4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 12 September 2025
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
CrowdScience listener Kerry started thinking about his sentimental attachment to his possessions when he began sorting through an old trunk, full of objects from his past. He wants to know why we get so attached to things that often have no use anymore and why it’s so hard to give them away.
Anand Jagatia investigates why the objects we accumulate during our lives mean so much to us.
He talks to psychologists Mary Dozier and Melissa Norberg and finds out that our possessions offer stability and comfort from the earliest age. That keepsake you brought home from your holiday may also stir memories about days gone by - and that’s one reason why we may find it hard to part with the things we own, because they help us to access our emotions. And the items we collect through our lives can come to represent our identity too.
Anand visits the Museum of Broken Relationships in Zagreb, Croatia, where people from all over the world have donated possessions from relationships that ended, whether romantic or family, and discovers that sentimental attachment is universal.
Presenter Anand Jagatia
Producers Jo Glanville and Imaan Moin
Editor Ben Motley
(Photo: Memories box in book shelf - Credit: Jan Hakan Dahlstrom via Getty Images)
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| 0:00.0 | You're dead to me. |
| 0:05.0 | No, no, that's the name of our podcast. Sorry. |
| 0:08.7 | And we're back for a brand new series. |
| 0:11.1 | Not only is it British history, it was a quill drop. |
| 0:15.1 | With more fun and facts from history without taking it too seriously. |
| 0:19.8 | Empress Matilda, what is she going to do now? |
| 0:21.7 | She decides to take back some of the jewels with her. |
| 0:25.0 | I'm taking these as well. |
| 0:26.7 | I'm going to come back for Tuscany one day as well. |
| 0:29.2 | You're dead to me. |
| 0:30.6 | Again, not you. |
| 0:32.0 | Name of the show. |
| 0:32.8 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:40.3 | This one's really good. |
| 0:42.0 | So it's a really battered old, like, Nokia mobile phone, like a brick. |
| 0:48.4 | There's a museum in Zagreb in Croatia, which is full of precious objects, like this one. |
| 0:57.0 | The note says, it was 300 days too long. He gave me his mobile phone so that I couldn't call him anymore. |
| 1:00.0 | It looks like the phone's been smashed up pretty bad. |
| 1:03.0 | As well as this broken phone, there's an antique metronome, |
| 1:07.0 | a grandmother's handwritten family recipe for Mexican Molle and an old horseshoe. |
| 1:13.3 | Today it would have been our 10-year anniversary and that letting go of this horseshoe |
| 1:16.9 | allows me to move on from the day we met. How sad? |
... |
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