It’s not really about the clothes. It’s about control. About readiness. About who she became when the suitcase clicked shut.
The list appears near the end of The White Album. It’s a book that captures the disquiet of its time with eerie precision, and somehow, still speaks to the quiet chaos of ours. The list casually inserted—almost as an aside—in an essay that drifts through breakdown and meaninglessness.
It’s a moment of stillness. Of order. The list reflects Didion’s belief in preparation as self-preservation. The act of packing isn’t just logistical. It’s more than that. It’s psychological. In an unpredictable world, a suitcase is a declaration. It says I have everything, and I am ready.
And yet, we know she wasn’t. No one is. That’s the tension: the list is a kind of fiction. One, we all write in our own way.
What would your version of the Didion list look like? Not the literal one, but the one that protects you from unravelling. The one that says, I still know who I am. Or at least, who I need to be.
Joan Didion’s Packing List (Selected)
1. Two skirts
2. Two jerseys or leotards
3. One pullover sweater
4. Two pairs of shoes
5. Cigarettes
6. Bourbon
7. Shampoo
8. Toothbrush and paste
9. Nightgown
10. Typewriter
11. “A mohair throw for the hotel room.”
12. “Yellow legal pads.”
It’s intimate. It’s armour. It’s a myth. And perhaps the most revealing thing Didion ever wrote about herself, not in what she included, but in what she needed it to mean.
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