Today is the same for me, nice weather, yet I am inside, but it needs to be done for my own sanity. I am sure I will end up working outside on one of the coldest nastiest days, but at least I will still be sane.
I got all of the drawers emptied, I did not take time to purge anything but obvious trash, I can clearly see that there is stuff that I do not need, nor will I ever use it. The real test is does it deserve a place in $100 drawer, as soon as I ask that, it becomes really clear. Some of the things are definitely not valuable, but the drawers will make them save me time and effort, so it is worth using the drawers, other things can either get trashed or put on the shelves in bins (with labels!).
Labeling is the key and I am still having a hard time deciding what the labels should say. I want them to be very descriptive, but I know I need more generalized labels, otherwise I will need another hundred drawers to put my next thousand bins in and each bin will have two things in it. This is one of those issues I have to work through in order to win this battle with myself. I also see I am going to need to start a thread asking what things are, I have a ton of items that I do not know what they are, but I have a general idea of what they are used for. This goes back to the "they are expensive and I can't toss them" mentality, that is a really tough one to overcome, my Father and Grandfather burned that into my brain so I see it when I close my eyes now.
Strouty,
I'm right there with you on the reasons we hold onto things. Some standard ones are:
It cost me a lot, way back when.
It's valuable, I could get a lot of money for it.
I might need it in the future.
I could fix this up and it would be worth a lot more.
This might go with something else I have, or could get.
And a dozen other reasons/excuses.
There are counters to these little pop up excuses that your mind trys to use to convince you to keep things.
The first one I use is, "How long have I had this without using it."
The second is, "When do I expect to reasonably use it."
Then I ask if I even like the item.
I ask myself if I want to go to the trouble of selling it, or donating it. Most times the answer is hell no. I want to get it out of my hands as quickly and easily as possible. Sometimes I put things on the curb, but it doesn't always work. Easier to just toss in the trash can. But them I have to wait until Thursday pickup, and the tension and threat of getting it back out, is unbearable. There is always relief when it goes, but usually some regret, especially if it isn't truly trash.
Each item must pass this gauntlet of questions to justify it's place with me.
You see, to be valuable enough to keep, an item must prove it's worth. I am going to have to house and protect and maintain it. It has to earn it's place.
Some of the sport coats I threw out still had price stickers on them from the resale shop. Some were too small. I'm not keeping them until an imaginary time when I lose weight. Some had a very small hounds tooth check pattern, that to my eye looks bad on a large guy like me. One was white. I don't like white.
I kept a navy one with brass buttons and a blue and grey flecked wool one that was more casual. Just kept the ties that would go with these.
Can I be as ruthless with my tools? Not sure.
Keep up the fight. The mind is a monkey, always taking you down dead alleys and creating chaos in your life. Take control of your thought processes, and control them with calm and deliberate decisions, to find peace and serenity.
Sometimes it takes me 3 or 4 times, handling an item, to finally decide to dispose of it.
As far as labeling is concerned, you are far ahead of me. I'm still assembling things by broad category, like woodworking tools, automotive tools, etc. The main thing is to always have a particular place for an item. That way, you always know where to look for it.
Bill