Anonymous wrote:My husband has bins of junk he’s hoarding away, and I’m thinking of purging some of it without telling him. He won’t do this on his own even if I ask; he thinks he may “need” it someday, however, we NEED the space it all occupies now.
It’s nothing of sentimental or monetary value. It’s things like old jeans (he recently lost 70lb and these don’t fit), too many jackets he hasn’t worn in ages (there is dust collecting on the shoulders), an old motorcycle jacket (a buddy handed it down to him before we had kids; he’s not getting a motorcycle anytime soon, and I doubt this jacket even fits now if he did), and other various “junk” he hasn’t touched in ages.
Am I horrible if I just donate what I can and toss the rest on garbage day? If so, any other ideas?
Anonymous wrote:My husband has bins of junk he’s hoarding away, and I’m thinking of purging some of it without telling him. He won’t do this on his own even if I ask; he thinks he may “need” it someday, however, we NEED the space it all occupies now.
It’s nothing of sentimental or monetary value. It’s things like old jeans (he recently lost 70lb and these don’t fit), too many jackets he hasn’t worn in ages (there is dust collecting on the shoulders), an old motorcycle jacket (a buddy handed it down to him before we had kids; he’s not getting a motorcycle anytime soon, and I doubt this jacket even fits now if he did), and other various “junk” he hasn’t touched in ages.
Am I horrible if I just donate what I can and toss the rest on garbage day? If so, any other ideas?
Anonymous wrote:I once threw away 16 huge, black garbage bags of old clothes that were my boyfriends. The items were not in good enough condition to donate. My brother was convinced that he’d break up with me. When he returned home, all he said was thanks for picking up around the house. He missed not one thing. He’s the ADHD-kind-of-hoarder. He is now my husband. Now it’s much easier to keep up with via constant pruning rather than a huge purge! Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:My husband has bins of junk he’s hoarding away, and I’m thinking of purging some of it without telling him. He won’t do this on his own even if I ask; he thinks he may “need” it someday, however, we NEED the space it all occupies now.
It’s nothing of sentimental or monetary value. It’s things like old jeans (he recently lost 70lb and these don’t fit), too many jackets he hasn’t worn in ages (there is dust collecting on the shoulders), an old motorcycle jacket (a buddy handed it down to him before we had kids; he’s not getting a motorcycle anytime soon, and I doubt this jacket even fits now if he did), and other various “junk” he hasn’t touched in ages.
Am I horrible if I just donate what I can and toss the rest on garbage day? If so, any other ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DO IT. Trust me, he will never know. The spouse is either a hoarder too, or an enabler. I remember a show on TV about hoarding and there was a couple in G-burg. She was the problem. They asked him.." How did you let it go on so long."
He just stared blankly. Don't stare....throw it out...all of it. Put him on notice...you might get your own place if you need to and arrange for Social Servuces to deal with him.
OK....
It doesn't at all sound like OP's husband is THAT kind of hoarder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoarding a a serious issue, OP.
But if he is just storing things without it really being hoarding -- I found I could tell my husband someone needed the items, and then he was fine with giving them away.
He had a shit ton of old magazines he was saving. I told him a friend of mine needed a bunch for a school project, and carted away boxes and boxes of old magazines.
This. I think that hoarders need their things to be valued, even when they don't respect the items/don't care for them or use them. It's emotional 'stuff' that they aren't willing/able to sort through.
So if you 'find' someone who is 70 lbs larger than him and 'needs clothes' he will probably happily part with the items. In addition, depending on the type of hoard, use an excuse like the pp. Even if it's utter garbage, act like you found someone who will enjoy it- do NOT tell him it went in a dumpster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I highly doubt he’s an actual hoarder. Cut the exaggeration. YOU don’t see a use for it, so you want it gone. I’m sure you have plenty of knickknacks, shoes, purses, flowerpots, some crap he doesn’t understand why you keep. It sounds reasonable to keep some of these things. I too once lost over 20 pounds and was a bit scared to get rid of my old clothes. It probably took me 4-5 years of staying my new, smaller size to get rid of all my old clothes. As far as certain jackets, I’m 38, and in my parents’ basement I still have some of my old high school jackets and travel sports team jackets. My DAD, who is 72, still has all his old trophies. We aren’t hoarders. We aren’t up to our eyeballs in junk. Get a grip.
That's you, but you don't know OP's husband. Why do you assume he's the same as you rather than trusting her judgement? Are you defensive because people have been calling you a hoarder?
Not at all. She simply didn’t describe anything that could be remotely construed as actual, mental illness hoarding. And people on DCUM have been known to exaggerate or slant a story their way.
She never said he was a HOARDER, she said he was HOARDING. Which is a verb. Which is different than the mental illnesses that cause hoarding. Calm the f down.
Anonymous wrote:OP here and I didn’t think people would think I meant he was a hoarder. He’s not. He’s good about getting rid of things when the mood strikes him—which isn’t often. We need the space, so the time needs to be now. He refuses to condense his things, and these are the things that he doesn’t need to keep (like I said, I would never get rid of his sentimental things, but old jeans?) And yes, I have four bags of my own junk that’s ready to be donated/thrown away.
I appreciate the advice.