An update after my last post: ultimately, I just grit my teeth and pushed forward to get mom
and dad moved into their new place. Mom
was outright hostile the last two days, and now the house, while empty of the things they took with them to the new apartment, is full of the things she wanted to sell. My partner wants no part of this and we have agreed on a plan, but I woke up this morning in a panic with guilt at getting rid of the things she thinks are valuable but won’t sell at a sale. Hiring people is out of the question. They’re not going to be able to pay their rent in June if we don’t sell the house fast. Dad wanted out come hell
or high water and mom wasn’t honest about how much cash on hand they have and now they’re in it deep financially.
For those who cleaned out their parents home, how did you handle the guilt that they put on you? How did you go about the liquidation in a removed way, especially if your parents are still living and have the ability to get to the home, but can’t mentally or emotionally separate from the things that have carried them through life so long?
To be clear: we took many many items to the new place that they have neither space for or need for out of compassion for both the emotional attachment and the perceived need of the item. The apartment is packed to the gills and mom was panicked at the boxes that kept coming in her door on moving day.
My partner and I are alone to do this job, and I will be forced to throw things away… I’m struggling to detach, I guess.
Another thing that will be beneficial is estate sales companies will straight out tell you if there is anything worth selling. This may mean a large dumpster in the front yard but, done is done and there are no options for this situation, it must get done rapidly.
Your mom now has her hands full with everything in her new home, so, don't bring up the sale or items or anything from her previous home. If she asks for something specific, tell her it's in one of the boxes at her apartment and move on to a different topic.
Best of luck getting the house cleared and sold with minimal upset for everyone. It is just stuff after all.
It’s a rock and a hard place, partly of my own making, sadly.
https://www.agingcare.com/questions/help-me-decide-how-deeply-to-be-involved-with-low-contact-toxic-parents-486211.htm?orderby=recent
Also, your parents don't have PoAs. If you are inserting yourself in their situation to rescue them, prepare to be criticized by others, and get no gratitude from your parents (or Mom for sure). "The nail that sticks up gets hammered."
Where is your Dad in all this? Does he have cognitive or memory issues?
Your decision-making seems frozen. Please see a therapist. Learn about boundaries.
Dad is perfectly capable, and in his right mind, but unwilling to challenge mom at all. Physically, they have let themselves decline until a few hours out to get a few things to put in the new house exhausted them. He is so heavily medicated that he just goes with the flow until he can’t and then he gets belligerent.
I think, rather than paralyzed, I have made several rookie mistakes and am paying for them. Family is already unwilling to come help but very willing to tell me how to do this job. The guilt is already miles high, so there you go. This has nothing to do with rescue. I know that’s not possible. But as the only daughter showing up to this circus, I’m going to get crap whether I leave them to their decisions or wade through the poo for a few more weeks. It stinks.
You just do it. No emotions no sentimentality, you just do it. If those boxes are things she just bought, send them back unopened. Keeping track so you know if Mom gets a credit. The quickest way to get rid of stuff is an estate sale. You can hire someone to get it all set up and they take a % of the sales. You go in ahead and get the trash and clean out the junk. Estate sales bring in more money than yardsales. Anything left over, you give away to Thrift stores. You takeva room at a time.
Its almost April, June will be here before you know it, You need to roll up those sleeves and get it done. Tell Dad to keep Mom away from the house. You can put the house up for sale and clean out too.
You know you are close to losing loved ones and all the memories that makes them who and what they are/were.
You don't have energy to waste on such self-accusations.
It is on your parents that they have not downsized their lives, and that they haven't the funds to make the next payment on rent (which doesn't bode well for the future, by the way). It's not on you and it's not your fault.
That handled, on to the task at hand. I would call estate sale companies and ask if they will handle the clearing and sale for what profit they can make out of it. Or if they know any company that will. Then I would call hauling places and find out the same.
Saving stuff gets ridiculous. I am 81. None of this stuff is going to my grave with me. And my daughters are already up to their eyeballs in their own stuff. There's no one who has more useless worthless "stuff" than Americans. In San Francisco it is out on the streets free to the extent you could furnish a studio and supply your kids with toys for a year.
The storage company lockers in this country should be a lesson to us all. But somehow they aren't. We just keep getting them, paying for them, and filling them with stuff no one wants or will ever use again.
For me I would call 1-800-junk and have it cleared. But that's me. I have already cleaned up my own mess so that there will be little for my daughter to have to address. I was brought up by parents who did the same for me.
I love a piece that the brilliant Annie Dillard wrote--and I can't remember it exact--but it went something like "We live our lives as though hundreds of thousands haven't lived before us, and as though there were not hundreds of thousands yet to come".
That is so true. We imagine we are more than a blink of the eye. We aren't. Get rid of it. You may find yourself strangely made lighter.
And yup, we always think that someone must care that Great Aunt Irma's cut glass cheese dish, which still rings like a bell, is somehow still valuable to anyone (it isn't; the young don't collect, they game and play on the ipad), or that someone will pay for it (they won't; they never heard of cut glass).
So, we agree: the most practical and easiest route for family would be to call GOT JUNK (or a local equivalent, which might be less expensive) to come in and CLEAR OUT our relatively compact, single-story residence. It would probably take them about 4-6 hours. We will be conspicuously absent even if we're still on earth. With any luck, there will be earmarked funds (ours) to pay for it. Problem solved!
About the guilt: After the five plus years that it took both of my parents to die, and the undue burden that they put on me, including their health and multitudes of legal problems, two homes and an apartment full of junk, offices and attics filled with things that hadn't seen the light of day in 60 years, I had no guilt. I was angry that they'd gone about their happy lives of horrendous accumulation without a care as to who would deal with this when they were no longer around. Five years of servitude to them plus five more years of dealing with their tangle of property, business, lies, legal issues and possessions cured me of guilt. Having no life of my own because of them was hard to bear for all that time, especially when I had health and other serious issues of my own to manage.
I advise you to get angry. It works wonders.
The dumpster drops at the house tomorrow. Today we start making piles.
Thanks for recognizing, as many of you have, the deep difficulty of this. Just because people are toxic and horrible doesn't mean we haven't been conditioned to love them.
Most important. I simply put any feelings of sadness or guilt on a shelf never to be removed.
We haven't looked back. Not going that way. Your parents won't either once settled.
I tried to get someone to do an estate sale on what was left in the house. I got the feeling the companies weren't interested unless the paintings were by Monet and the furniture had sat in Buckingham Castle.
Got a great idea from someone here on the forum, to swap out things. I looked around my own house to see what I could swap out for something of my parents. Now I have most of their table lamps, and I donated mine. Got some of Dad's bookcases which he handmade. Pudding bowls now hold paperclips. And my parents unusual bookends are now holding up my books :)
For the furniture, called in Goodwill and the Salvation Army. Anything left over, used a local hauling service. Expensive glassware and jewelry went to a hospital yearly rummage sale. I still have an early 1900 encyclopedia, heavens knows what to do with that, as my 3 or 4 year old self took to drawing on the pages.
i offered all remaining items to siblings, children and grandchildren. After that I held a sale; after that I made massive donations. Yet, I still have art work piled under every bed and couch in my house; collectibles I did not choose on display throughout my house. IT’s TOUGH to get rid of their prized possessions. Choose some to hang onto, and over time get rid of the rest.
I've found NextDoor and FaceBook Marketplace great resources for giving Mom/Dad’s stuff a second life. Good luck.
The results were fantastic and it was well worth the expense! And the home sold within a week of going on the market.
I know it is awful to deal with, but it might help if you could separate yourself emotionally and not feel you have to hang onto things because your parents are trying to cling to the past. It’s all just STUFF.
When my mom moved, my brothers helped with the sale and on moving day, but I did all the sorting through with her to decide what to take and what to sell or give away. It was, in some ways, more frustrating than the much much bigger job of doing an estate clean-out. My mom is still very much "with it" but it was difficult for her to sort through her things and make the decisions. The stress of the move really messed with her. She'd get indecisive, take forever on each little item. She was much better the second time; not as much she needed to give away, and her community was able to accept her organ as a donation, which made her feel good.
It takes a lot of work and organization and even creativity to figure out how to get everything done. Get help wherever you can!
* Instead of trying to get rid of guilt, and emotionally and mentally separating from the task / feelings, invite them in and listen to what those 'parts' say to you. You might even want to write them down in a column - what 'they' say and how you respond.
The more you try to push away feelings, the more they will stick to you like molasses.
The column of what you are doing "I am doing this for my parents.
I feel for them, I feel deep compassion and this needs to be done now.
This transition is really hard and I am very sad. My heart is breaking.
Give yourself a 'note' (column) for self-compassion and how you can do that.
These transitions are never easy; they are gut wrenching.
Try to give yourself breaks.
While I hear it is only the two of you and your partner doesn't want to be involved, I would re-search organizations that 're-home' people with furnishings. Some organizations NEED what you have for others - that may have been homeless and moving into a new / apt. These organizations are around although it may depend on where you live. Do check out and see.
* You could post some on Next Door or perhaps Facebook or some area to give away.
* It might be possible to 'leave as is' for the next buyer (?) and deduct from the purchase price for them needing to go through the house. In other words, "as is" although the realtor may not agree / allow. You could leave it up to the realtor too - perhaps - they want to sell the house and might feel motivated to take this on - and pay a company to clean it out.
You mom will likely always think / want her belongings no matter of their value. It is her life / her history.
And, this is her independence being challenged / confronted. SHE IS SCARED and ANGRY (as I remember you said before they moved out). It will take the time it takes for her to regroup. You cannot 'make her' feel any certain way and certainly logic won't help at all. Focus on her feelings - losing, loss, grief, fear of the future. While giving her venting time, consider how much time you can do 'per vetting session' as you too need to listen to your feelings - and step back as you need to. Don't deplete yourself. Take breaks.
This is certainly not easy for her or you. Self compassion and compassion for her is really important. I would suggest you listen to her (reflective listening).
Do you argue or say "but I can't sell it ..." or anything.
It will only upset her more.
Do say "I really understand how you feel. . .
I know you want to keep your xxx.
I know this is really hard for you.
This is really hard for me too."
Personally, I put several items of my friend-companion in a storage unit - which I really can't afford ... after six months, I am ready to give away a really lovely piece of furniture I'd love to keep but I don't have any room and I can't afford to keep paying 'rent' for something I cannot use now or in the foreseeable future.
It is really a GRIEVING process. Letting go.
Lean on your family (?) and friends as much as you can for support.
Take breaks as you can.
Get students / volunteers in there (through churches?)
Talk to your guilt. "I feel you lurking in my head." Okay - tell me everything you want - and I'll respond afterwards." (I learned the model "FOCUSING" decades ago which in part is having a dialogue with words / thoughts ... listening, giving them a voice, then see what what say (and boy do they say A LOT - I've been doing this for decades and I am still surprised at what comes up). This might be too involved although do what you can - don't stuff in - allow space to process through. Gena / Touch Matters
For you, the key word is going to be - organization. What is perceived to be an item of high value, often is not.
Only temporarily, to get their house cleared out for sale, and giving you more time to separate from their belongings. And only store stuff you or your parents feel might be valuable. Everything else gets tossed!
You might be able to enlist someone who sells on consignment to go through and help with identifying what might be worth selling. You can sell items from the storage space. It may give your parents peace of mind to know their belongings are still available to them.
I love my nerf bat that I can whack stuff without damage, almost as satisfying as tenderizing meat with a meat mallet. :-)
You didn't cause it and you can't cure it so quilt is off the table. You are feel the other g-word which is grief. And you are facing the loss of your parent and all the "stuff" they had that they loved, and that made them who they are.
We cannot take these things to the grave with us.
I am sure you would like to be angry at being left with the mess instead of faced head on with things that remind you of all the loss.
Weep over it and then TOSS IT.
I have already, at 81, given my kids what I would like them to have, and given up a lot of the collections and things I liked that honestly they have no interest in, having their OWN stuff. Any photo albums are torn down, duplicates and similars tossed, and put in a label box with "Look through once and toss). Sorry, but we live so long that our kids are RIGHT BEHIND US. My SIL just had his 70th.
Get rid of it. Stop being invested in "stuff". You have your own and don't need theirs and they don't need theirs now either. Make a photo album of memories, a collaged scrapbook of pictures of this stuff and sell it, toss it, donate it and move on.
For a while I missed some few things. A very SHORT while. And I love the clean, spare open spaces now. I don't need a picture of Pere LaChaise to remember walking those paths. I can do it in my brain any time I wish. And it is MY memory. No one else wants or needs it.
I would answer that by asking - so another words, YOUR PARENTS didn't financially prepare for this properly and are now placing the work and pressure on YOU to resolve every part of their situation....Are THEY feeling any guilt for putting all of this on you?? I bet not! And yet, out of all that you're doing to help them, on top of that, they're giving you the gift of Guilt? That's very generous of them!
If you simplify it that way, I do hope it relieves any possible "guilt" that you may feel. And whatever residual "stuff" that they have - that's all it is - "stuff" - it's just downsizing and if you provide it to a charitable organization or a company that buys estates in its' entirety, you can feel satisfied that you're providing these items to others who are in need - so it's all for a good cause and purpose!
(...)
We cannot take these things to the grave with us."
Well spoken, AlvaDeer.
Though I am in the privileged position that both of my parents have passed I still very well identify with the "guilt-question" of not keeping/storing all of their stuff. My Dad was passionate photographer, leaving bazillions of photos (printed, framed, digitalized). After their death I tried to sort this visual legacy out, but after some months gave up.
Should my home really become a museum of my parents' lives? Furniture, paintings, letters, and all these damned photos? Hell no! The dead are dead for a reason, so that the living can live, breathe, make their own decisions and their own experiences.
I recently meditated (for the same problem) on the biblical story of Lot's wife. And I realized that I do not want to turn into a salt figure, just because I refuse to look forward. The bible tells us on multiple occasions not to be eaten up or hindered by (false) guilt towards our ancestors.
It was awful for mother. All her possessions being sold--or worse yet, NOT being sold b/c they were of no value. We simply had to be tough, b/c we HAD to sell the house. Selling off the stuff they couldn't take piece by piece...nobody had that kind of time!
After the sale days were done, the men just loaded up pickups and made several trips to Goodwill. Mom spent a few years mourning the loss if some of the weirder things (an industrial meat slicer that weighed about 50 lbs and took up a huge amount of space--That kind of thing.) And there were a couple trips to the dump. It was sad, really, but a warning to all of us to not overfill our lives with 'stuff'.
Eventually she settled down and I think forgot about a lot of the stuff.
We did NOT pack and store anything but their financial info and a few personal items, diaries, love letters between GGma and GGpa...but truth is, mom was a hoarder and kept way too much.
We had a tight timeline in which to empty and clean the house. It was a sad and depressing end to a life in their dream home. This is, sadly, very common.
We just emptied MIL's house after she passed (in a NH). I was not allowed to be involved, as I am an inlaw--but the sibs worked and worked to empty & clean the house. No emotions--just hard work. They found that they literally could NOT 'give away' her stuff.
DH showed absolutely no emotion. OB either. YS cried a lot, but then , she liked her mother. Dh and OB were just glad she was gone. They didn't take anything from her house, except a few books.
In the end, none of us can take anything WITH us when we die--maybe doing the downsizing is a blessing in disguise. IDK. It's hard, no matter what.
In our situation, YS felt incredible guilt, but the boys? They were stone faced throughout all of the last year. I guess not caring makes it easier?
As you toss things, do take a second to let yourself feel, not guilty, but a little sad b/c nobody wants to do this. Acknowledge that you're doing what has to be done. Don't ignore those feelings, but don't feed them, either.
Good Luck.