Gransnet forums

House and home

I want to declutter, partner does not want to?

(87 Posts)
Newme2026 Wed 03-Jun-26 19:44:11

We have lived in this house for several years. Both of us have accumulated so much random stuff. Recently I have wanted to declutter like crazy and I feel super overwhelmed with all the stuff
We have successfully donated quite a bit, but that has not even put a dent in the total amount of stuff.
I have started declutterimg my stuff and trying to do the same with my partners stuff. Partner is not a hoarder, but has a hard time getting rid of stuff. They even dont allow me to get rid of some of my stuff like old laptops that are at least 10 years old.
Anyways am I terrible for starting to just slowly throw stuff out? This is not valuable or sentimental things (think led candles) and the stuff does not bring joy to our family. I feel bad, but some stuff I put on a random box and my partner has not asked about the things at all...

Janal1 Thu 04-Jun-26 15:58:03

I would say i'm a hoarder,i've got clothes that are years old that still fit me,some i still wear,i've got two wardrobes full.Cards are another thing,i've got boxes of them,the ones i keep from my Daughter and Son for bithdays,Mothers day,anniversarys all have such lovely words inside,also nice ones from Sisters,Niece and Nephew and Christmas cards,hubby has a moan now and then.

Milest0ne Thu 04-Jun-26 15:58:39

One effort at de cluttering has resulted in a large bag of paired socks which for him have rather tight elastic tops. I have made fabric tubes to use as draught excluders which I can stuff with the surplus socks. But--- Nobody I know wants or needs draught excluders. confused. does anybody know if the charity shops take pairs of socks?

jakuss Thu 04-Jun-26 16:19:13

Get a big skip

TwiceAsNice Thu 04-Jun-26 16:27:50

I have moved 3 times in the last 10 years. Did a big declutter each time. The only thing I kept without sorting was a large box of photographs spanning around 50 years. I started looking at them this week with daughters and granddaughters and they are going to help me cull them and just keep some sentimental or historical significance. 17 year old granddaughter was fascinated to see my engagement photo which was taken when I was the same age as her

AllyTrevally Thu 04-Jun-26 16:58:38

As the daughter of an elderly man who refused to throw anything away or let me tidy up or move anything, as he “knew where everything was”, I spent several thousand pounds and much heartache after he died, getting rid of 75+ years of stuff in the house, garage and shed: not just his, but things he inherited and other stuff he kept in case it “came in handy”.

Furniture is worthless without fire retardant labels, charities are overwhelmed with clothing, books and old china. Most upsetting was that no-one wanted his large and cherished collection of opera and jazz LPs. I’ve also still got to go through suitcases full of old photos.

Moral of the story, get rid of all the clutter and stuff before you are too overwhelmed or elderly and spare your children the task later.

ExaltedWombat Thu 04-Jun-26 17:05:21

You DO completely understand that you’re not allowed to just chuck his stuff away against his wishes, don’t you?

petra Thu 04-Jun-26 17:06:33

Milest0ne

One effort at de cluttering has resulted in a large bag of paired socks which for him have rather tight elastic tops. I have made fabric tubes to use as draught excluders which I can stuff with the surplus socks. But--- Nobody I know wants or needs draught excluders. confused. does anybody know if the charity shops take pairs of socks?

We take new ones. The others go in the rag bag.

yogitree Thu 04-Jun-26 17:16:08

If anyone ‘quietly removed’ my stuff without checking with me I would be very upset.

MissAdventure Thu 04-Jun-26 17:29:03

So would I!
I'm that much of a hypercrite. blush

MT62 Thu 04-Jun-26 17:57:00

SpinDriftCoastal

I once knew a lady whose husband had a penchant for smart suits. They lived in a long walk in wardrobe and some of them were 20 years old and more. Despite this he would continue to buy new suits. On the arrival of the next resident, the lady would remove one he had bought years ago and donate it to charity so the suits were actually contained in the wardrobe and he never even noticed one was missing.

One in, one out is my motto

valdali Thu 04-Jun-26 18:44:52

I'm in that situation too.DH won't throw things away.

I think he probably is a hoarder, actually. He leaves empty packets for me to put in the bin, really has a problem with throwing rubbish away even.

I get rid of things that are "mine". I leave his things alone. He has a lot of boat related stuff and 2 old lawnmowers that don't work, and 2 bikes from 25+ years ago, decrepit -looking and I'm not allowed to do anything about them. But things in the attic, candles, household things I do throw out or sell on - it's my home too.

Sadie5803 Thu 04-Jun-26 20:31:12

I have been having a sort out for the past 12 months, i wait for hubby to go out, put stuff in double black bags, when he's in the shower, I put them in the car boot, then off to charity shop, HE'S NOT MISSED ONE THING.....but I dont touch the garage or shed....THATS HUBBIES SPACE

Musicgirl Thu 04-Jun-26 20:45:57

Newme2026, you said that your partner is not a hoarder but then you said that he finds it very difficult to part with anything, even things like obsolete computers. This would suggest that he has hoarding tendencies, even if he is not a full-blown hoarder. We tend to think of hoarders as the people we see on television programmes with houses packed full of things to the point where it is very difficult to live in the house. I know three people and their families caught in their wake, who live like this. However, there is another group of people who find it very difficult to dispose of items and who are also untidy and disorganised but whose homes do not betray the fact because their wife, husband or partner go behind them and literally pick up the pieces and also make less of their own things so that there is enough space for the person who is unwilling to let things go to store their things. This is the case in my house. Visitors see a very tidy, welcoming home (I am told) because l have to be on top of things at all times. Mr.Music overbuys and does not like to get rid of anything. He has all sorts of projects and ideas for reusing things that rarely come to fruition. If I let my guard down, I find all sorts of things that need to be recycled, such as empty soap dispensers. One Christmas morning, seven of them fell out of a cupboard. I hide them under more innocent items in the recycling bin so that they are not brought back in. He is also still very smug about the great toilet roll debacle of the early Covid days as we probably had enough to stock a medium sized supermarket shelf. His parents were very similar and the upstairs of their house was chaotic. The living room and dining room were tidy. Mr. Music also dosses things down and forgets about them, which means that l have to go behind him, putting the items where they belong. As he is also very disorganised, I truly think he has undiagnosed ADHD. If I ask him to tidy and try and get rid of a few things, it is a slow, painful process by which he will sort things into one pile then transfer them to another without getting rid of anything. This happens on repeat and is called churning. Does your partner do this? I realise that I have written an essay here and only given sticking plaster interventions that have helped me, rather than a cure. Sadly, unless the person themselves wants to change, and this can be a long, painful process, there cannot be a cure. However, I hope some of this may help you and your partner. In the end, it can only be a compromise.

NotSpaghetti Thu 04-Jun-26 20:56:14

Cossy
😯 He has two small drawers
... really?
two small drawers!

NotSpaghetti Thu 04-Jun-26 20:58:45

Nannan2 why are you involved in your adult son's underwear choices?

Just wondering 🤔

valdali Thu 04-Jun-26 21:00:19

I realise I'm "enabling" DH as I tidy, recycle, throw away, and as you say am extra-strict with myself about not accumulating "stuff", so the house looks & functions fine.
So why would he want to change? There's no risk of throwing something away & then needing it for the first time in years, if you keep everything (although by the time he needs it, he's probably forgotten he had it in the first place & it's easier to buy new).
If I wasn't here though, I think it would soon dawn on him that there are downsides to keeping absolutely everything. But whether he could change his ways then, I don't know.

jocork Fri 05-Jun-26 03:30:52

petra

Milest0ne

One effort at de cluttering has resulted in a large bag of paired socks which for him have rather tight elastic tops. I have made fabric tubes to use as draught excluders which I can stuff with the surplus socks. But--- Nobody I know wants or needs draught excluders. confused. does anybody know if the charity shops take pairs of socks?

We take new ones. The others go in the rag bag.

I used to volunteer with the Salvation Army handing out clothing to the homeless. They took second hand underwear and socks as they provided shower facilities too so the users left their undies with the towels for washing and were given a new set. You coud certainly enquire at your local Salvation Army or a homeless charity. I even knew a lady who collected odd socks to send to Sierra Leone to a charity helping elderly people stay warm in winter. I used to sort the socks that the Salvation army had and give the odd ones to her via freegle!

WithNobsOnIt Fri 05-Jun-26 06:03:39

NotSpaghetti

I wouldn't do it.
I'd collect the things I thought were unimportant (including my own) and say "are you bothered about any of these or can I give them to Oxfam?"

I think seeing them in one reasonably small collection at a time is unlikely to ruffle feathers.

I would hate it if someone did it to me.

I would just concentrate my own stuff you wanted to get rid of..Then black bag any shared stuff and put it in a spare room or shed

At least it out the way for the time being.

LesterGran Fri 05-Jun-26 07:26:17

I'd be torn on this one because on the one hand it's not exactly your call to make when it's his belongings, but on the other he doesn't notice these things and would probably only remember them if you were to bring them up... I'd say don't feel terrible if these are minor things that clearly haven't been used for a while and likely won't be as they aren't even remembered.

There are also different approaches to decluttering, i.e. you can digitize some documents or photos (you may even repair old photos in programs like Photoglory) and get rid of the originals if they take up too much space. It depends on people though, some prefer storing the old papers even though they never look at them, but asking for your partner's opinion on that wouldn't hurt anyway.

Suzieque66 Fri 05-Jun-26 07:52:06

The paint that my husband used about 15 years ago .. he would keep and then buy new paint ? Where is the logic ?

Hil1910 Fri 05-Jun-26 08:17:25

We’ve lost 11st 7lbs between us since 2017 and only this week have decluttered clothing that’s way too big. Why I’ve held onto it I’ll never know but I definitely don’t feel the need to keep it just in case we grow back into it. My OH owns a brand new dinner suit and blazer which he bought just before we started our weight loss journey and they need to go to but for some reason I’m finding it difficult to let go of them.

LindaPat Fri 05-Jun-26 08:52:54

Hi Nannan2, thank you for your kind words re my weight loss. It hasn't been easy, but I'm determined to keep going! Even more importantly - to keep it off!
Don't know why it is so difficult to pass on my larger clothes. I know someone would benefit, yet always in the back of my mind is that little voice saying" but when you put it back on, you will need to buy these clothes again".
Mr LP has lost a lot too, but he doesn't have a problem with getting rid of clothes - just "stuff"! But just yesterday he mentioned letting go of some of his vinyl collection ( very collectable these days ), so we are making progress!

My best advice to everyone is a quote from Dana K White ( A slob comes clean), who says " The space that you have is the space that you have", ie you can only keep/own as much "stuff" as will fit in your space. Some people have more space than others. That's life. If you don't have the space, you can't keep it all. She also says " You can keep anything - but you can't keep everything".
She really talks sense, worth having a look at her posts and videos,

Also, keep a donation box/bag at the ready, ( one that can be donated ), so you can discard as you go. I use a carrier bag, or a delivery box if we have one, and when it's full - out it goes!

Good luck everyone, keep at it!
xxx

MissAdventure Fri 05-Jun-26 08:56:50

That seems a really sensible approach, LindaPat.

Lesley60 Fri 05-Jun-26 10:05:40

I must admit to being overly sentimental and hold on to things from my children’s childhood and also things that are to good to get rid of, my 2 daughters are in their early 50s with grown up children of their own but I still have some of their baby clothes and brownie uniforms and until recently a few of their old toys.
I asked them if they wanted any of it and of course they didn’t and thought I was nuts for holding onto them, I even have the congratulations cards from when they were born.
But I think what is taking up most of the space in my attic is all my clothes from when I was five sizes smaller all in large suitcases waiting for me to get back into them which of course I never will,but nevertheless we can live in hope.
I also have a garage full of furniture as we downsized eight years ago.
My husband jokes that he is going to hire a skip and get rid of it all but my retort is that it’s all in the attic out of the way.

Musicgirl Fri 05-Jun-26 10:47:49

Lesley60

I must admit to being overly sentimental and hold on to things from my children’s childhood and also things that are to good to get rid of, my 2 daughters are in their early 50s with grown up children of their own but I still have some of their baby clothes and brownie uniforms and until recently a few of their old toys.
I asked them if they wanted any of it and of course they didn’t and thought I was nuts for holding onto them, I even have the congratulations cards from when they were born.
But I think what is taking up most of the space in my attic is all my clothes from when I was five sizes smaller all in large suitcases waiting for me to get back into them which of course I never will,but nevertheless we can live in hope.
I also have a garage full of furniture as we downsized eight years ago.
My husband jokes that he is going to hire a skip and get rid of it all but my retort is that it’s all in the attic out of the way.

I have a few very special items of clothes from when my now adult children were babies. I realised that they were stuck in a chest and never seen so l put the two shawls on two children's chairs in our bedroom and on one there is my very threadbare and very much loved teddy bear 🧸 - he is over sixty himself. He shares the chair with a few other soft toys. On the other chair is my daughter's doll and she is wearing some of my favourite baby clothes that my children wore, which include the bootees that originally belonged to the violinist Kyung Wa Chung's babies. Sentimental? Yes. A bit silly? Perhaps, but it is not harming anyone else. I found a winter coat that my daughter wore as a toddler. It was a timeless style and I passed it on fairly recently to a friend for her granddaughter. The baby's mother was delighted and a nearly thirty year old coat was given a new lease of life.
As for your clothes that are several sizes too small, would you ever wear them again even if you lost the weight? They are probably dated at best and may not suit you now. I had a lovely 1980s Laura Ashley dress but not only were the chances of it ever fitting me again somewhere between slim, fat and none whatsoever, I realised that even if by some miracle I could actually wear it again, the style was too young for me by now and I would probably look faintly ridiculous in it so I put it on Ebay and a lady who owned a vintage clothes shop at the other end of the country bought it for £20. As for your furniture, I presume your children do not want or need it. Are your grandchildren anywhere near the stage of setting up home, whereby they might welcome some items of furniture? If not, I would get the British Heart Foundation or any other charity that sells furniture to come and collect it.