Every now and then, someone will post on one of the Pokémon card game Reddit groups: “Help! My brother passed away, and I don’t know what to do.” Sad to begin with, the post inevitably comes with lots of shaky photos: boxes on boxes, cards on cards.
Their brother was an avid Pokémon collector, but no one else in the family has a clue about his hobby. How can they decide what to get rid of and what to keep? How will they know what things are worth and where to sell them? It can be a real challenge.
Thankfully, the community is kind and helpful. “Don’t let anyone fleece you. This stuff’s worth at least $5,000.” “Here’s a great place to look up prices. List and wait, don’t rush.” “This auction house offers consignment. They can take care of everything for you and make sure you get good prices.”
Sometimes, the original poster will provide an update. “We managed to sell everything and unlock most of the value. Thank you guys!” But in many cases, the relatives don’t ask for help, and those collections end up on other subreddits as posts from savvy investors: “Look how much stuff I bought for $500!”
It’s unbelievable how much value we can assign to things as individuals. When I show fellow Pokémon nerds my collection, they often lose it. “I can’t believe you’ve got this, and this, and this! That’s such a rare box now!” But if I died tomorrow and my parents walked into their basement, they’d just be staring at a bunch of cardboard, facing that same question: “What are we gonna do with all this stuff?” To them, it hasn’t got any sentimental value, let alone a financial one. But once they listed and sold it, they’d get thousands of dollars in return.
It’s wonderful to pour your heart and soul into an activity. To connect with others over that shared joy, create insider knowledge, and maybe even have a hobby literally pay off. But it’s also easy to get carried away when you care about something.
Every day, people post angry comments on Youtube about their favorite video game receiving a bad rating. They hype up Pokémon cards as the greatest retirement plan, promote a diet no scientist would endorse, or review-bomb a TV show because it’s not true to the source material.
When you’re deep into something, talk to outsiders on occasion. Even the world’s biggest religions only count a third of the global population among their believers. So no matter what you’re a fan of, most of the rest of the world won’t care. You love it, and that’s wonderful. But to someone else it’s just “stuff”—remembering that can help you keep a cool head when you need it the most.