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I'm not oblivious to the obvious fact that someday my kids will have to decide what to do with my stuff. But it's not selfish of me to want to keep my stuff while I'm alive. I don't have to be Jack Reacher who owns just one set of clothes and a toothbrush while I'm alive just to make it easy for everyone when I'm dead. |
Actually, yeah, your parents will absolutely react negatively if you say, "by the way I'd like to throw out all your stuff now just to make it easier when you croak". Practically guaranteed to enrage them. It is 100% easier to just throw out / donate all that stuff after they pass away rather than having a big argument about it now. |
Brace yourself. You're going to discover that it's not valuable at all. |
Yes, yes, I am 100% entitled to keep my own stuff and do what I want with it while I'm alive, do go on. ![]() And you're entitled to throw out your own stuff and to throw out your parents "garbage" after they pass away, just as you like. |
I’m so worried about my MIL’s stuff. She has so much stuff, the house is full of boxes of crap. She still has clothes from the 1980s with tags on them. The problem is DH is also a hoarder and sentimental. I’m almost positive he won’t let me get rid of her stuff. Then I have my DD who inherited the hoarder gene and is also sentimental. They can keep whatever they want but I don’t want it in my house! |
I've asked my parents to downsize for 30 years. Have they done it, no! Have they used any of the stuff that has been put away for "later use", no! Do I want to deal with throwing it away, no! They could have done it themselves 30 years ago! |
Yup. |
Have them watch Swedish Death Cleaning so they know what to do with the actually sentimental heirlooms. There are extremes on both ends. A sibling with OCD who hates stuff may go in and dump everything without giving a thought to things like, Mom's wedding dress that granddaughter had planned to wear, the family bible, and things that belonged to other people; photos of ancestors, a painting great grandfather brought from the old country, clothing that should have been donated, not trashed. |
One sentiment I loved about Swedish Death Cleaning deals with the "I want her to have this when I die." Why wait? Give it to her now and tell her why it is meaningful and why you want her to have it. The memory of that exchange will be more valuable than the object. |
You are entitled to keep your stuff. Your heirs won’t think well of you on that score. |
It means exactly what I think it means - feeling like your parents should be more concerned about your future inconvenience than about what they actually want for themselves. This thread started about what people are doing themselves to help reduce the load for their kids and other loved ones in the future. But it quickly turned into people just sh**ting all over old people, once again, for daring to be alive. I'm not the old person. I will be dealing with this with my own parents, who have a house crammed with stuff, one day - hopefully not soon. I don't think they have to choose to live differently than they want to now, so one day I will have less stuff to deal with. I don't think that will be easy. It will be one of a hundred awful things to deal with one day. I don't think they owe me getting rid of their stuff today. |
My mom died when I was in my late thirties with two little kids. She lived far away.
It took a year to deal with. And I only looked at 1/4 of it. Gave the rest away. Because of that I keep a small home, declutter often, and have a very specific will. |
I started cleaning out my mother's cupboards and closets when I visited. Her house was not bad, but there were still things to get rid of, like a stack of phone books, empty boxes she had kept from things she ordered, old suitcases without wheels. I would fill up her trashcans which I did every week anyway. I also went through the garage and took all the old paint, solvents, etc to the dump which takes toxic stuff. She moved into assisted living and we divided up all her furniture and things we wanted, gave away the rest then had junk removal. It was nice to have things we wanted before she died (we told her how much we liked them, which she appreciated). We fixed up her house and rented it. She lived for five more years. I was so glad not to have to do this task on top of everything else. |
It's not about future inconvenience or s***ing over old people. It's to remind everyone that the current idea of living on a pile of mammon is not sustainable! Nobody needs so much stuff! Get rid of it! My grandparents were old when they died and probably had 1/50 of stuff my parents have managed to accumulate and refuse to get rid of. Accumulating needless stuff and inability to let go is a sign of mental issues and control. |