As the only adult child living nearby, I am the one who has cared for our parents as they have grown older. The past several years have been rough. Dad died in February and mom has been in assisted living since December. Maintaining their home as well as my own has been exhausting.
While I am glad that the discussion about selling the house has been started, I dread trying to figure out what to do with everything. The house is loaded with furniture including a few really nice family pieces, 4 china cabinets full of china and crystal sets, books, tools, etc. Lots of collectibles with a fair amount of hoarding as well. There’s a great deal of stuff that none of us will want but there are also some things that we will all want. With Covid, it will be harder for my siblings to get here. They both still work full time as do I.
Can anyone offer tips or strategies to prevent damage to sibling relationships?
We (any number of siblings or other people mentioned in the will) went from room to room throughout the house. Rotate from 1 - how many people are involved.
#1 - gets first choice - if they don't want it #2 can have a choice, etc.
A couple of things we both wanted - as the items meant something to both of us. We would talk it out and negotiate. We ended up feeling good about what we wanted and what we got. There were no hard feelings.
A lot of the stuff neither of us wanted. So after my mother passed, if there was a relative or friend that we knew would appreciate the item, we offered it to them. What was left, we gave to charity.
When my father passed, my brothers and I used a lottery system.
We put numbers 1, 2 and 3 in a bowl. We each picked a number.
Then we took turns in that order picking what we wanted.
After we were done, we traded a few things with each other.
Obviously I didn't get everything thing that I truly wanted, however, it was fair.
More importantly, we kept it civil!!
Family is more important than stuff!
Best wishes!!
Each person was always free to trade with another for an item that they had missed claiming, but there were to be no arguments, since each could have claimed it when they had the chance. At the end of the process they put their own items in a special place and invited my grandmother's best friends to come in and look at what was left. If someone wanted a certain china pattern because they remembered the wonderful meals my grandmother served on it, they were welcome to it. Some very small, but especially nice, items were arranged on the dining room table and all friends who came to the house were invited to select a piece that would remind them of my grandmother. Anything that was left was given to charity.
I stood in for my father and selected items for him, since he couldn't be there, so I saw the process work from start to finish. Four siblings (plus me) from all over the country, over five days, going through a fully-furnished three-story house, yet there was not a single argument or even a cross word! Each item chosen evoked fond memories, people were telling funny and poignant stories, and what could easily have been a really terrible experience was actually made enjoyable and a tribute to my grandmother's long and eventful life.
Starting with the oldest sibling isn't fair. Not trying to start animosity, just would recommend you draw numbers for who goes first.
Made three piles that all boys considered "equal" in their "value", then drew lots for the pile they got. It seems to be the most fair way that I've heard. So many other ways end up with people not feeling heard, or certain siblings running over others.
I am SO not looking forward to this when it comes.
With covid-19 and family working it is going to be harder for family to pick up items and sounds like some items would be too large or costly to transport or ship.
We gave away ourselves over 35 Boxes to a couple of charities (check with the Better Business Bureau, if in doubt). Sadly, in our case, it was a little more like tower of babel style. Best of lucks. Long Live America!
Oh, I tried to donate furniture but they weren't taking donations by the last quarter of 2019 and then the pandemic kicked in the 1st quarter of 2020 and they weren't taking donations again. And they don't want to pick up from public storage.
This may not help those trying to give away things, but part of my reason was to save them the effort of all the details required to disperse those belongings during Covid Safe at Home.
I have his memories, way back to my childhood when he was living with us.
I on the other hand, have a specific will giving specific items to individual with the understanding that they can trade, re-gift or give to goodwill or set on the curve for neighborhood folks
That said, I always marveled how my Mother's family handled that issue. They grouped items into like value/type sets and numbered them (1-6 as there were 6 siblings) and then they drew for each set. They were free to trade items after the drawing was complete but also no argument if someone choose not to trade. One thing that fell outside of that were the dining room chairs. There were 12 chairs and 12 grandkids. We each got a chair.
-Gave away gifts of some of her items to dear friends.
-Gave away furniture to family and friends.
-Gave 138 baskets to local florist.
-Found resale shop to give away remaining furniture.
-Gave away senior health items and clothing to senior thrift shop.
In my family we then gave each person $500 in Monopoly Money (this could be virtual $$ on a running tab, and you could do the bidding activity on Zoom). Then we went through the list. If no one wanted the item it might go for $1. If several people wanted it the bidding started and went up based on how much it was desired.
The point was that each person would walk away with no more than $500 worth of items. Someone might spend their entire $500 on something they really want and another person might end up with 20 items. But the important thing was for everyone to remember that the value was being set by the group via the bidding process. And, it helps if you have someone in the family who is willing to be the banker and documents all the bids so that everything is transparent. Once you spend your $500 you're out.
Good luck!
My husband’s grandmother had a beautiful collection of expensive hats! I wasn’t interested then but I wish that I had taken them.
I was asked about taking her furs too. She flew to New York to shop every year. She had full length, jacket length, stoles, etc. I am anti fur so I didn’t want them. Her housekeeper loved furs. I gave them to her. She deserved them due to being treated so shabbily from my husband’s grandmother!
I was practical and took the antique furniture. She was a wonderful artist and I took several oil paintings, charcoal pieces and pastels. I took a few pieces of jewelry.
We were even offered the entire home! It was a beautiful home in uptown New Orleans but she was so mean that I thought she would have haunted us!
We should have accepted it and burned a ton of sage, called in clergy for a blessing, anything to rid the place of her lingering spirit! 😂 LOL
I also wish I had taken some things from the kitchen like the old cast iron pots and pans.
There are so many belongings that are left when people die. We can accumulate so much over the years. I don’t like clutter. The older I get, the less that I want.
I have started giving away sentimental items that people want before I die.
Everyone knew the system I set up and all went along with it. When I got the bedroom furniture home, I set it up in one of my unused bedrooms pretty much the way my mom and dad had it all the years they had the house with the same items on the dressers arranged the same way. That is my "memory room" and I go there once a week to pray for their souls and be in touch. I bought a new mattress for the bed though.
As I age, I wonder who, if anyone, will want this furniture in the future when I have to move or pass away and if I should be making arrangements for this before hand.
Isn’t it amazing how many storage facilities there are? That is a fairly low maintenance business that makes a profit.
I have bought off eBay but never sold anything on there. Sell what you aren’t donating. I have had a few garage sales that I sold just about everything.
My neighbor cared a lot about her 12 piece Noritake dinner set, which had been a major purchase earlier in her life. None of the daughters in law wanted it – gold rims mean that it shouldn’t go in the dishwasher, it’s all too difficult. She found it heart breaking.
If people can't make a reasonable effort to make choices, it's not wrong to assume that they don't care.