OMG! A member of one my quilting groups was a hoarder. I kid you not. . .she had a very tiny path open in her house from room to room, you could hardly get into the bed in the bedroom. . .she proudly showed off all her treasures and I just got more and more claustrophobic. . .
One of Isaac Asimov’s short stories, “The Acquisitive Chuckle,” concerned a hoarder. When someone stole something from him, he couldn’t figure out what had been taken, because he had so much and to no rhyme or reason. Worrying about the question drove him into a decline.
The spoiler can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Acquisitive_Chuckle
I opine, often, that billionaires and multi-millionaires are hoarders.
Hoarding disorder is a persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions because of a perceived need to save them. A person with hoarding disorder experiences distress at the thought of getting rid of the items. Excessive accumulation of items, regardless of actual value, occurs. – Mayo Clinic
If a hoarder makes a frank and earnest effort and gets rid of a quarter or even half of his/her Stuff…a non-hoarder will come into the house and tell the hoarder, “There’s too much stuff in here. You need to declutter.”
Thus the hoarder has gotten zero positive reinforcement for all his/her effort. Why bother putting in the work?
I wouldn’t have called my parents hoarders, but they sure had a hard time getting rid of stuff; the house was kept clean, but cluttered because there was just too much stuff and not enough places to put it. I think it came from growing up during the Depression (but then why were their parents [my grandparents] all so neat with uncluttered homes?). My mother even had several books on how to get rid of clutter, but those just ended up adding to the clutter!
Gent over 4 years ago
He’s been preparing for lockdowns since always.
sandpiper over 4 years ago
H-e-e-y. Somebody’s snooped my garage.
!!ǝlɐ⅁ Premium Member over 4 years ago
‘Where’s Waldo,’ the cat version! >^.^<
P51Strega over 4 years ago
He looks so content there.
1953Baby over 4 years ago
OMG! A member of one my quilting groups was a hoarder. I kid you not. . .she had a very tiny path open in her house from room to room, you could hardly get into the bed in the bedroom. . .she proudly showed off all her treasures and I just got more and more claustrophobic. . .
uniquename over 4 years ago
Or maybe he needs to put things away.
DHBirr over 4 years ago
One of Isaac Asimov’s short stories, “The Acquisitive Chuckle,” concerned a hoarder. When someone stole something from him, he couldn’t figure out what had been taken, because he had so much and to no rhyme or reason. Worrying about the question drove him into a decline.
The spoiler can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Acquisitive_Chuckle
micromos over 4 years ago
My wife is in training.
Zen-of-Zinfandel over 4 years ago
Interesting..no empty pizza box.
walstib Premium Member over 4 years ago
I wonder if “Promise Keepers” is still a thing.
Librarylady over 4 years ago
I opine, often, that billionaires and multi-millionaires are hoarders.
Hoarding disorder is a persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions because of a perceived need to save them. A person with hoarding disorder experiences distress at the thought of getting rid of the items. Excessive accumulation of items, regardless of actual value, occurs. – Mayo Clinic
the lost wizard over 4 years ago
Got any toilet paper?
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member over 4 years ago
If a hoarder makes a frank and earnest effort and gets rid of a quarter or even half of his/her Stuff…a non-hoarder will come into the house and tell the hoarder, “There’s too much stuff in here. You need to declutter.”
Thus the hoarder has gotten zero positive reinforcement for all his/her effort. Why bother putting in the work?
eromlig over 4 years ago
It’s like keeping kosher — you’re never so neat that some people won’t think you’re messy.
WF11 over 4 years ago
I wouldn’t have called my parents hoarders, but they sure had a hard time getting rid of stuff; the house was kept clean, but cluttered because there was just too much stuff and not enough places to put it. I think it came from growing up during the Depression (but then why were their parents [my grandparents] all so neat with uncluttered homes?). My mother even had several books on how to get rid of clutter, but those just ended up adding to the clutter!
StephenRice over 4 years ago
Attila the Hun was a horder.