Some people might have been surprised to hear that Aretha Franklin kept the handwritten will for her estate, initially estimated to be worth up to $80 million, hidden under her sofa cushions.
But some respect for the Queen of Soul, please. It was not unusual for members of her generation to stash their important documents or cash under a mattress or in a cookie jar.
"I think this had to do with the way Aretha approached money. She insisted she be paid in cash and she put that money in her purse and took it onstage with her," says Angela Neal-Barnett, clinical psychologist, professor at Kent State University and author of "Soothe Your Nerves: The Black Woman's Guide to Understanding and Overcoming Anxiety, Panic and Fear."
"It dated back to when she was on the early circuit with her father and saw how Black musicians were treated," Neal-Barnett adds. "Keeping her will under the sofa may have been her way of feeling in control of her money."
Franklin also had a fear of flying, so she always traveled by bus. "She may have feared she would end up penniless," Neal-Barnett says. "She was told by the legal profession that she needed a will, but she did it her way."
Money often turns up in or under couch cushions, whether on purpose or after spilling out of a purse or pants pocket. A California woman found $36,000 in the cushions of a sofa she scored free on Craigslist. Cash-strapped college students have been known to scour their sofas for loose change at the end of the month, says Neal-Barnett. Plenty of other stuff turns up there, too.
"Sofas are the repository for many of our stories," says Mark Rubin, who owns multiple 1-800-GOT-JUNK franchises. Rubin says he has seen a wide assortment of stuff fall out of sofas, including porn, sex toys, alcohol, weed, food and letters. Everyday items, including keys, jewelry, toys, photos, pens and ticket stubs, usually end up there by accident, says Rubin. "People snooze on the sofa and these small things get lost," he says.
Downsizers and cleaning services report that alongside the stray Goldfish crackers and pennies, they have found dangling diamond earrings, gift cards, uncashed checks and even steak knives when sofa cushions are removed. Remote control missing? It's probably wedged in a crevice in your couch. In some parts of the country, junk haulers find handguns under there. Rubin says a job in Washington, D.C., once turned up a cache of intricate blueprints stashed under a cushion. "It didn't say top secret," says Rubin. "But how would I know?"