Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.
I know I’m not helping PP but I could never toss something like those letters and journals. They are simply irreplaceable
OK, but if they are special and irreplaceable, you need to store them in a way that will preserve them, and even display them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.
I know I’m not helping PP but I could never toss something like those letters and journals. They are simply irreplaceable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rule is, if nobody knows who is in the picture or anything about the item, throw it away.
But there's a market out there for old photographs including snapshots.
NP. This is just setting up people to stay stuck. Most people don't want to bother sorting, posting, selling, and mailing old photos. If the photos don't mean anything to you or anyone you know, get rid of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rule is, if nobody knows who is in the picture or anything about the item, throw it away.
But there's a market out there for old photographs including snapshots.
Anonymous wrote:My rule is, if nobody knows who is in the picture or anything about the item, throw it away.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.
I would keep this.
Anonymous wrote:to whom, and what is going to be done with them? np here.
Most people are going to have to accept that what they have is not that special. I mean, if it's special to you, it's special to you. Keep it. You can't assume it's going to matter to anyone else or the larger, wider world.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are both only children. When our parents passed away and we cleaned out their houses, we found ourselves in possession of tons of family photos and papers spanning 4 generations and 100+ years. I don’t have any problem getting rid of my clutter, but I really hesitate to throw out my grandparents’ journals and letters from the early 1900s. Am I being irrational? It just feels like we’re dumping irreplaceable historical items.