At first it felt like a sale: items listed, tidy photos, a few notes—“free to a good home.” People came and took things, thanked me, left. The rhythm was easy. But generosity, once given a form, asks questions back.
mygiveawayme became an experiment in boundaries. I learned that gifts carry expectations, sometimes invisible: gratitude, reciprocation, or the quiet obligation to remember. I watched strangers take a sweater and return it in a different town, a note folded into a book. I watched someone take a painful story and bear it away like a coal; later they wrote to say it warmed them through a long night. That taught me that value isn’t fixed by price or possession, but by what the receiver needs in that precise hour.
The project sharpened my view of identity. “Me” fragmented and multiplied across the giveaway list: the practical me who cleared clutter, the nostalgic me who catalogued memories, the performative me who curated generosity for attention, and the private me who was learning to ask what I needed in return—respect, kindness, care for the things I’d entrusted. Each transaction rewove who I was with a new strand: the giver, the witness, the one who was trusted.
If you started a mygiveawayme of your own, what would you list first—and why?