouters2016). Retaining a sense of self can be especially important when relationships break down or new ones are formed. Just as personal biographies and individual identities are constructed through memories invoked by things, couples also shape a new couple identity through the negotiation of what things to keep or divest from previous relationships, and which items best signify and foreground the newly emerging one, allowing for a renewed ‘critical alignment of persons with their possessions’ (Miller, Reference Miller2001: 13). Louise and her second husband were surrounded by things in their home that they had accrued during previous relationships, as well as things they had bought together:

I have got my mother's piano in the sitting room, and [husband] has got an old chest that belonged to his family. But we bought a new sofa because we needed a much bigger one. And the things around the house like paintings, the one in the hall was in my hall before. These paintings by Hogarth we bought together. So we have got a mixture of things on the walls that we have either chosen or we brought with us. Generally around the house we have got things that are a combination of our histories and our life together. This room is full of furniture we chose together and this I feel is the heart of the house for me because we chose it together. (Louise, London, 1)

Louise's comment about one room being ‘the heart of the house for me because we chose it together’ highlights how things not only maintain connections to family and kin but are also significant in the making and remaking of couple identities. In the context of discussions about changes in retirement, Louise spoke of plans for her ‘material convoy’, which were modest and tentative:

I am trying to get rid of, not rid of, de-clutter a bit. I have got far too many clothes … I am trying to find some winter clothes for people to wear. (Louise, London, 1)

Louise's use of the words ‘trying’ and ‘a bit’ suggests an ambivalence and reluctance to reduce her accumulated belongings, so the challenge for her therefore was how to manage the combined collections of her and her husband's items in the home, given she also finds it ‘difficult to part with things of sentimental value’ and can only pass things on to someone to whom she is emotionally connected: ‘If something matters to me emotionally I want to give it to someone I like, I am a real old softie’ (Louise, London, 1).

It's all got to go’: clutter and the problem of stuff

We have so far focused on those items in the ‘material convoy’ to which people have a strong affinity, but as Smith and Ekerdt (Reference Smith and Ekerdt2011) have observed, even though the convoy fluctuates in size along the lifecourse, the eventual accrual of items, loved or otherwise, can become problematical at critical moments of transition in later life when the future prospect of downsizing the home and/or moving into residential care seems more imminent. Our own participants’ responses suggested retirement is also a point at which individuals assess the suitability of their homes for the next stage of their lives. This included a reflection on the quantity of objects they had gathered around them. For several, this meant not only assessing the items they cherished and would keep, but also those which constituted unspecified ‘clutter’. In contemplating retirement, Kenneth anticipated cutting down his already part-time hours before finally retiring, whilst also downsizing his home, ‘Yes, it could all go on at the same time [retirement and moving] if you know what I mean’ (Kenneth, London, 1). In the second interview, he partially explained his lack of progress in moving home and realising his post-retirement plans through reference to the accumulation of objects in his house:

It's a difficult thing to do [move home] … it's the amount of clutter … I just look around and think ah it is just full of stuff, it just goes on and on.

The ongoing presence of too much stuff presented as a barrier to his future plans, and prompted a critique of his own consumption habits: ‘I'm a terrible hoarder’ (Kenneth, London, 2).

We discussed earlier Margaret's reference to things in her home to which she was emotionally attached and would keep, but Margaret also demonstrated the complexity of material ownership in that some items within the ‘material convoy’ are precious, whilst others are merely ‘clutter’ and represent a challenge to the moral order of the home. Margaret explained that one of her goals, when she had more time after retiring, was to ‘put the house in order’, by getting rid of ‘piles of paper everywhere’, which had led to her home going ‘a little bit out of control’. Regaining control of her home and giving it a sense of order by removing unwanted matter was important to her normative expectations of how a home should be presented: ‘Well yes you have your standards that you would like to keep the house [to] and I see some terrible places!’ (Margaret, Scotland, 1). The use of language by participants like Margaret and Kenneth when referring to their household objects was suggestive of moral criticisms about the amount they had (‘clutter’, ‘rubbish’), their own culpability in creating the ‘problem’ (‘I'm a terrible hoarder’, ‘out of control’) and how such clutter constitutes ‘matter out of place’ (‘you have your standards’) (Douglas, Reference Douglas1984).

Nevertheless, the objects which constituted ‘clutter’ were not always in plain sight, and participants spoke of discovering forgotten and unused items in the process of decluttering – like William who had emptied his loft, his van and his shed as part of his post-retirement efforts to bring order to his home, and in the process discovered collections of forgotten items: ‘I think in the shed there was 30 pairs of shoes’ (William, London, 3). Similarly Adele, whom we introduced earlier as anticipating retirement would give her the opportunity to clear out her clutter when she retired, rediscovered an extensive cookery book collection in her attic:

I can't believe the cookery books that I haven't looked at for years that were hidden away, and I'm really actually going to have to go through them and say … I don't need all these, and get rid of some. (Adele, Scotland, 2)

Adele's project of decluttering continued across the transition to retirement, and she explained in her final interview how she had uncovered further items in her attic that had lain dormant and out of sight:

It's an ongoing project [in retirement]. The laugh was that I was going to go up in that attic … and get looking to see what was up there. John [husband] went up and he came down with these two boxes. Opened them and there were boots that were probably about, well, as old as this house. So I said, ‘I wonder if there's any more boots up there because that's terrible! (Adele, Scotland, 3)

Adele's self-rebuke (‘that's terrible!’) echoes Kenneth and Margaret's own self-criticism for having such a large quantity of items, and for not remembering they were there. Moral judgements on lifelong acts of overconsumption, and criticisms of messiness, clutter and hoarding in the home and storage spaces were common, reflecting cultural discourses of the need for tidiness as a means of displaying a tasteful home (Dion et al., Reference Dion, Sabri and Guillard2014), but also highlighting the tensions participants felt about what they should keep and what they could let go. Nevertheless, several participants acknowledged how decluttering contributed to a sense of wellbeing, albeit ‘to an extent’:

I find it therapeutic to do that [declutter] to a certain extent. (Stella, London, 3)

Every bag that I take to Oxfam makes me lighter and brighter. (Iris, Scotland, 2)

William, Kenneth, Margaret and Adele's stories of clutter are indicative of how items are accumulated over time and along the lifecourse, and how they come to be stored out of sight and temporarily absent (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004; Evans, Reference Evans2012). Only when the transition to retirement afforded the opportunity to reconsider the spatial ordering of home were those items which crowded out the home, or were lying dormant in lofts, sheds, garages, drawers, cupboards and even spare vans, brought back into an unsettling presence through practices of sorting, handling and counting (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004). Once back in plain sight, items were either subsumed into existing valued belongings or put on a trajectory for disposal (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004; Evans, Reference Evans2012).

Moving things on

Within participants’ narratives of decluttering in retirement were stories of the final journey of their belongings and how they disposed of them. We suggest that the way they undertook disposal reveals a generationally distinctive attachment to thriftiness and frugality, and consider this in light of the literature on sustainable consumption and lifestyles.

Disposal, like consumption, constitutes a ‘social activity’ in that it requires attention to how, what and where objects are placed, by whom and to whom (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2004). Participants spoke of a wide variety of disposal practices ranging from giving to families, donating to charity, recycling and re-purposing, using digital forms of exchange (e.g. Freecycle, Gumtree and eBay) and the practice of ‘leaving out’ – or putting outside on the kerb for others to take. Only once all these methods had failed would objects became re-designated as waste and thrown away.

Finding the appropriate method of disposal required time, careful consideration and planning, as well as knowledge of local disposal organisations, and the ability to access them, thus comprising a ‘labour of disposal’ (Ekerdt and Baker, Reference Ekerdt and Baker2014). Christopher's description, for example, of how he got rid of items he no longer wanted after he had retired revealed his varied attempts at different modes of disposal, and how only items in bad repair were ‘dumped’:

Some of the furniture and things, we left quite a bit in the [church] and they said that if the next person can use it, that's fine. If not, then they'll give it to [local charity furniture shop]. They take stuff. One or two things went to them, one or two things went to other friends, clothes and stuff went to the charity shops. Some of it was just so bad it got dumped. (Christopher, Scotland, 2)

The re-purposing and recycling of items via different conduits of divestment other than the rubbish tip, and the placing of items back within spaces of use and re-use, such as charity shops or other digital exchange mechanisms, could therefore be argued to align with practices of more sustainable consumption and ‘ridding’ (Gregson, Reference Gregson2007). The household is increasingly targeted as the main focus for encouraging sustainable lifestyles, given its perceived role as a ‘primary consumer’ (Collins, Reference Collins2015). Therefore, disposing of unwanted objects from the household by seemingly sustainable means would appear to tie into approaches which aim to shift households into more sustainable ways of consuming and disposing (Collins, Reference Collins2015). Yet within the context of our own study there are two important observations to make about retirees’ approaches to divestment which do not necessarily align directly with sustainable ways of living, but which nevertheless reveal how the current generation of retirees engage with consumption. Firstly, the attention to detail given to modes of disposal by participants was not explicitly as a result of environmental concerns, but rather was more aligned to how they valued thriftiness, and hated waste:

It's not about concern about the planet [taking unwanted items to recycling] because we don't have children so, you know, after us it doesn't really matter! It's just the thought of waste. We were poor as kids, relatively poor anyway, so nothing went to waste. (David, Scotland, 3)

Secondly, participants noted that their preferred mode of disposal was to pass on things to which they had an affinity, and those items they no longer needed, to younger family members. Their refusal to take them prompted comments on generational differences in attitudes to consumption. Younger generations were regarded as being reluctant to accept second-hand items, and to favour regularly updating what they owned (Leach et al., Reference Leach, Biggs, Phillipson and Money2007):

We'll have lots of stuff we don't want – well not so much don't want, it won't fit, and the kids don't want it, it's hopeless, everything has to be new. (Kenneth, London, 1)

I wouldn't change things unless they kind of, I felt they needed it, I am not someone, my daughter's quite different, she likes to change things, you know it's a different generation. (Veronica, London, 1)

The sense of a generational divide in orientations to consumption was reinforced by participants aligning themselves to their parents’ preferences for thriftiness and waste avoidance. Louise echoed David words about being brought up at a different time when thrift was valued and waste was disdained:

I was born during the war and brought up afterwards and I think that thriftiness never leaves you actually, I really think it's so ingrained, I can't bear to waste anything. (Louise, London, 3)

Yet in defining themselves as thrifty or frugal contra younger generations, participants failed to take account of how their homes had become sites of overconsumption in the first place, which led to them being compelled to dispose of some items as they transition through retirement.

Discussion

Our objective in this paper was to contribute to understandings of how those in the process of retiring orient themselves to their material possessions, the significance of this in terms of their wellbeing, and to reflect on how this can contribute to the currently limited work connecting later life and sustainable consumption. We demonstrated how the prospect of retirement prompted considerations as well as concerns for a post-work future, and led to a reassessment of the suitability of the material possessions within the home for later life. We found that even seemingly mundane things in everyday use prompted memories, and stories of kinship connections, and that these threads of connectivity were significant in the making and remaking of identities. As such, possessions were important to participants’ sense of wellbeing in that they provided context, continuity and attachment to lost, current and future generations (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019). Contrastingly, our research also showed that the prospect of retirement highlighted the ‘spectre’ of the ‘material convoy’ of possessions that had the potential to burden participants with the labour of their management and disposal (Ekerdt et al., Reference Ekerdt, Sergeant, Dingel and Bowen2004). We demonstrated how the end-point of consumption was not straightforward in that divesting was carefully managed so that the emphasis was placed on putting items back into use, and as such would ostensibly suggest an alignment with sustainable lifestyles. However, the way possessions were disposed of was more as a result of a generational habitus defined by thrift and frugality, in contrast to perceptions of younger generations’ habitus of a rejection of such values.

The connections between people and their things were ambiguous and did not comprise a simple binary of affinity or burden, and decisions on what to keep or divest were further complicated by the ‘messiness’ of lifecourse transitions. We turn now to discuss this in more detail.

Degrees of affinity

Whilst most participants had a sense of which things they would absolutely retain, and what stuff they would definitely dispose of, the remainder of the ‘material convoy’ elicited varying degrees of connectivity which made decisions on what to keep, what to pass on or what to dispose of more complex (Holmes, Reference Holmes2019). Not all cherished things were to be kept, and not all items that were deemed clutter were considered for disposal. Rather, participants like Margaret considered the consolidation of their belongings in light of other factors, including how much space they envisaged having in retirement, the role of their belongings in the making and remaking of home, and whether or not they impinged on the norms of how homes should be presented – for themselves and to others (Oullette, Reference Oullette2019). In the case of couples, the question of whose cherished things could be moved on and whose would be kept also depended on negotiations around which partner's items had precedence when space was limited.

Transitions are messy

Participants anticipated that retirement would afford them the opportunity to assess the suitability of their surroundings and their possessions for the next phase of their lives. This would also align with the ‘moment of change’ hypothesis whereby transitions are viewed as points of contemplation, when people may be more open to shift existing consumption patterns in a more sustainable direction (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Michaelson, Abdallah, Johnson, Morris, Riley and Simms2011; Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020). However, whilst retirement was a time of significant change in the participants’ everyday lives and lifestyles, we would argue that the idea of retirement as a single ‘moment of change’ is too simplistic and does not capture the complexity of their lives as they transitioned into retirement (Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020). One of the benefits of longitudinal research is that it offers the opportunity to follow individuals on their lifecourse journey and discover whether aspirations were fulfilled or not, what had changed and what remained the same (Neale and Flowerdew, Reference Neale and Flowerdew2003). Being able to accompany participants on their pathway through retirement enabled us to observe the progress or otherwise of their plans towards putting their homes in order, and to observe two confounding factors. Firstly, whilst some participants, like William and Keira, made significant progress in decluttering their homes, the reality for those like Kenneth was that the pathway to retirement was not straightforward, and the interconnectedness of family lives meant that plans to divest were permanently halted, partially stalled or never started at all. Over the course of the three interviews, participants experienced multiple interruptions to their plans, including personal or family health issues, unexpected financial changes, and the breakdown of family or community relationships. Furthermore, for some, the reality of such ‘linked lives’ led to an increase in items in the home when adult family members moved back home along with their own belongings (Burningham and Venn, Reference Burningham and Venn2020).

Secondly, whilst retirement is regarded as a lifecourse transition, marking the end of employment and the beginning of a new phase of life, it was also regarded by participants as a temporary transition, pointing to the next stage of the lifecourse of moving into a smaller home, a managed home, into care and/or into a final transition of death. In addition, the prospect of declining health, increasing frailty and possible reduced financial circumstances was unsettling. The significance of this is that for many participants decisions on what to dispose of or what to retain were more challenging in light of unknown and unknowable future transitions in mind.

The transition to retirement highlighted to participants the consequences of lifelong acts of consumption, and the need to make plans for how to manage the ‘material convoy’. Given that it is known the acquisition of material goods and the labour that is required in their disposal negatively impact wellbeing, and that overconsumption has negative consequences for the environment, there are arguments for making systemic changes which discourage the accumulation of ‘stuff’ at much earlier points along the lifecourse (Ekerdt et al., Reference Ekerdt, Sergeant, Dingel and Bowen2004; Dittmar et al., Reference Dittmar, Bond, Hurst and Kasser2014; Jackson, Reference Jackson2016).

Conclusions

In this paper, we have drawn on the different fields of gerontology, consumption and environmental sustainability, and in so doing have sought to move critical work on the consumption and divestment practices of the current generation of retirees into the arenas of sustainable lifestyles and consumption. Within this arena, existing work has tentatively explored retirement as a ‘moment of change’ for encouraging sustainable lifestyles, but has mostly focused on the oldest old and their vulnerability to climate change and environmental risks (Filiberto et al., Reference Filiberto, Wethington, Pillemer, Wells, Wysocki and Parise2008). Including a recognition of the diversity of later-life experiences, lifestyles, and consumption or divestment practices within sustainability research is timely, given those currently in the process of retiring, or approaching it, are greater in number, healthier and, for the most part, better off financially than preceding generations (Biggs et al., Reference Biggs, Phillipson, Leach and Money2007; Boerenfijn et al., Reference Boerenfijn, Kazak, Schellen and van Hoof2018). If, as Biggs et al. (Reference Biggs, Phillipson, Leach and Money2007: 34) suggest, the retiring ‘baby boomer’ generation’ use consumption as part of their wider strategies in coping with the challenge of growing older then having a clearer understanding of the role of consumption in their generational habitus should not be left out of work on sustainable consumption.

Exploring the ridding practices of those making the transition to retirement would also reveal more about the ‘material convoy’ of the baby-boomer generation and to what extent they have ‘overprovisioned their homes’ (Ekerdt and Baker, Reference Ekerdt and Baker2014: 448). This will be increasingly important as they progress through retirement and into later life, along with the objects they have retained.

Finally, we suggest that gerontologists may wish to consider critically engaging and connecting with environmental sustainability research. For example, focusing on the ridding of objects at the later transitions of the fourth age is problematic in that unwanted items remain a spectre to be tackled most commonly by family members or even one of the increasing number of service industries which cater for house clearances (Smith and Ekerdt, Reference Smith and Ekerdt2011). If the burden or labour of divestment shifts to younger family members, or external services who are less invested in thrifty ways of disposal, there is more potential for the flow of materials to end at the rubbish tip, rather than finding its way back into use and re-use (Ekerdt et al., Reference Ekerdt, Sergeant, Dingel and Bowen2004). Shifting such research to lie within a sustainability framework offers the possibility of reshaping current discourses that present older people as a burden on resources and/or as being solely responsible for climate change (Karpf, Reference Karpf2020).

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the Department for Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra), the Economics and Social Research Council and the Scottish Government for funding of the project; the participants for taking part in the research; and the support of colleagues within the Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity (CUSP).

Financial support

This work was initially supported by funding from the Department for Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra); the Economics and Social Research Council; and the Scottish Government and continued under CUSP, Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity, funded by the Economics and Social Research Council - grant number ES/M008320/1.

Ethical standards

Ethical approval was granted by the University of Surrey Ethics Committee (EC/2010/132/FAHS).

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