| Lynn S | Posted: 12 April 2013 - 09:12 PM |
I don't know how to start a topic since it is my first time but I'm willing to talk about my mother. My mother suffers from PTSD and OCD. Hoarding/cluttering for her is hereditery. Both her mother and grandmother have hoarded. | |
Replies (67)
| Pain | Posted: 28 January 2017 - 07:51 PM |
Hi I go by the name pain here . Currently I'm not in any pain . Not for the last 3 years. I got a job in warehouse only because I feel I will do more exercise if work in the warehouse than to be a courier as I've always have. Making use of the lack of pain to work. The the difference between accumulation of mess and hoarding. . God I think that's probably the tip of the ice Berg. Thing is The thing is I keep this stuff out of the common areas. I won't keep this stuff in a kitchen,bathroom,living room,dinning room, or hallwAy. I keep it in a basement , attic, or garage. Currently in a storage unit. No trash. Just packed so tightly that I turn it into a giant mess. About once a decade I go through every little piece with scrutiny. And barely purge. Then I pack it all up again. After watching many episodes of hoarding burried alive . If been purging more of the ridiculousness. But I have more to say . But usually say too much. I lacked purging and sorting skills. I get no help. Then my mother tries to purge her clutter by sending it to me. Or others in my home. I don't wHy this to keep reoccurring. Trying to help relate. This so others can maybe see it from point of view for whatever reason. When I pick my next roommate. | |
| Loose | Posted: 02 December 2016 - 08:37 AM |
Kara, | |
| Cleaning | Posted: 04 November 2016 - 12:54 AM |
I am so sick of being a hoarder, collector whatever you want to call this meager excuse for life. I hate my stuff , I love my stuff I trip on my stuff I find mice crap under my stuff I freak out, I get angry and I take it out on my young daughter. I feel sad I feel like a failure. I am changing this , it's so easy to say but I really am going to do it. I am just bagging everything I can live without up and either putting it in the trash or taking it to goodwill. I'm trying really hard to gain control of my life so I can enjoy the time of my daughter's youth and really concentrate on her and being creative and having the freedom to walk into my house and be comfortable. Right right now the opposite is what I have but I promise I am going to follow my goal and let's all do it. Tomorrow start even if it's just a grocery bag full just fill it up and toss it. | |
| Nan weaves | Posted: 14 April 2016 - 11:19 PM |
I never thought I had a problem until I watched a TV show today. I would say I have a milder or functional hoarder. That is, most of my house is habitable. But the garage is not and one of the upstairs bedrooms I call "the pit of despair" because everything is shoved in there. And I identify with many of the comments posted; I hate to toss anything I spent money on (in case I need it some day) and also possessions give me memories. I think of myself as a pack rat. My mother was a pack rat too but my father was a neat freak. They both grew up during the depression so they saved EVERYTHING. I can remember my mother telling us to clean out clothes that didn't fit, or that we wouldn't wear, only to cry over them later about "why are we getting rid of this. . ." So we would put it back in our bedrooms. Obviously, this did not help down the road. I don't have problems with perfectionism or making decisions. My husband is pretty understanding - but sometimes gets upset and tells me to just "pitch my junk" and threatens to get a dumpster. This makes me feel panicked. I literally freeze. Or, if I do tackle a space, says something along the lines of "is that all you got done? I want it ALL gone". I finally told him this is the exact thing I need him to say to me: "I know this is hard for you. You've done a good job so far. Keep going". I recently got quite a bit cleaned out of the garage. The hubby said it went from "Mount Everest" to "Mount Kilimanjaro" ie. it's less stuff but still a mountain. Now I've had a tough time getting back to it. | |
| ShedTheShame | Posted: 13 April 2016 - 11:23 PM |
Hi, Darcy and welcome. I'm at least a 2nd generation compulsive hoarder. My grandparents passed away when I was young, but for sure the hoarding tendencies run in my father's side of the family. Can totally relate to feeling overwhelmed and not knowing where to even begin. Don't know if this will help you or not... what helped me get started was not immediately sorting and purging, but making a habit of clearing and cleaning my kitchen sink every night before I went to bed. This allowed me to build some confidence by seeing some improvement in my home, and it didn't require difficult decisions every day. I made a little video about it. Perhaps starting with something small like this will help you build some confidence and motivation. This disorder is not an easy one to tackle, but please don't give up ☺ | |
| Darcy | Posted: 12 April 2016 - 02:37 PM |
I am a hoarder. Wow! I just said it. I think I might be a 3rd generation hoarder too. I do have a bad habit of buying the great deals I see. Then I can't find them. It probably has been 15 years since I've let someone inside the home because it is so bad. I don't know where to start. I do live with my mom and neither of us are happy, but we seem to counteract each other. One of us will get on a kick to do something and the other one isn't which frustrates the other person. Lately when I want to try to do something I am so overwhelmed and don't even know where to begin. In some ways seeing that something is ruined is easy because I can throw it away. I don't have to figure out if I should keep it, sell it, or give it away. I can't live like this anymore. It is so bad. I don't even know where to start. | |
| Red | Posted: 25 January 2016 - 01:12 PM |
I am a "functional" hoarder, like others have described. That is, my front room and dining room aren't too cluttered, but my family room, bedroom, bathroom, dressing area, as well as my garage are. I have always had a problem with clutter. One time when I was a child, you couldn't even see my floor in my bedroom because of all the stuff. My mother told me I had to clean it all up, which I did. After that point, I always had a neat bedroom. My mother was a hoarder, of sorts, though the house was kept neat and clean. She collected all the old magazines, margarine containers, etc. She never threw any of our toys out, nor her or her mother's old clothes. Our house was large, so there were a lot of places to store her stuff. As I grew up, and on my own, I tended to keep things fairly neat, though not always. For instance, at work, my desk was usually messy. My managers would finally tell me to clean them up. At home, I usually had a "junk" room which was messy. However, the boyfriend I had before my husband made sure that the house was clean, and held a garage sale for all my stuff. He cleaned out my garage, and I maintained a fairly neat house while he was there. Things changed when I married my husband 15 years ago. He hasn't worked, staying at home, and not doing any cleaning. He always kept his stuff around, and accumulated a lot of stuff. For me, I bought a lot of stuff, including a lot of gadgets. I know it was compensation for having to do everything in the house, giving myself "presents", and also it being too easy to just order things from the internet. Consequently, my house and garage is full of stuff I have even forgot buying. I find that it's gotten so bad, but I don't have the energy to do a thorough job in cleaning. When I clear an area, I ask my husband not to fill it back up, but it's too much of a temptation for him. I know I'll need some help in doing the cleaning, now. Unless I need a repairman to come over, I won't let anyone in my house. | |
| AbiYah | Posted: 31 October 2015 - 01:11 PM |
Oh, RavesAK, I wonder if you know how encouraging you are. Just reading your post and seeing how you are so determined to do this, in spite of the circumstances, encourages me, too, that I can complete and mantain this. Thank you! | |
| RavesAK | Posted: 27 January 2015 - 08:51 PM |
Watching hoarding shows, the drama aside, has really helped me understand the root of my own problem and to take firm steps to begin the cleanup process. I know I come from a family of hoarders. My great-grandmother never allowed anyone into her home; when she passed, my oldest brother did the cleanup and discovered she was a hoarder. My grandmother had an attic and two garages STUFFED with things; while the rest of her house had cluttered collectibles and stacked-up things, she kept her hoarding manageable. My mother keeps her home clean, but she has a room no one can enter because it is too full with magazines and miscellaneous things. When I was a child, I received many toys and was never expected to clean my room. The floor was littered with toys and game pieces, until one day when I was 7 and at school, my older brother took every single thing off the floor, stuffed them into seven thrash bags, and threw it away; I was DEVASTATED, and I know this was an early mark for me. I was lazy as a young adult because I didn't like to clean, but I still kept my home presentable. Until my "first love" cheated on me with my best friend, of all trite stereotypes. I spiraled into undiagnosed depression and threw myself into garage sales, online shopping, anything in the name of "I'm a collector." I stopped allowing visitors into my house. My hot water heater went out because I couldn't allow a repairman in. I was so embarrassed. But I didn't know how to stop. Now...after watching these shows and gaining some insight into my own problem, and pulling myself out of my depression, I have begun the cleanup process. It's almost overwhelming, and I'm still too ashamed to let anyone help me or even know about it. So I'm trying to do it alone. I live in an isolated community without cleanup resources for this kind of problem. It's so hard, but I have to do it. I won't live this way anymore. | |
| Visitor | Posted: 06 January 2015 - 04:22 PM |
http://www.empathtest.com/ I think it's because I'm an empath. I just found this out recently. Please take the test (link above) and see if it applies to you. I think empaths and highly sensitive people may make up the majority of hoarders. We also have a high incidence of depression, agoraphobia, fibromyalgia, and other mental disorders. There's nothing wrong with us - we're just sensitive to everything and most of us don't know how to handle it and blame ourselves for it. Please take the test and good luck! | |
| Like Smaug On Treasures | Posted: 19 December 2014 - 02:44 PM |
Hi, I'm new to the board. I'm a hoarder. I'm rather successful at it despite having no job, no credit, and no home of my own. That's all about ready to change so I really have to get this under control before it gets much worse. I think I hoard for many reasons. First of all, I'm cross addicted to shopping. I haven't used meth for over 4 years, but my abstinence doesn't equal recovery. My shopping addiction even worse now that I've discovered extreme couponing. I'm currently in a month fast from shopping. My problems started in childhood. I've always been socially isolated so I thought that if I could just have cool back to school supplies people would like me. I never talked to anyone so I didn't know what the status symbol items were. As a teen I was diagnosed with OCD and Bipolar. I was also the Scapegoat in the family of my alcoholic father. I had great loss and trauma in my life including loosing custody of my son when I was 21. My therapist feels that my hoarding might be about control. Now at 39 I find myself living with my parents in a relationship that just gets worse in dysfunction and codependency. I feel like I have no control in my life, but I can build a mote of books around the couch where I sleep because my bed is covered with stuff. I'm currently working with Voc Rehab to find a job and I might be able to get into disability housing even though I've been denied disability. In other words, if I don't nip this hoarding in the bud now I'll be in a position for it to get infinitely worse. Living on my own and with income. It might not be a good idea to apply at Goodwill though even though they're hiring. I've applied twice before and I they always mention how I over-dress. I guess they don't hire divas. Anyway, I just thought I'd intro myself and add to the discussion. | |
| nwoodrum | Posted: 14 December 2014 - 03:04 PM |
I think there are a few reasons why I hoard. Some of it I think is genetic, my grandma was a 'hoarder', plastic bags, napkins, all kinds of 'treasures', she wouldn't throw anything away without taking useful things off of it, like buttons, zippers, etc. When we would go out to eat somewhere, she would stuff her pockets full with sugar packets and jelly, creamers, ketchup packs, etc. My mom is a hoarder as well. My sister and I used to share a room and then later in my early teens we built on to our house and I had my seperate room with a walk in closet. It didn't take long for our closet to become overridden with stuff, mostly Christmas decorations. But she still does it. Every closet is so packed and there's years of stuff in them. I don't even think she knows what she has. Similar to my hoarding, my house is functional, cluttered in areas, but functional. I think another reason I hoard is traumatic experiences. When my parents divorced, I think that started it off and it manifested from that. Then some years of bad relationships and the death of my father contributed to it. In ways my stuff makes me feel...safe. Like people in my life leave me and etc but my stuff won't unless I make it? To my husband he sees it as a wall I've built around myself. I go through phases where I'll try to go through it and skim it down but I always keep more than I purge and the thought of purging items I like or might need makes me crazy. I don't just hoard for myself though, I hoard for my family as well. I would like a nice and organized area, but I want my stuff too. Trying to get myself past the two not being able to coexist though is hard. | |
| Dianne | Posted: 23 November 2014 - 09:45 AM |
Hi Marlena, I think Hoarding Housewife was referring to an online friend she had met thru another website, probably not a hoarding one if they *admitted* to each other they were hoarders. On this website we know (or are beginning to suspect) we are hoarders and help each other thru the boards and chat. You can check out the chats by clicking the red box next to posts that says Online Support Group. We have wished we were nearby to help each other in real life but it seems most people are scattered far apart. Read some past posts here to get some ideas for working thru your boxes. And of course jump with posts anytime. 🙂 | |
| Marlena | Posted: 21 November 2014 - 07:18 PM |
How do we get in touch with each other??? I have so many boxes to go thru it is overwhelming and seem to have trouble diving into the boxes to decide whether to keep or donate. | |
| Dianne | Posted: 18 November 2014 - 06:30 AM |
Hi Hoarding Housewife, Your online friend seems like a good person to share with about all the frustrations of being/living with a hoarder. And, of course, the people who post here are very familiar with your struggles. It is a terrible feeling when we finally admit, even to ourselves, how horribly our lives have spun out of control. We post in the Daily Chat section about everything we're going thru and how we're digging out a little bit at a time. Some of us can afford help, some not. Regardless, we all deal with the emotional side of it. As overwhelming as it seems you are not powerless. When I take breaks from work it's encouraging to go over past posts on this site. There's lots of good advice and sharing that is encouraging. You can get out of it Hoarding Housewife. It's not easy or fast and it involves lifestyle changes and inner head work but you can do it. That hope holds us up when not much else can. I hope you'll take baby steps with us. take care ~~ Dianne | |
| HoardingHousewife | Posted: 18 November 2014 - 02:34 AM |
An online friend, who I have never met, recently admitted to me she has a hoarding/clutter problem. After talking to her and letting her bare her soul to me, I admitted that my husband and I are in the same situation. I used to chalk it up to my husband being lazy, sloppy, and/or depressed, and while I have bipolar and anxiety disorders, I have always been a neat & organized freak. When I had a breakdown and was diagnosed with the mental disorders, then was left alone to my own devices while husband worked, and never got any help cleaning or taking care of the house, the hoarding and clutter began in earnest. I wondered for a long time if it was just laziness on my part, or if I was making all this up in my head, but I'm not lazy by nature. I'm sick. I can admit that now. I can't stand living like this anymore. I'm tired of the clutter, the filth, not being willing to invite people (even family) to my home out of sheer embarrassment. I've also been screamed at for the state of the home the last time my parents were here and I had to throw them out of the house and tell them they weren't welcome anymore. There's no one I can turn to about this - not for help, to vent, nothing, because everyone judges me. We are financially struggling and I can't even pay someone to come in and fix, clean, or help declutter. The very thought of getting rid of things, or allowing someone into my home, sends me into full blown panic attacks. I'm absolutely miserable and feel powerless to dig may way out. | |
| bitsy | Posted: 29 October 2014 - 02:50 PM |
The Psychology Behind Messy Rooms: http://elitedaily.com/money/entrepreneurship/psychology-behind-messy-rooms-messy-room-may-necessarily-bad-thing/708046/ my daughter sent me the link to this article... the article is interesting but some of the comments are full of truth too... | |
| Dianne | Posted: 23 September 2014 - 12:12 PM |
Hi James, First, do what Bitsy said. You can talk and get feedback and best of all it's free! Honestly some of the advice you'll get would be the same as from a professional. (Although if you can find a therapist who will take your insurance definitely do that too.) Tillie's advice about *Buried in Treasures* and CBT is excellent. You can work at your own pace and get support here. About being scared crapless ~ we get it. All of us have or are living in fear to some degree. We've had or still do have strained relationships with family members. We've kept people out of our homes for years. It will be time consuming but if you can, go back over the old posts here. You'll find a lot of stories and heartfelt emotions that you will connect with. Please join us in the Daily Chat threads. Just talking will help take the edge off your fears. | |
| bitsy | Posted: 22 September 2014 - 12:43 PM |
James, Pretty much every day several people post on the Daily Chat Board. So, go on over there; read a few posts; and then join in. | |
| James | Posted: 22 September 2014 - 10:30 AM |
is there anyone out there that just wants to talk? | |
| Tillie | Posted: 19 September 2014 - 10:55 PM |
Hi James 🙂 Sorry the clinician isn't covered by your insurance. Good luck and best wishes. | |
| James | Posted: 19 September 2014 - 01:37 PM |
first I am scared crapless.I am about to loose my fiancee due to my hoarding. My Hoarding is around books magazines and sporting goods and survival goods. I look at all the stuff I don't use and know I could sell it on eBay and make a nice amount of money. So Why am I terrified to get rid of my stuff? I am terrified to loose my fiancee. I am fortunate that I do not have the food containers and the rotting food. But my house is barely livable. So many things I have in case i need them. Redundant copies of books and magazines even equipment I have duplicates. I know I should sell them but the fear is what if I need them. No one has been in my house in years. Even my fiancee. I have PTSD. I am afraid of losing her. I don't want to wake up. I am trying to stop accumulating things. Trying to sell things. I do not understand why I collect them. My loses have been pets and family.Every time a pet dies it seems to get worse. The more scared I get the worse it gets. It is not about immediate gratification. At times I am preparing for adventures I will never have. Lots of great equipment but I know I wont use it. Or at least I won't get to. I am trying to get in with a clinician that specifically works with hoarders. Can someone out there talk to me? Help me understand this mess. I do not want to loose her but I feel out of control. I am divorced and my ex was abusive. Now I just found ot the clinician does not take my insurance. | |
| Felicia AB | Posted: 30 July 2014 - 03:48 PM |
I hoard because my things will not leave me. I have suffered a lot of loss and hardships. Somehow, my things make me feel wanted. | |
| LR2014 | Posted: 18 May 2014 - 11:26 PM |
Hi, Rae. Welcome. If you are free to do so, join us on Sunday nights and on Tuesday nights for the online chats. (See the "online support group" button at the right for times.) Many of us help one another through the online chats and also by posting here on the message boards. If you look at the part that says "The Daily Chat," you will find a number of people who talk daily about their plans, their struggles, their suggestions, their successes. Many of us have bought a book called "Buried in Treasures." It helps explain a lot about our problem, gives us exercises to work, helps us learn about ourselves, and actually helps us make progress. It's not the only book that's out there, of course, but it's one many of us recommend. Please keep posting! There are a lot of people on this message board who have been "at this" longer than I have and can give you lots of good suggestions. You are not alone. And there is hope . . . there really is! | |
| Rae | Posted: 18 May 2014 - 10:10 PM |
I am a hoarder. That is very difficult to admit. I divorced my 1st husband and lost everything except the children. Out of sheer loneliness I started hoarding, my mother is also a hoarder so I've always had the tendencies but managed to tamp down the urges until my life started spiraling out of control. My children grew up and left, I remarried out of fear of being alone, it is not a happy union. I have gained a lot of weight and am now depressed. I don't like the way medication makes me not feel in control of myself. Yesterday, I decided to clean.....after 2 hours I became sad and hurt and laid on my bed, woke up 7 hours later. I am absolutely at my wits end. I don't have money so hiring a bunch of professionals is out of the question. I would be appreciative of any self help advice. | |
| LR2014 | Posted: 24 April 2014 - 07:21 AM |
I don't know if the way I'm writing this makes sense, but here goes . . . I have noticed that one type of thought that goes through my head when debating about discarding certain things is this: "So-and-so will be so impressed that I saved this thing that he/she gave me so many years ago (gave me, wrote me, this article that got published about him/her, etc.). The person will feel that I really value our friendship because I kept this item so long and still cherish it. The person will feel that he/she is important to me (and therefore the person will be reassured that he/she is important, period)." In part, I find myself believing I can "fix" other people's feelings in a positive way by "proving" that person's worth to me simply because I kept xyz. There is a lot of fallacy in that way of thinking. For one thing, by now, I have saved so many things and for so long (and now have so many things to juggle) that I really don't feel the freedom to get out and spend time with that person, whomever he/she is. The person is not likely to think I value the friendship, because I stay hidden away so much and out of his/her life . . . out of many people's lives. "Oh, but I saved the cute calendar you gave me in 1988" isn't likely to do anything positive for the person or the relationship if the "friend" has heard very little (if anything) from me in ages! I would do better to chunk the old calendar (that and many other things) to free me up to spend time on the actual friendships! | |
| Dave | Posted: 29 January 2014 - 03:31 PM |
Darci, Perhaps as you start making changes again and making empty spaces, something will show up or happen that you can't even begin to imagine now. Please continue posting on the site as a way for support, the people here understand the difficulties you are facing. In one of the threads Tillie was talking about meditation. Since you are unable to use medication for your depression, perhaps you would be able to look into meditation as a way to help with your mind. | |
| Darci | Posted: 29 January 2014 - 01:17 PM |
I used to think that it was a waste of time to figure out the "why" for what we do. However, once I started to understand why I hoard I learned to be more forgiving of myself for how I got "here" and also, more important, I learned the triggers of backsliding. Without boring everyone with details, for me, the initial trigger was trauma and loss... family loss, loss of home, friends, what I always knew. Each loss thereafter seemed to deepen the void. Once I experienced my third miscarriage I went from 0 to 90. From not hoarding at all to full scale "collecting" supplies for a business and then things spiraled from there. Most recently, I had theft from within my home (housesitter) and then two days later, identity theft (and I have to wait six weeks to MAYBE get money back after investigation). Chronic illness, pain and social isolation only make it worse. My life cyclicly presents the "perfect storm" for hoarding and losing the will and strength to purge. Life will always present loss and sadness... on top of a chronic illness and chronic pain it is hard to get and keep momentum. The most difficult emotion that comes up when I try to purge is that I *sniff* just can't accept that I will never have enough family and friends living close enough to ever have another Thanksgiving meal or holiday meal at home. My only friend who lives three hours away is always too busy with her two children at holidays to have time for me. I can accept that but have a hard time accepting that she doesn't ever invite me to join them (I have been friends with her for 42 years). One time I asked if it was ok if I dropped by and that I would get a hotel so as not to impose and she seemed obligated to say ok. It was a harsh realization that I really don't have any friends or family to share holidays with. So, all the table linens and decorations don't make any sense. I need to just suck it up and let the dishes, serving ware etc. etc. go | |
| Barb | Posted: 14 January 2014 - 08:40 PM |
For those of you nerds like me who are trying to understand hoarding from a psychological perspective, here are the changes written in the DSM-5 manual. (the manual mental health professionals consult when diagnosing and treating recognized disorders) | |
| Dave | Posted: 29 December 2013 - 04:14 PM |
Wow! I'm having trouble thinking this through. I just looked at a time zone converter-it says Sydney is 19 hours ahead of L.A. So it gives 5 PM Sun in L.A. as 12 PM Mon. in Sydney. (and I think that is with a Sydney summer time difference, I suppose that could change an hour at different times of the year.) | |