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Decluttering

(999 Posts)
Doodledog Sat 21-Sept-24 11:36:44

It’s that time of year.

Who is looking to get rid of extraneous items and declutter their houses ready for winter and associated upcoming festivals?

I have two boxes of books waiting to be collected on Tuesday, and hope to add a few bags of clothing before they get here. My decorator is coming to do various bits and bobs, and I need to clear the decks ahead of that, which is my motivation for starting now.

I also need to clear out a huge kitchen cupboard which will become a walk-in larder if the carpenter ever gets back to me.

What’s on your declutter list? Record your successes and difficulties on this thread and support one another.

No lectures on why we shouldn’t need to declutter, please? We know grin. Start another thread about people who are disorganised or who shouldn’t buy too much in the first place and we can choose not to engage with it. This one is for support, encouragement and celebration of clearing ‘stuff’ from our lives.

Calendargirl Sun 20-Oct-24 07:43:42

I had a set of Books Of Knowledge and a large dictionary which dad bought off a door salesman back in the 50’s. Expensive back then, but he thought they would be useful education wise for my sister and me.

I ‘inherited’ them, they filled up shelves in the bookcase and were very heavy, no one looked at them but the thought of getting rid filled me with guilt.

Then a couple of years ago I found a charity shop that would take them. They said if they didn’t sell they would go for pulping, so that seemed less ‘wasteful’.

I felt so relieved, have never missed them.

Mizuna Sat 19-Oct-24 22:33:52

My favourite charity shop takes everything, like yours petra. In their loo they have loads of free sanitary pads with SIEMPRE printed on the wrappers. (It's Spanish for Always. 😁)

The shop is siempre 😏 my first port of call when I declutter. The other day I laundered a mattress cover and packaged it tidily and they were so touched because it could be put out for sale straight away.

MissInterpreted Sat 19-Oct-24 22:20:31

Doodledog

A lot of charity shops won't take books now - I'm never sure why, as I'd have thought they'd be good sellers and people going in for something to read are likely to pick up something else they see.

Definitely get the HP books valued, MissI! They sound like a find. My children got all of them as they came out, but we passed them on when they grew out of them.

I don't think they're actually all that valuable now. I was having a look online and they're certainly not worth thousands.

petra Sat 19-Oct-24 22:03:17

It’s come to the stage now where in the past I would take clothes and toys from our shop to women’s refuse homes.
Now they can’t take any more.
From our charity shop I can walk to 3 others in less than 10 minutes. They are all doing boot sales.
They are selling clothes/shoes at 20P an item.
Last Monday I had to refuse all donations. We were at the unsafe stage in the shop and sorting rooms.😱
I’ve been aware of this problem for a couple of years.

To all that donate.
Please be aware that charity shops pay a high price for our skips to be emptied.

MayBee70 Sat 19-Oct-24 21:57:35

I’ve got boxes of old hardback poetry books that I inherited from a friend. I always wanted to have a library room so I could fill the shelves with them. I don’t know what to do with them. I wish they’d been passed onto someone else. I thought when I retired I’d find time to read them but never did. I find old books beautiful.

fancythat Sat 19-Oct-24 21:52:43

I will guess though that it will get bought?!

fancythat Sat 19-Oct-24 21:51:56

Ew no!

petra Sat 19-Oct-24 21:43:59

fancythat

They must all be different in that case.

Our local ones take soft toys, no problem.

But cant say I have ever seen arch files, box files etc.

We take everything, and I do mean everything
I thought I’d seen it all until last week.
A packet of small incontinence pads for a small dog 🤷‍♀️

Doodledog Sat 19-Oct-24 21:30:00

A lot of charity shops won't take books now - I'm never sure why, as I'd have thought they'd be good sellers and people going in for something to read are likely to pick up something else they see.

Definitely get the HP books valued, MissI! They sound like a find. My children got all of them as they came out, but we passed them on when they grew out of them.

valdali Sat 19-Oct-24 20:47:21

I wish books were easier to recycle - I love books & can't bear just sending them to landfill. I'll probably give a couple of boxes to Free Little Libraries, & our local Tescos also has a book swap. I have so many though - 2 boxes from S-i-L when I was going to do a carboot then didn't , 2 boxes from Son 1, one box from son 2, probably 2 boxes from me & DH - that's besides the shelves of books that I'd never get rid of.

loopyloo Sat 19-Oct-24 20:42:56

Wow, they go for thousands now.

MissInterpreted Sat 19-Oct-24 19:57:37

We're doing a lot of decluttering at the moment, but finding it really hard to get rid of stuff. Some has ended up going to the skip because even trying to give it away free on Facebook or Gumtree etc proved fruitless. I do find it hard to part with books though. We had a big box left behind by my daughter when she moved out - she had a root through them and took a couple but said just to get rid of the rest. I advertised them on FB - there was a set of Harry Potter books and a woman said check in case any were first editions, so I did and several are, so I've put them aside.

fancythat Sat 19-Oct-24 19:42:43

Books was one of the first things I did.
I sort of thought, if I dont do them nearer the beginning, I was not going to look forward to doing them later on.

I couldnt quite believe how much books date.

I didnt get rid of more recent ones, but most of those older than say 30 years old, personally, with the books I had, were quite easy to declutter.

I did keep a few. In case, the powers that be, past and present, might change "history", if they had a mind to.

Doodledog Sat 19-Oct-24 19:12:46

Books are hard.

I got rid of a lot of them last year, and found, against all instinct, that reference books, of the type that used to be seen as investments would be missed least. You can google now, and will get much more up to date answers than in the books I got when the children were small, so out went atlases, history books and so on. I kept some, but know I will rarely look at them, so they will go out in the next round. I hung onto novels and poetry books, as they stand a chance to be re-read (the poetry books in particular).

I also applied the £20 and 20 minutes rule, which applied to the vast majority of old books, as I don't have first editions etc.

It's really difficult though.

Cabbie21 Sat 19-Oct-24 19:06:29

Yes Doodledog, but because the books are being stored in my late husband’s study, there will be no real rush to decide what to get rid of or to actually do so. I am going to have to be disciplined.

Doodledog Sat 19-Oct-24 19:03:28

Oh, that's a shame about the Christmas tree, MissA. Good news about the fishtank though.

Emptying a room is a massive pain, but the best way to declutter, Cabbie. If you only put back what you want to do in, you are really left knowing what you can get rid of.

Cabbie21 Sat 19-Oct-24 18:53:16

I now have an empty sitting room, apart from the sofa, in readiness for the decorator. My son is coming back next Saturday to help put things back. I know he won’t want to put much back, especially the five small bookcases. If I move the sofa away on to the long wall away from the radiator, which makes sense, there won’t be room for the bookcases. And I can’t move the sofa once he’s gone. I have a week to think about it. Meanwhile I might get some sorting out and filing done in the study, so will be decluttering and shredding paper.

MissAdventure Sat 19-Oct-24 18:42:25

On the plus side

MissAdventure Sat 19-Oct-24 18:36:15

Oh I just looked them up and they don't accept Christmas trees. sad

Doodledog Sat 19-Oct-24 18:34:30

Yes. They will come for anything. They do a whole postcode area on the same day, so will be passing anyway.

MissAdventure Sat 19-Oct-24 18:30:13

Mind you, that Anglia collection...
Do you think they would come just for the Christmas tree?

MissAdventure Sat 19-Oct-24 18:28:18

I've had to call a halt, for now.
I'm just not well enough.

Doodledog Sat 19-Oct-24 16:40:15

I've been meaning to get those coat hangers for ages.

I think a lot of shops are rationing donations these days. I've started using Anglia Doorstep Collections, as they pick up from the house and take clothes and bric a brac. You book online, and just have it ready for them on the collection day - you can leave it outside if you're not going to be in. The things get sold and a percentage goes to charity, so much like a shop after overheads. The charities vary from month to month, and you get to choose which one you support.

Lisaangel10 Sat 19-Oct-24 15:34:04

Took all my clutter to charity shops today. Several are full to bursting and are not accepting donations. Some kindly took a few bags at a time so I got rid of it all.

I then went and bought 30 new slimline coat hangers with a velvet effect non slip coating.

I am going up to swap all the odd coathangers for lovely new spacesaving ones. I had about 20 of these already.
A job well done this weekend.

fancythat Sat 19-Oct-24 13:27:08

They must all be different in that case.

Our local ones take soft toys, no problem.

But cant say I have ever seen arch files, box files etc.