Not quite a horder - decluttering

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  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited March 2014

    I lurk on threads!

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited February 2014

    We're skipping the home show this year. Washing machine quit last week and new one will come on Mon. Went to the laundromat this morning. Darn machine took the fund for a new sofa.

    We had a car once that knew our bank account. Every time we would get a little cash built up, it would need a repair costing that amount. We finally changed our bank. Sounds weird, I know, but it happened too often for chance.

  • FierceBluebird
    FierceBluebird Member Posts: 758
    edited February 2014

    Ouch, that hurts wren. New machines are so expensive these days! But think of how clean and pretty the new one will be. 

    The talk of cleaning out of parent houses hits a little too close to home. I thought I was the only one with deep dark family skeletons. My parents (my dad mostly) saved for 50 years. Coffee pot broke? Dad would have a spare out in the garage. Need a tire for your bike? Doesn't matter what size he'd have one. He could pull a rabbit out of hat. Of course you'd have to dig through boxes and boxes of stuff to find it. A few years ago, I had just fallen from my horse and broken my shoulder. With great timing, my dad calls and tells me he sold their house. What?! When did you put the house up for sale? Then tells me they have to be out in three weeks. OMG...what goes through the mind of older people?!  We (his kids) had to quickly empty out 50 years worth of crap good stuff.  My dad wanted to go through each thing and then couldn't part with it. We were getting no where. They were moving from a 2 story 4 bedroom colonial into a retirement 2 bedroom rancher. I had a pickup truck and I brought truck load after truck load of stuff to my own home, garage and basement to "hold" for my Dad. My husband was getting fed up. Finally my own home could take no more. We began piling boxes at the curb at my parents house. It grew to over 50 feet long and 6 feet high. My Dad kept trying to carry things back in. We had to get really mean with him and I still feel bad about this. 

    In an ironic twist of fate, one of the boxes we put to the curb had "ugly" pottery with big flowers. I was later watching an antique show and saw this pottery. It was Roseville pottery that goes for hundreds of dollars a piece. We probably put out many thousands of dollars for trash. And I ended up with 50 years of Christmas crap, tangled light strings, broken christmas balls, and mismatched furniture.  My mom passed away soon after and I didn't have the heart to throw out her furniture. For several years I had two dining room sets, two living room sets and other pieces. I'm just now getting to the point where I can donate her things and not feel bad about it. Of course my Dad never wanted any of his "good things" back again and left me to sort and donate. What an exhausting and draining experience!

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited February 2014

    Bluebird, What a nightmare! I can just see DH doing the same thing. DS says he's going to take the photos and drop a match on the way out. Can't blame him.

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited February 2014

    Wren, I will not let my children read your last post!  That thing with the match is exactly what they would want to do.  I can just see them dancing around the bonfire.  I doubt they'd add the bit with the photos, however.  Maybe one of my daughters-in-law might.

    My father advised me to have the local auctioneer come (they'll either purchase everything for a lump sum or cart it off to auction)  Of course, I did nothing.  I will, of course, pass that advice on to my children.  The only problem is that before the auctioneer gets here to value the stuff, my #2 son will probably have schlepped all the best stuff off to the dump.

  • OncoWarrior
    OncoWarrior Member Posts: 5,234
    edited March 2014
  • FierceBluebird
    FierceBluebird Member Posts: 758
    edited February 2014

    Wren, tell them to forget taking the picture and grab the washing machine on the way out! Lol...  

    Oops, misread your post. Someone can grab the photos and someone else get that washing machine!

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited February 2014

    Ohhh.  I guess I misread the part about the photos too,. I was thinking they'd immortalize the house by taking photos, but i guess you're right, Bulebird.  They might (or might not) take those albums.  Come to think of it, maybe not.  At least one of my daughters-in-law has gone through the ablums with her smartphone and copied anything she might ever want to see again.

  • FierceBluebird
    FierceBluebird Member Posts: 758
    edited February 2014

    Brookside, that's actually a good idea about the smartphone! I've been wanting to scan old photos but it's so time consuming.

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • BUNKIE10
    BUNKIE10 Member Posts: 733
    edited February 2014

    Wren - That is what my house keeps doing to me. Every time I get some money saved for a new car down payment my house springs another leak or something.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited February 2014

    When my folks died, the family divided up the stuff someone wanted. Called an auctioneer who said not to toss anything. Made a tidy sum from the auction.

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited February 2014

    Well, I emptied an entire drawer and my shredder (woodstove) bin is overflowing with financial statements from 1997 and thereabouts.  The drawer is pristine.  The things that go back in it are piled on top.  While I'm proud of my accomplishment, I think it looked better before.


     

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited February 2014

    It's amazing to me how much I can get rid of and still have no more room. Our washer died so we had to make a path for delivery of the new one. I'm going thru stored linens and towels. I have left over containers - probably a good sign.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited February 2014

    Well, talk about clutter! The poor washer delivery men had to carry it around to the back yard because the garage was too full to bring it thru on a dolly. I'll bet you couldn't sell the lot of what's in there for 50 cents if you took out the tools. I was embarrassed.

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • OncoWarrior
    OncoWarrior Member Posts: 5,234
    edited March 2014
  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • OncoWarrior
    OncoWarrior Member Posts: 5,234
    edited March 2014
  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • FierceBluebird
    FierceBluebird Member Posts: 758
    edited February 2014

    I've been having cough/post nasal drip issues. Tea with lemon and honey helps. I can't stand the taste of licorice so fenugreek is out for me! So is slippery elm bark.  

    My biggest complaint is the cough when I lay down.  

    I de-cluttered my dining room table. Hooray! I swear every horizontal surface around here is a magnet for junk! 

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited February 2014

    Oh, I WISH I could take guaifenesin! Unfortunately, it makes me sick...

    My go-to tea when I have a cough: quarter a lemon, then cut one quarter in half horizontally. Peel and slice a bunch of ginger root. Add lemon and ginger to two cups of water and microwave for 2 - 3 minutes, til boiling. Let sit for a few minutes. Squeeze lemon juice into water. Strain into big mug, add a glob of honey, and sip. Ginger and lemon have healing properties; the heat relaxes throat muscles and bronchial tubes. I pour it into my insulated travel mug and put it on my nightstand at bedtime.

    Some good news: we've been dreading the task of cleaning out the in-laws' home when 92 year old Dad passes. It's a 56 year old house packed to the rafter with "treasures"... and a HUGE pile of absolute crap on the back patio.

    We originally thought we'd have to go in and clean it up before selling it, but now one of the sisters wants to have it. Awesome! We can divvy up whatever contents the family wants (anything anyone takes will be appraised and the amount deducted from their share of the estate) and just leave the rest for the SIL. SHE can worry about cleaning it up! WOOT! Major chore avoided!

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017
  • Mandy1313
    Mandy1313 Member Posts: 1,692
    edited February 2014

    Onco Warrier:  I love your saying: 

    "Every box out of the house is another victory in the de-clutter decathalon!"

    I am just recuperating from a severe stomach virus....for the first time I was glad that I'd had chemo because it took one of the  chemo anti emetics to get things under control for me.  Hubby got full blown flu (he had a flu shot) and I got this incredible intestinal flu.   But I'm on the mend now and hubby is cured. 

  • OncoWarrior
    OncoWarrior Member Posts: 5,234
    edited March 2014
  • FierceBluebird
    FierceBluebird Member Posts: 758
    edited February 2014

    Blessings that is great news!  My inlaws have two houses that will need cleaned out one day. A shore house and a city house. Ugh! It's doubtful any of their kids will take either of the whole house-  junk intact.  They bought a new house and we had to cart all their old stuff to the new house. How useful are 50 year old encyclopedias?!  And they weigh a ton!

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited February 2014

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