The quest to reclaim my garage continues

January is the month where all sorts of storage containers abound in stores. With Christmas over and the new year, most of us want a fresh start. I didn’t need new containers or some fancy new organizational system when I embarked on decluttering my house a few weeks ago- I needed a new mindset.

Moving around the Army forced me to declutter on a regular basis, but over 30 years in this house and way too much stuff has taken up permanent residence here.

The youngest of my four kids is in her late 30s and two of my grandkids are adults. My closets and garage are cluttered up with stuff . The garage, has always been my family’s home for everyone’s extra stuff.  In 30 years, our garage has never been the home of our car.

Two weeks ago, as I was sorting through a box of other people’s stuff that was still in the garage, I came across some plastic coffee mugs with lids, that judging from the designs on them, I believe they belonged to my two adult sons. As indecision hit and I was debating getting rid of them or should I message my sons and ask if they still want them, a moment of clarity hit me. I was wasting more time on a decision about plastic coffee mugs, which I will never use and both of my sons use much fancier metal coffee mugs now.  My sons have probably never spent a moment thinking about these left behind, plastic coffee mugs. Tossing them felt good.  Another discard was a Karate Kid thermos from a lunch box and a California Raisins lunch box with the original thermos in it. Those went in a box for Goodwill, that actually made it to Goodwill, instead of the usual, sitting around for weeks (or longer).

Before the thought crosses your mind about, oh what if that lunchbox is a collectible, during my organizational idea browsing I came across an explanation of sunk cost fallacy, where we hold on to items even when the items are no longer useful to us and in many cases cause us considerable distress, in the form of clutter that ends up being moved and shuffled about. We assess a value to these items based on the amount of money we spent buying them. Most people greatly overestimate the resale value of items and don’t consider the the time incurred reselling or setting up a yard sale takes. We also never consider the time we spend relocating unused items around our home and even moving them from home to home. Sunk cost means accepting the money was spent and is irretrievable – and the item has no real value if it’s just sitting here taking up space. An item has no value to your life if it’s just creating more clutter in your home.

In 2020, the pandemic and civil unrest prodded me to become more of a prepper than I had always been. I have always had plenty of extra food and my kids would quip about there was enough food in our house to last a year. While that’s an exaggeration, we always had a lot of food. While I still believe it’s good to have food and emergency supplies, I want to rethink the amount and strike a reasonable middle ground between Doomsday prepper level prepared and not prepared at all. Most of the online prepper stuff is fear-based and while there are real and serious potential threats of all sorts from weather events to hostile foreign threats to our critical infrastructure, having too much stuff piled up might impede in a crisis rather than help.

Once I stopped thinking about the value of all this stuff, all the imaginary uses, and worrying about being wasteful and throwing “good stuff” in the trash, it has become easier and easier to make decisions and get rid of things. I don’t want my garage looking like a junk yard anymore.

My neighbor helped me sort some items and she guided me to better decisions. Her husband told her to tell me he’d be happy to take any of my late husband’s guns off my hands. She related this as I had just picked up an old broken BB gun in the garage. These neighbors didn’t know my late husband. My husband owned one handgun and wasn’t into guns. He considered them his work gear and he wasn’t a hunter. He liked doing home repair and fix-it projects and had a lot of saws and tools. One of my sons took the handgun and most of the tools before my husband even passed away, because my husband told him he should take them. However, I do have a lot of old paint cans that I need to dispose of and fortunately, my county has a quarterly drop off for those kind of items coming up in a couple weeks.

Bringing up guns, is a little off the topic of this post, but I told my neighbor who was helping me declutter about a young man in our neighborhood, who has had a lot of problems with the law, coming to my door one day last year. He told me someone tried to break into their house in broad daylight and he asked me if I can protect myself. It was a bizarre question. I asked him what he did when this person supposedly tried to break in and he said he pulled out his gun. I admit, I lied and told him I have a gun and can defend myself and am fine. He persisted and questioned me if I know how to use it and he said you have to train and wanted to know if I go to the range to practice. I told him I was in the Army and do know how to use it. I haven’t handled a firearm since I got out of the Army in 1981, except when I worked at Walmart and handled some sales of firearms. I was in a management position and we were required to hand carry the purchased firearm to the door and then hand it to the customer. I have never liked handling firearms.

With that neighbor, he has had numerous run ins with the law, so while I wasn’t scared of him, since I’ve known him since he was a kid, I was just perplexed at his persistent questions. I do possess an arsenal of water pistols that I use regularly on two very bad cats, who climb on everything and won’t listen.

Getting back on topic, that broken BB gun went in the trash too and open space being reclaimed, inch by inch, feels liberating. So far, I haven’t regretted or missed a single thing. Before claiming victory over my packrat habits, I haven’t gotten to decluttering my craft and sewing room, where I really do find uses for many items that have been here decades and I am not getting rid of my books. Since I was a kid I dreamed of having my own home library. I’ve worked hard to acquire that. I don’t have space for a massive home library, but mine can still grow a little bit and I would feel like a part of me was ripped away without my books.

This is the earliest book I received for Christmas in 1964 when I was 4 years old. My mother wrote my name and the date inside the cover. Several years ago, I stitched the signature back together and retaped the cover back on. A signature is a group of pages stitched together in books. If you look at a book where the pages meet the spine, you will see groups of pages sewn together, which are then attached to the cover – those groupings of pages are called signatures. I wish I had done a better job on the taping, but it replaced the white bandage tape I had used as a kid to tape it back together.

My books are staying.

5 Comments

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5 responses to “The quest to reclaim my garage continues

  1. Sam Topeka's avatar Sam Topeka

    Good stuff. Yeah, why save too much junk anyway? We’re not long for this life anyway. No one has use for old paint and plastic thermoses,

  2. As an adult child let me thank you for your sons for not asking them if they want more stuff. My house is already cluttered and whenever my mom does this to me with some item I haven’t thought about in 20 years I always get a pang of guilt about whether I should take it or not, oftentimes they end up at my house wasting space til I inevitably throw them away myself.

  3. JK's avatar JK

    Heh heh LB.

    Happy to note I (somehow!) managed to get a step ahead of you – but actually ‘thinkin’ onit’ not really even the just itty bit.

    August of 2021 somehow it dawned on me I’d been monthly paying fees for four (4!) storage units at $40 bucks a pop. Each.

    One I hadn’t opened the door to in the years subsequent to maybe 5 years after I’d initially rented it when I moved back to the home vicinity. (Home vicinity at that time, 3 hrs away) Circa 2000. Figure 2005 > 2021 X 35/40 = ??? !!!

    The latter three : 2009, 2011, most recently 2020 (which I’m keeping … “highly valuable stuff doncha know”).

    Coulda been worse though : Luckily a pal mentioned him having a pal who “paid people for the contents of, for instance, deceased relatives’ storage units (as well, people in *curious situations storage unitswise) So … I did manage to somewhat “adjust” my sunk costs.

    However in my case[s] … An FFL guy had to be “consulted” over the seven months it took for the buyer of my “treasures” to remove the junk off site.

    I figure I was about 8 G in the hole. Ouch

    • JK, You are certainly not alone, judging by how many storage unit places exist. I actually bought some stuff at an auction years ago that came from an unclaimed storage unit. A lot of the containers from it were sold, as is. I don’t remember what I bought, but it was assuredly junk I didn’t need.

      I am so glad to get some of this junk in my garage gone and I still have a ways to go. My late husband has been gone almost 4 years and I know he certainly doesn’t need any of this stuff and a lot of the gadget stuff, I don’t even know what it’s for. Our son, who is into tools, too many hobbies and various inventing stuff took the things he wanted long ago and he has his own house full of too much stuff too

      To give you a taste for this son – he works on building electric circuitry, he does computer software engineering, he loves gun stuff, he bought a 3-D printer several years ago, he bought a sewing machine a number years ago, he dabbles in gardening – in other words, he’s much like me with acquiring too many hobbies. He’s also like me with setting up little “work stations” around the house for his various hobbies.

      My late husband liked woodworking and home repair stuff – and taking care of the yard, so his stuff was largely contained to the garage and shed in the backyard. Mine has always been all over the house – plus the gardening stuff. What prodded my disgust was I have large plastic totes of fabric in the garage (at least 12) and a granddaughter got a sewing machine for Christmas and I had stuff in front of these totes and other people’s stuff on top. She needs fabric.

      Then there’s the fact I have a 4 bedroom house and I have had the smallest bedroom as my sewing/craft room for many years, but I want to take part of another bedroom and create a sewing area in that room to play around with quilting again (which I am not good at). That would leave my bedroom and a bedroom as a guest room. It shouldn’t have required this much work to – locate fabric and set up a table for sewing, but the garage was a wreck and the bedroom where I want to put a table turned into a “prepper pantry” storage/ seed-starting area/ general collection of miscellaneous clutter after my husband died. It was the bedroom we used to set him up for home hospice care. He would have been horrified to see me turning a bedroom into basically a storage room – so, I’m downsizing the “prepper” storage some, giving some stuff away and most of all trying to get better organized. I watch these “minimalist” videos and know I will never be like that, because I am always thinking up new projects and hobbies -that’s reality- but I can do better than this disorganized mess.

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