Filled a 20 yrd dumpster just the start at my parents hm they couldn't throw ANYTHING away. They saved empty jars, had boxes of boxes, empty bags of bags, broken things to "fix" someday, bits and pieces of carpet, rags, etc etc etc. What is up with this type of hoarding? Why couldn't they throw anything away? When they moved to retire they UP sized. This is both my parents but mainly my dad. They were young kids in the depression but please this is loads of junk and broken items. What do you do with a broken & taped up 5 gal bucket?!! Junk mail not even opened from years ago. And really who saves carbon copy paper?!! This is just the tip of the iceburg. Can anyone shed light on this and tell me why all this junk was saved?
Very sad.
There's a lot to be said for moving, even if it is only to clear the clutter.
Remember too the children starving in China, India, Africa and all the naked little children. Waste not, want not. That's what I grew up with, penny drives, food drives, clothing drives. That is powerful conditioning.
There was a woman at my church who went to thrift stores on 1$ bag day and emptied the store. She shipped it all to Central America, to people in her village. I don't know where she is now but I'd like to give her my stuff.
One really bad thing about hoarding is that furniture can get full. The solution is not to get rid of the hoard, but to buy more furniture. This takes up all the wall space in a room. It's a horror to try to clean. And painting... forget about it. Each task takes 1000% longer because of the hoarding.
Remedy for hoarding: Big bulldozer to push the house down and start again.
And she saves the flimsy little plastic sleeves the newspaper comes in. Has bags and bags of the damn things. In case I ever see that guy, he can reuse these. No sense throwing away perfectly good stuff! The paper comes at 6 am. Mom hasn't been up at 6 am since the Truman Administration.
My mother, the guardian of the hoard, passed away 7 years ago. She loved her junk! I havent had the "energy" or heart to start in, but I have to get it done this winter.....not looking forward to it! Yes depression era and WWII to the core....still found a book of ration stamps from 1940's!
I doubt if Depression Era PTSD has been explored as a specific malady, but I think it certainly exists.
Perhaps you might try to read more about what it was like during the Depression - living in cold houses because you couldn't afford heat, standing in bread lines and being embarrassed because you were so poor.
The cold weather is especially difficult. If you live in a cold area, try turning off your furnace for a few weeks this winter and see what it's like. You'll begin to search your house for blankets and anything to keep you warm. Then imagine that people who survived the Depression had to do this for more than a few weeks - it was all winter.
Have you ever gone to a food handout for poorer people? Do you have any idea how embarrassing it is for people to stand in line to get food?
Remember the social safety nets that are available now didn't exist then.
If you didn't save something, you might never be able to afford to buy it again.
The Depression and the compromises necessary during WWII are events that formed survivors' outlooks for the rest of their lives. Younger people today often can't even begin to comprehend the sacrifices that had to be made during those earlier periods.
That need to save served my folks well, in that they started from NOTHING and amassed enough money to take care of themselves well during their lifetime, while leaving a nice nest egg for me too. So I respect that desire to save!
Some people are savers...especially people in their late '70's and 80's. That seems to me to be a leftover of The Depression. BUT there's a big difference between someone who saves rubber bands and empty jars and those who save garbage.
It's my understanding the compulsion is very difficult to treat...destroys families...creates real health hazards. Compassion but not enabling would be my solution, but no one I love has the disorder.
There were concerted efforts during WWII to get folks to reuse and save everything. Shortages were much worse in GB; I wonder if any of our British friends could chime in on whether hoarding is prevalent amongst elders over there.