I read the first and last page. Then I said naw, I gotta read it all. Wow! I'm proud of you Strouty. We all have our vices and bad habits. I believe most guys would feel they hit the mother lode if they had half of your stuff. Some of my thoughts have been spoken, however me thinks your issues are that you :
Have a buying addiction,
Buy more than you sell,
Buy on emotion not logic,
Buy entirely too many cabinets, large capacity and nut and bolt type,
Have a phobia of missing out on a deal,
Have difficulty completing a task.
If I recall correctly your thread went like this:
Clean, clean, buy, buy, buy, clean, sell, buy, buy, clean, buy, buy, sell, buy, clean.....Kinda kidding.
You are a wise man based on some of your quotes:
"I overestimate my ability to use things and then get caught up in storing them.
People in general will almost always fill whatever size container they have.
I am pretty sure that the ton of space is my problem.
I feel overwhelmed, under-motivated, and overall like the shop is actually causing me more problems than value.
I have also decided that my goals are may too ambitious for me and I have tried to scale them back so I don't feel so bad all the time."
But then between each great comment and progress you say you've just bought something else because you couldn't pass up on the deal. Before you said your actions were like a drug addict I said to myself he's like a crack head. How many relapses are we gonna have to see? But then I think you turned it around.
If I you I would get that Quincy compressor working pronto, then get the Mohawk lift installed, and keep at least one bay open. Have you thought of putting some of your heavy machines/tools on casters so they can be stored together, out of the way, and moved when they're needed?
Strouty you have made enormous progress in getting rid of stuff and cleaning up the place. You realized you had a problem and you faced it head on. For that you deserve a big congratulations! BTW, you place looks tremendous in the fall with all the colors. As Johnny Carson used to say, in California the changing of the colors meant the smog changed shades of brown.
Keep up the good work.
Bob