Anonymous wrote:MIL saved a bunch of dh's old toys and baby clothes. She had stashed them away neatly in a trunk for him. You would not believe how much stuff can fit into a trunk!
As it turns out, the kids loved discovering Daddy's toys. In fact, the stuff that dh used to play with as a kid (cars, soldiers, legos, baseball cards) is exactly the sort of stuff that our kids love. The baby clothes that she saved are precious - many are lovingly hand knitted items from his relatives.
I'm saving those clothes for my kids. A little sense of their family history. Priceless.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my mom is exactly like yours. She is both a hoarder* and someone who wants me to have all the old baby stuff she saved from my childhood. I let her keep baby stuff at my house for a few months and maybe take pictures of DD in/with it, but then I give it back to her and say DD can't use it or outgrew it or whatever. This works particularly well with handmade baby clothes because I just say, honestly, that I don't want DD to ruin them.
*I agree with PP that keeping a lot of baby stuff does not by itself make someone a hoarder. But an inability to let go of possessions, and an inappropriate idea of their value, is characteristic. My parents didn't hoard newspapers they hoarded furniture. At one point in my teens I counted 46 dining chairs in our two-bedroom house, most in various states of disrepair and awaiting refurbishing that would never happen. They could't bear to donate them because they were so "valuable." My mom brings that dysfunction to me when she tries to fill my house with things she can't let go of: giving stuff to me is a way to get it out of her house, and assign value to it, without actually letting it out of her life.
Anonymous wrote:My MIL offered us DH's crib, mattress and car seat that had been in their unfinished basement for 30 years. Not kidding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the OP described is not a hoarder. The OP described a sentimental person who saves things which are important to her.
There's a difference.
Exactly!
If she was a hoarder wouldn't the op be happy she's getting rid of items? If she was a true hoarder you should tell her to bring you more things!
Just be grateful and accept her gift. Then do what you want such as dispose or donate.
Anonymous wrote:What the OP described is not a hoarder. The OP described a sentimental person who saves things which are important to her.
There's a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
"You don't want to be rude?"
Dear, this is how this site works. People spill the beans. You haven't told us anything.
A hoarder is a person who has stacks of stuff dangerously stuffed around the house, or in specific rooms of the house. Sometimes it gets so bad you can't walk around anymore and the hoarder is crushed to death under his giant pile of newspapers, etc.
So is this your mother?
And how is she organized about it?
No, that's the hoarding they show on TV.
OP, my mother is a hoarder. I grew up under those conditions. Saving stuff from your childhood doesn't make her a hoarder. Not being able to come empty handed doesn't make her one either.
So if your mom isn't a hoarder STFU. Enough with the hyperbole.
Maybe you can focus on improving your manners?
Anonymous wrote:I want to say that I love my mom, she is a good mom and grandma and is very sweet. But she is a bit of a hoarder. I had a baby three weeks ago and now every time she comes over she brings something that she has saved from when I was a baby. She cannot come over empty handed. I could go on, but I don't want to be rude. Also, I know there is probably something I could say to stop it, but she is being nice and I don't want to cause a thing. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
"You don't want to be rude?"
Dear, this is how this site works. People spill the beans. You haven't told us anything.
A hoarder is a person who has stacks of stuff dangerously stuffed around the house, or in specific rooms of the house. Sometimes it gets so bad you can't walk around anymore and the hoarder is crushed to death under his giant pile of newspapers, etc.
So is this your mother?
And how is she organized about it?
No, that's the hoarding they show on TV.
OP, my mother is a hoarder. I grew up under those conditions. Saving stuff from your childhood doesn't make her a hoarder. Not being able to come empty handed doesn't make her one either.
So if your mom isn't a hoarder STFU. Enough with the hyperbole.