toggleswitch2
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 23, 2008
- Messages
- 5,000
The hardest part of cleaning up after a hoarder is the fear that there MIGHT be one important document in the thousands that one may not want seen by the outside world, or maybe otheriwse personal. At some point one gives up and just runs it ALL through the shredder. Those really afflicted often say. "I can't throw it out without going through it, there may be some money hidden in there". There never is.
My relative was so bad she could not close the bathroom door from all the crap taking reisdence on it. We could not eat on her dining room table and she had only a small poriton of her double bed upon which to stretch out for the night.
Above and beyond to all was the fire hazard in the ancinet old brownstone-type buildng on a GAS stove with pilot lights were:
Stacks of napkins taken form shitty restaurants. Nail-polish remover. Crosses of dried-out palm leaves from chuch, newspaper clippings in a styrofoam supermarket meat-tray. (We had ZERO success in getting her to remove flammables from the stove-top and oven).
The couch was a yard/meter away from the wall and packed to the gills behind it with worthless papers.
G.D. it ! If you are gonna hoard and leave someone else to clean it up, could it at least be something that is readily converted to cash? Gold, jewely, pearls, stock? Nope NEVER.
Perhaps parents should stress which papers have value and what is toilet-paper early on in a child's life.
Sandy, as always, best wishes. You have done a hugely good deed for the universe and I pray you will be repaid tenfold sooner rather than later.
My relative was so bad she could not close the bathroom door from all the crap taking reisdence on it. We could not eat on her dining room table and she had only a small poriton of her double bed upon which to stretch out for the night.
Above and beyond to all was the fire hazard in the ancinet old brownstone-type buildng on a GAS stove with pilot lights were:
Stacks of napkins taken form shitty restaurants. Nail-polish remover. Crosses of dried-out palm leaves from chuch, newspaper clippings in a styrofoam supermarket meat-tray. (We had ZERO success in getting her to remove flammables from the stove-top and oven).
The couch was a yard/meter away from the wall and packed to the gills behind it with worthless papers.
G.D. it ! If you are gonna hoard and leave someone else to clean it up, could it at least be something that is readily converted to cash? Gold, jewely, pearls, stock? Nope NEVER.
Perhaps parents should stress which papers have value and what is toilet-paper early on in a child's life.

Sandy, as always, best wishes. You have done a hugely good deed for the universe and I pray you will be repaid tenfold sooner rather than later.