Lump
Well-known member
Bill, I have posted a couple of "atta-boy" messages in this thread, but nothing more than that until now. I am thoroughly impressed with your progress, and decided to finally add a couple thoughts, which you may hopefully find helpful in some way.
First, I am not quite a "hoarder" myself, but I'm really not so far removed from that status. I LOVE to search for/find cool old useful and/or collectible items at bargain prices, and I HATE to waste anything which is potentially useful. So I must constantly work at getting rid of things, or I am quickly overrun with junk. Fortunately for me, I also love to sell stuff, and go to 3 or 4 flea mkts or swap meets a year, plus list stuff on eBay and Craigslist. This removes a lot of stuff, and keeps a respectable bit of cash handy for future treasure-hunting.
But as you said, finding and buying bargains is WAY more fun than working to organize/store/re-organize/dispose of things. It's much too easy to find something like, for example, a beautiful-but-broken old rocking chair and say, "Heck, all it needs is a new runner on one side, stripping, gluing, and refinishing...and it will be a beautiful piece. And, it's worth way more than the $20 price...maybe the seller will come down?" Of course, the seller usually does. Then it is great fun to load up my bargain treasure, take it home, and proudly show it to my wife. However, then the hard part comes. I must now store it someplace, and I'm often tired after a long day shopping...so it gets plopped down in the most convenient place available (often the only open spot in my garage.) My plan is always to organize my storage space "tomorrow," and put it neatly away until I can tackle the restoration project soon, "...maybe this weekend." But by the time the weekend rolls around, I have found out about another, even-more-FABULOUS estate sale/auction/swap meet/flea mkt, etc, etc. And the cycle continues.
By the way, that phrase, "...all it needs is..." has been the ruin of many a collector!
In the past, I would resolve these issues temporarily whenever I would get frustrated and overwhelmed with junk, by suddenly getting fed up and hauling off a bunch of junk to the dumpster. But then I would feel conflicted... I would be proud of my beautifully clean and organized shop, but guilty because I had wasted so many potentially useful things. But in more recent years I have learned to pick out the few really-cool items that I like, and make a firm decision to keep them. Then, I really look forward to disposing of everything else, by selling items, giving away things, and finally discarding of other items that weren't really as good as I had hoped. It would kill me to "waste" a perfectly good piece of lumber, for example. But if my neighbor might be building a new addition next door, I would carry over a bunch of lumber and give it to him, hoping he could use some of it, and discard the rest later. I give extra tools to my sons and brother and close friends, and sell many others at events, or on eBay.
I have found, for me at least, that if I can pass on a useful item to someone that will use it...either by sale or gift...I don't feel bad to have gotten rid of it. Indeed, I haven't "wasted" it at all. I have merely made it ultimately useful.
Gotta get back to work. More later. Merry Christmas!
First, I am not quite a "hoarder" myself, but I'm really not so far removed from that status. I LOVE to search for/find cool old useful and/or collectible items at bargain prices, and I HATE to waste anything which is potentially useful. So I must constantly work at getting rid of things, or I am quickly overrun with junk. Fortunately for me, I also love to sell stuff, and go to 3 or 4 flea mkts or swap meets a year, plus list stuff on eBay and Craigslist. This removes a lot of stuff, and keeps a respectable bit of cash handy for future treasure-hunting.
But as you said, finding and buying bargains is WAY more fun than working to organize/store/re-organize/dispose of things. It's much too easy to find something like, for example, a beautiful-but-broken old rocking chair and say, "Heck, all it needs is a new runner on one side, stripping, gluing, and refinishing...and it will be a beautiful piece. And, it's worth way more than the $20 price...maybe the seller will come down?" Of course, the seller usually does. Then it is great fun to load up my bargain treasure, take it home, and proudly show it to my wife. However, then the hard part comes. I must now store it someplace, and I'm often tired after a long day shopping...so it gets plopped down in the most convenient place available (often the only open spot in my garage.) My plan is always to organize my storage space "tomorrow," and put it neatly away until I can tackle the restoration project soon, "...maybe this weekend." But by the time the weekend rolls around, I have found out about another, even-more-FABULOUS estate sale/auction/swap meet/flea mkt, etc, etc. And the cycle continues.
By the way, that phrase, "...all it needs is..." has been the ruin of many a collector!
In the past, I would resolve these issues temporarily whenever I would get frustrated and overwhelmed with junk, by suddenly getting fed up and hauling off a bunch of junk to the dumpster. But then I would feel conflicted... I would be proud of my beautifully clean and organized shop, but guilty because I had wasted so many potentially useful things. But in more recent years I have learned to pick out the few really-cool items that I like, and make a firm decision to keep them. Then, I really look forward to disposing of everything else, by selling items, giving away things, and finally discarding of other items that weren't really as good as I had hoped. It would kill me to "waste" a perfectly good piece of lumber, for example. But if my neighbor might be building a new addition next door, I would carry over a bunch of lumber and give it to him, hoping he could use some of it, and discard the rest later. I give extra tools to my sons and brother and close friends, and sell many others at events, or on eBay.
I have found, for me at least, that if I can pass on a useful item to someone that will use it...either by sale or gift...I don't feel bad to have gotten rid of it. Indeed, I haven't "wasted" it at all. I have merely made it ultimately useful.
Gotta get back to work. More later. Merry Christmas!


.............and I have a sneaky suspicion I know the guy!