Seems the opposite is true for me. I save my boys’ childhood memoirs but my boys don’t care about them. I passed on a few of their toys to my grandkids. My boys are not the sentimental type. They don’t even bother looking through the pictures in their albums that I made while they grew up. Is this a millennial thing? My daughter in law is the same.
I’m waiting for the bloody IRS to sort themselves out and get my THREE EIP checks to me! Honestly, it’s gone beyond ridiculous, they sent one check to Austria. I live in Australia sigh
Anyways once that happens, I’m having all the boxes my parents packed of my stuff and stored at my sister’s house shipped to Australia. Most of it anyways. I’m still upset with my sister for assuming I meant my reproduction tin box collection was kitchen stuff I didn’t want :(
I’m extremely sentimental. That’s why, when we were cleaning out my parents’ apartment after my mother died, I took home a few “swizzle sticks” from the restaurant my mother waitressed at, and a shoehorn/backscratcher I remember my father having when I was a small child.
This was done at the time when my parents were leaving their house of many, many years. My mother had more plastic containers than anyone you can imagine.
My daughter is 40 years old, my son is 34. I STILL put ornaments they made in daycare on the Christmas tree. I always will. They would be disappointed if I didn’t.
After what I went through with my mom and how hard it is to sell and we had to give away, I am not going to do the same. I have lots and lots of books, when I finish and depends on shape of book either trash or donate.
My wife died recently and I managed to “throw” away a few things she was saving to create things with when she had the time. Sadly she didn’t have the time. Now I have a house full of “things” and nobody who wants it.
I have moved far too many times in my lifetime to have formed much sentimental attachment to stuff. I’ve kept some old photo albums that my parents had, and a very few small keepsakes to remember them and my late brother, but everything else either was given away or sold before each move.
Keep any expensive jewelry, firearms, also some small personal items… But the rest either gets donated to the thrift store or tossed into the dumpster.
In all that junk are probably things you were given as gifts from your children and your grandkids. That’s why I say no gifts….and mean it. If you feel you have to buy me something or die, then make it lottery tickets, food, or money. Gift cards don’t count unless they are loaded VISA’s ; )
If you are downsizing from a 2000’ -2400’ house to a 750’ condo: make a plan drawing on one sheet sheet of graph paper and overlay your new place over the old one.
If the house is three levels and a double garage (if you use it for storage), plus a storage shed on the back yard, just put those drawings next to each other, and then place your new plan on top—then you’ll see how much new room you’ll have and you’ll see there is no way you’ll fit four floors of stuff into a one or two befroom condo, and a storage locker, and have room for your own body! I’m telling you, that’s such a wake up call!
Even the kitchen cubboards, which in the new place might be galley style, won’t take the stuff from three sides of cupboards and pantry from your present kitchen….
When I say that to my friends, they really start to clean out those blind corners and all the top shelves, and all their old clothes from closets, and never used bedding from the linen closet, and their pantry corners, and wonder why they kept all that stuff…
Some advice from someone who’s been there: take lots of digital pictures for the memories, be brutal about getting rid of stuff, and do it QUICKLY, like pulling off a bandage.
capricorn9th over 3 years ago
Seems the opposite is true for me. I save my boys’ childhood memoirs but my boys don’t care about them. I passed on a few of their toys to my grandkids. My boys are not the sentimental type. They don’t even bother looking through the pictures in their albums that I made while they grew up. Is this a millennial thing? My daughter in law is the same.
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
What was Canada’s favourite thrift store then?
wjones over 3 years ago
There are unwanted memories for some things.
PammWhittaker over 3 years ago
I’m waiting for the bloody IRS to sort themselves out and get my THREE EIP checks to me! Honestly, it’s gone beyond ridiculous, they sent one check to Austria. I live in Australia sigh
Anyways once that happens, I’m having all the boxes my parents packed of my stuff and stored at my sister’s house shipped to Australia. Most of it anyways. I’m still upset with my sister for assuming I meant my reproduction tin box collection was kitchen stuff I didn’t want :(
littlejohn Premium Member over 3 years ago
What is one person’s junk. Is another person’s memory. And another person’s treasure.
SamT53 over 3 years ago
Yeah, saw that last panel coming.
Wren Fahel over 3 years ago
I’m extremely sentimental. That’s why, when we were cleaning out my parents’ apartment after my mother died, I took home a few “swizzle sticks” from the restaurant my mother waitressed at, and a shoehorn/backscratcher I remember my father having when I was a small child.
ILK over 3 years ago
“Human’s spend their life collecting useless junk. When they die their relatives sell it and use the profit to buy more junk” – Quark.
The Pro from Dover over 3 years ago
“I know!” “Let the kids have it!”
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Yard sale! Woo Hoo!!
Nala the Great over 3 years ago
How does the car levitate?
Gerard:D over 3 years ago
Lynn’s Comments:
This was done at the time when my parents were leaving their house of many, many years. My mother had more plastic containers than anyone you can imagine.
DawnQuinn1 over 3 years ago
My daughter is 40 years old, my son is 34. I STILL put ornaments they made in daycare on the Christmas tree. I always will. They would be disappointed if I didn’t.
jango over 3 years ago
Solution=rent a dumpster
Kawasaki Cat over 3 years ago
Dumpster time!
tripwire45 over 3 years ago
My Dad was a total packrat. When he died, my brother and I had a ton of his old junk to get rid of.
kab2rb over 3 years ago
After what I went through with my mom and how hard it is to sell and we had to give away, I am not going to do the same. I have lots and lots of books, when I finish and depends on shape of book either trash or donate.
John9 over 3 years ago
My wife died recently and I managed to “throw” away a few things she was saving to create things with when she had the time. Sadly she didn’t have the time. Now I have a house full of “things” and nobody who wants it.
Linguist over 3 years ago
I have moved far too many times in my lifetime to have formed much sentimental attachment to stuff. I’ve kept some old photo albums that my parents had, and a very few small keepsakes to remember them and my late brother, but everything else either was given away or sold before each move.
InuYugiHakusho over 3 years ago
One’s trash is another’s treasure.
Johnnyrico over 3 years ago
Keep any expensive jewelry, firearms, also some small personal items… But the rest either gets donated to the thrift store or tossed into the dumpster.
paranormal over 3 years ago
Yard sale?
summerdog over 3 years ago
In all that junk are probably things you were given as gifts from your children and your grandkids. That’s why I say no gifts….and mean it. If you feel you have to buy me something or die, then make it lottery tickets, food, or money. Gift cards don’t count unless they are loaded VISA’s ; )
1JennyJenkins over 3 years ago
Here’s another tip that suits today’s topic:
If you are downsizing from a 2000’ -2400’ house to a 750’ condo: make a plan drawing on one sheet sheet of graph paper and overlay your new place over the old one.
If the house is three levels and a double garage (if you use it for storage), plus a storage shed on the back yard, just put those drawings next to each other, and then place your new plan on top—then you’ll see how much new room you’ll have and you’ll see there is no way you’ll fit four floors of stuff into a one or two befroom condo, and a storage locker, and have room for your own body! I’m telling you, that’s such a wake up call!
Even the kitchen cubboards, which in the new place might be galley style, won’t take the stuff from three sides of cupboards and pantry from your present kitchen….
When I say that to my friends, they really start to clean out those blind corners and all the top shelves, and all their old clothes from closets, and never used bedding from the linen closet, and their pantry corners, and wonder why they kept all that stuff…
MCProfessor over 3 years ago
I have amassed a huge collection of comics, manga and art books. After I gone EBay sales may show an uptick.
dustoffer over 3 years ago
Sounds like our family too—-
BlitzMcD over 3 years ago
The proclamation in panel number two is basically condemning yourself to years of aggravation, frustration and stress. Trust me on that one.
rebelstrike0 over 3 years ago
Watch them say “This is a piece of crap” and toss away a copy of Superman #1.
ZBicyclist Premium Member over 3 years ago
Some advice from someone who’s been there: take lots of digital pictures for the memories, be brutal about getting rid of stuff, and do it QUICKLY, like pulling off a bandage.
Brent Rosenthal Premium Member over 3 years ago
Got news for you El. If they don’t pitch stuff you and your bro will be spending months cleaning it up after they go.
bike2sac over 3 years ago
What gets me, is when things I threw away moving some years ago, show up on the Antiques Road show, and assessed at multi buck worth.
Orcatime over 3 years ago
After 30 years of living in one place, when my folks moved, we practically re-stocked an entire thrift store!