novaboy009
Well-known member
Sell 17 trailers = water heater + a good start on a furnace, even @ $100 a trailer in scrap prices. You have assets Bill! Liquify the assets into cash and then you can afford to get your life back!
AND..........the next steps ARE in the back of my mind. After the main rooms of the house are cleared (Living, Dining, Kitchen Bedroom and Bathrooms)I have to purge the yard of stuff to make a staging area for the basement. The roof is stable and leaks temporarily patched, but it needs a re-roof within a year. Then it will be time to face purging the basement. At that point a dumpster may be necessary. I will suit up and dive in and haul it all out and dump it. By then I will have saved up money to fix the heat and replace the water heater. YES......I am starting to think about saving rather than spending and planning rather than living for the moment.
Til then, no more purchases. No more non essential spending. No more helping others to avoid my own work. Live simple and cheap and treat each day as a work day on the house clean project.
Well, it's almost 8:00 and time to clock in for the day!
I have started to throw away perfectly good things like the can of floppy disks.
I am about to do some wholesale disposal of perfectly good things
Just pull it all outside and worry less about sorting.
I have to purge the yard of stuff to make a staging area for the basement.
The roof is stable and leaks temporarily patched, but it needs a re-roof within a year.
Then it will be time to face purging the basement. At that point a dumpster may be necessary.
Holy moly Bill, those pictures of your kitchen almost make me vomit. I don't want to see bathroom pics.
What exactly is your end goal and timeline? How do you evaluate what to toss out? What is your thought process on this? I ask because of the way you reply about the microwaves and refrigerators.
I mean for me if I was entering your house with the goal to clean it out and live there I'd have the following in mind:
Goals/timeline - something like this...
1. Camper trailers will all be gone within 20 days. Clear them out, advertise them, use funds to help with a real dumpster or drop-box.
2. Kitchen, bath, master bedroom: cleaned out (only basic furniture, appliances left) within 5 days; wall/cabinets/fixtures/appliances wiped down and floors mopped (carpet ripped out and tossed?) within 8 days.
3. Basement emptied @ 12 days
4. Basement cleaned, services fixed @ 20 days
3. Secondary rooms emptied within 25 days
6. Yard debris/piles gone @ 35 days
....
16. Garage emptied @ 50 days
...
19. Interior walls deep scrubbed TSP cleaner @ 60 days
20. Paint primary rooms @ 62 days
21. Paint secondary rooms @ 64 days
...
30. Landscaping trimmed back @ 90 days
...
40. Have a house party for all family and friends in a clean house.
etc, etc. - you fill in the blanks.
Throwing stuff out - what is the psychology/rationale....
1. Do I need this item? If no, then throw all out. If yes, then...
2. Are there multiples of this same/similar item? If no, put item in room it belongs in to be eventually cleaned. If yes, pick the best one and throw all others out. And by throw out I mean throw out, if pickers want to sort the junk at the curb then let them.
How about starting a regular ad in the local paper and/or CL for every Saturday morning a "sale from 9am-10am, all items go - make offer" for all the stuff that you don't think is outright trash? Throw anything left at 10am away.
Anyway, it might be helpful for you to type out here exactly what your plan is and what the timeline is. It can be modified at any time. Get your wife in on this, you're both up to your eyebrows here.
This is a moonshot you're doing here. Gotta start thinking beyond what color to paint the fins on the rocket and pick a landing date and a plan how to get there.
Edit: p.s. I support your endeavor, think big!
This is how perfectly rational people attack a project like this, including many people on this forum. We see a big project, we jump on it and go go go until it's done.
Bill is working towards being that person, but I get the distinct impression he isn't quite there yet.
When you guys push like this, at first I am angry and embarrassed that you have hit me where I am wrong. Then I realize you only take the time because you care. Then I am motivated to do something. Just filled a can. Taking photos as I go. Cleaning off the back walk.
It's pretty unusual for someone to be able to be this honest even with themselves, but you are able to do it with a whole bunch of people in an audience. I think it's pretty healthy.
Red Leader, a very good summation of the situation. Well done.
"Bill is working towards being that person, but I get the distinct impression he isn't quite there yet."
Boy, you got that right!
I can see that piecemeal isn't making it.
The schedule above is kind of scary, but if no specific goals tied to a timeline I won't ever get anywhere. Funny thing, I used to schedule construction jobs. Tonight I will start working on a timeline using the above one as a guide.
No one took the VCR tapes so I threw them away. Filled 2 trash cans. Not enough progress. Stacked up a pile of brush and put away 15 rakes and shovels. Raked a pile of leaves. Trimmed bushes and cut up and put in trash.
Shaved and dyed mustache (Just for Men). Fixed the second meal for in our new dining room
Here's what happened yesterday that has me frustrated.
A lot of the boxes from all rooms of the house went outside without sorting through them. This was to make maneuvering space in all the rooms of the house. First they went on the porch and then they were put on the side of the house and finally they were stacked on the back walk. at each step some of the things in them were thrown away and some things were organized by putting like things together. Some of the discarded things were ruined things. Some were usable things I didn't like or want or see a place for. This is good, as I have found it hard to discard this type of (Usable) item. I have to sort all boxes because they contain all sorts of things, some very valuable to me, some useful and some just junk. As an example, yesterday I came across an envelope with the history of the Michie family of VA (William Michie of Michie's Tavern is my 4th great grandfather), sent to me by family genealogists. In the same box was paperwork on a 95 Suburban that was stolen and documents sent to get insurance coverage. Also flyers and old advertising mail from 8 years ago and old Fine Woodworking magazines. I kept the Michie folder, happily discarded the junk mail and old paperwork, and grudgingly discarded the magazines. I can't throw away things wholesale because trailer titles and important papers are mixed in. But sorting is slow. And the more I sort, the less I want to throw away. Although I did make progress on books. Books are something I treasure. Yesterday I threw away a bunch of them.
It took all day to bring the boxes out on the sidewalk to work on them, do the work and then put them back. Part of this was because I had to take breaks to try to control the panic attacks I was feeling about throwing things away. I stacked the VCR tapes and a blender on the corner with a free sign. The same blender I had done this with before and then retrieved to keep for some possible future use. They took the blender but not the tapes, which I later threw in a trash container. I discarded a perfectly good 4 head VCR as well. I still feel a sense of loss over these items and an urge to retrieve them is in me. I will be glad when they are picked up next Thur. and gone without reprieve. I don't know if these feelings of panic and loss go away with time. I don't know if it gets easier to throw things away with practice. I hope it does. Right now is he hardest time to part with things. Things are security to me. They are items with plans for the future attached to them. They say to me that I have a future because they are here waiting for me to do something with them. Right now, with our health in decline, our financial house of cards about to collapse and everything in jeopardy, is a time I need those things the most, and it is the hardest to part with them. I am in turmoil!
But I am tired of being a slave, and a self made slave, to these endless boxes of books and papers and things that I haven't even seen, much less used, in many years. I've tripped over them too many times, and been prevented from using my house too long. I used to take a long hot shower every day. I miss that.
I had to cover the boxes last night because of rain. This is too slow! And the back walk is still blocked! I don't really have space ready elsewhere in the yard for them. And I don't want to keep moving them around.
So today I am determined to go through them ruthlessly and pare them down to what is final keeper items, and then put those items where they belong, not just stored, but where they will be used. There will now be enough space in all the rooms of the house, that all future sorting can be done in place, without bringing unsightly piles of boxes out on the porch or sidewalk.
This will finally open this pathway to the basement. With a few removals from the back porch and hall I will be able to start on the basement. A very big deal. Then it will really be real dumpster time.
And I've got one more admission to make to myself and you. I am afraid that my mania for collecting tools and machines is just like my mania for collecting books and kitchen tools and equipment and electronics and trailers and everything else I have too much of. It's all part of the desire for security in possessions. I don't really have any specific plans for them. Just want to "have" them. If I have a perfect shop set up, what then?
It may be that I will be happiest just having a normal amount of basic tools and spend my days doing other things.
In any case, I see a big job just purging this place. I am now starting to want to get rid of the piles of wood and aluminum I have stacked in the yard. I've always wanted to keep it for "Some future use". Now I feel like if it isn't a specific use, I want to be rid of it. Same with the stacks of lumber. Use it or lose it. I feel like I've just started.
15 rakes and shovels!!!!! I have 2 or 3 at the most. You need to take at least half of them and put them to the curb for free. VCR tapes and a VCR Player. The VCR went out years ago. Items DEPRECIATE. A VCR Player can be bought for a couple of dollars IF A PERSON NEEDED ONE. Today, they are mostly useless. Pick the best two rakes and the best two shovels and keep those. You and Julie can't use more than two at a time if you are working together anyways. Send the rest to the curb. Dig out all the titles for the trailers and keep those. Anything else in the boxes, you haven't cared about it anyways or it would not be in shoved in boxes under other piles of trash. IF you cared about it, the items would have been out where they are useful and served a purpose.Right now the perfect shop for you is an empty one.If I have a perfect shop set up, what then?
Right now the perfect shop for you is an empty one.


No one goes into a fight to lose, only to win. And to win at whatever means possible.

And instead of juggling money for the next week, we were able to pay the last $56 we owed on property taxes. If it hadn't been paid by the end of the month, we would have lost the property.
Just paid 2 months hangar rent.
Bill, I'm still sensing an incredible upside-down list of priorities. The two posts above illustrate that better than anything else. It's time for you to get serious. How many times has that been repeated?
In addition to the suggested counseling for the hoarding, I may also suggest some money management classes.