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Messy House; Messy Life Thread ??

(180 Posts)
FannyCornforth Sun 02-Jan-22 09:50:46

Hello folks ?

I recently mentioned on another thread that my bedroom, and indeed my whole house, isn’t in the most satisfactory of states.

I also think that my messy house is having a knock on effect on all sorts of stuff in my life.

I received a few lovely pm’s from posters saying that they are in a similar situation.

So if you feel like a chat about your messy house / life; please do!

Hopefully we can sort; chuck; organise; tidy; and clean together.

Bin bags at the ready! x

FannyCornforth Tue 04-Jan-22 14:30:52

No offence Naninkasmile but if I had enough space for ‘his and hers’ studies, and a utility room, I’d be ‘all tidy here’ too!

Naninka Tue 04-Jan-22 14:18:11

I have a great many "clever cubes". In the hall, they contain my shoes. In the dining room, they contain board games. In the living room, toys for the grandchildren. In my study, craft and stationery items. In his study, computer paraphernalia and in the utility room, garden shoes, mop attachments and bags. All tidy here!
Ignore the thin layer of dust on top of the units please.
Happy New Year btw! xxx

Musicgirl Tue 04-Jan-22 14:04:57

Helgawills, if you put your worn-out clothes in a bag and clearly mark it rags virtually any charity shop will take it as they can get money for it.
I like a clean, tidy home but am definitely not a minimalist. My husband is a hoarder and l find the only way to cope with this is firm boundaries so his part of the bedroom and his office are where l turn a blind eye. Everywhere else is kept to the standards l prefer. Some of our friends have truly messy homes but because they make us so welcome it doesn’t matter. I would not want to live like this, though.

Dowsabella Tue 04-Jan-22 13:58:34

MayBeMaw

It’s a sort of conjugation though isn’t it
1 I like my house to reflect my personality
2 You are relaxed about your home looking lived in
3 He/she is very messy
Plural
1 We don’t get over obsessed with minimalism
2 You (plural) could do with a good sort out
3 They live in a pigsty ???

Love it!! I think we come under the heading of "pigsty"!! When a schoolteacher marries a children's librarian, everything gets saved "just in case" and we both had large libraries. Now we are retired, it's proving hard to kick the habit of hoarding, plus if things get put away we forget we have them......

Hope you don't mind, but I've just passed a quote of your post on to my very messy family!!

Jaxjacky Tue 04-Jan-22 13:42:23

MrJ has sorted out his clothes this morning, one bin bag for local charity shop, two for the local air ambulance who recycle clothing.
I’m now thinking about mine, but I had a good clear out last year.

Nan0 Tue 04-Jan-22 13:32:21

Cleanliness above everything, That is important.. My house may be messy, books, magazines newspapers, old and shabby, but clean.

62Granny Tue 04-Jan-22 13:28:10

I find doing one aspect at a time sometimes helps , so tackle the messy corner of line up your books in order that you would like to read them. I have sorted through some clothes in a spare wardrobe before Christmas so have something "summery" things to go to the charity shop. I try to use the theory that if you haven't used/worn it for over 12 months then you probably don't need it. We moved a few years ago to a smaller property so I needed to be ruthless then and am trying to keep that mindset but it doesn't always work. ?

sazz1 Tue 04-Jan-22 13:23:59

My house is quite tidy except for a spare bedroom I call my office.
All our paperwork is filed there and organised. But as a hobby I sell on ebay so it's full of unwanted clothes, shoes, books, etc. And about 40 empty boxes that I use to pack things in. I have things given to me from DD and DIL, and also stuff from late MIL's house so a right mess in that room really. There's also my desk and a sofa bed for family so room is quite cluttered. But I love doing ebay so it will all stay. I don't make much money from it but its my hobby and doesn't cost me anything.

jaybee66 Tue 04-Jan-22 13:21:51

I'm so glad I'm not alone with clutter but still clean.

Hil1910 Tue 04-Jan-22 13:20:29

Took the Christmas decorations down yesterday and put them straight into the garage in a massive body bag type thing I bought at Costco last year. I did intend cleaning the living room today but OH couldn’t be bothered so it will have to be done tomorrow. I’ve just tidied the pull out kitchen cupboard where I keep tinned stuff and binned anything out of date. It seems never ending tidying up after Christmas but I’ve jumped off the hamster wheel for the rest of the day and I’m now enjoying a hot bowl of homemade soup. I do like my home to be tidy but it will just have to wait another day says she surveying rolls of wrapping paper, cards and bags in the snug!

Calistemon Tue 04-Jan-22 13:17:32

helgawills our local Red Cross shop takes clothes for the 'ragman'. They were pleased that I labelled the bags so they didn't have to sort them.
It's worth asking your local charity shops.

I took a bag of books to the Oxfam shop years ago and was told sniffily that they didn't want them unless they were the very latest editions or very old editions which might be worth something.
I've never taken any there since.

Calistemon Tue 04-Jan-22 13:13:44

there are no books on show anywhere in her house
Not all ours are on show but do I really need my Noddy books, St Clare's books and the DC's annuals etc in boxes in the attic?

I need the House Doctor.

helgawills Tue 04-Jan-22 13:12:32

I have a pile of clothes on the floor, that are worn out, I hate waste so wear stuff until it falls apart. When I try to find out, where I can drop off clothes for 'recycling' all I get is 'wearable clothes' for use by others. I know there are companies, which 'recycle' clothes to make new ones, or other items like furnishings etc, but I have no idea where to find places like that. I'm sure a lot more can be recycled to save resources, but the information is totally lacking.
Can anybody help?

Calistemon Tue 04-Jan-22 13:10:12

I will start with a built-in wardrobe- do I really need perm curlers any more? Or rollers?

With lots of cupboards it's out of sight, out of mind.

Theoddbird Tue 04-Jan-22 13:08:19

I find it really difficult to be tidy. I live on a narrow boat and got rid of masses of stuff when I bought her and moved. I am now planning to move back to land and I find myself still trying to get rid of stuff. I am determined to be tidy and organised when I am in a house. Ok...maybe when pigs start flying...grin

Noreen3 Tue 04-Jan-22 13:06:44

I think that when we're older,and have lived in a house for a long time,we do have a lot of stuff.I've noticed it with others,and I'm guilty of it myself.Even Princess Anne was photographed in her very lived in looking sitting room. People who have moved house tend to have more minimalist houses

spabbygirl Tue 04-Jan-22 12:59:14

when I was a home carer over 40 years ago I visited a very intelligent woman who had worked for the foreign office, she had piles of books, needlework etc in various places around her room and called them her creative piles cos she could go and sit when she fancied doing some particular thing. She was so interesting I have kept my house similar, I loathe overtidy houses, they're totally boring

Yammy Tue 04-Jan-22 12:54:13

mokryna

My rooms are a bit a dusty but not untidy. However, we won’t talk about what is in the wall to ceiling cupboards in each room plus the garage and two cellars.

This sounds like me. A place for everything and everything in its place. BUT all is surrounded by dust I do it once a week. The loft and spare bedrooms are stuffed. Out of sight out of mind.
I lived as a child in a very clean house but it was clean chaos we couldn't even find the scissors when we needed them. Nothing was ever put in the same place twice. One of my grans was the same.
The other just pushed everything under setees cushions stacked up the stairs and dusted like me once a week. I still remember as a child sitting on a settee that was very uncomfortable putting my hand under the cushion and pulling out grans spare corset much to everyone's delight in the room. She didn't bat an eyelid just said she had been taking washing of the pulley as we arrived. Granddads long johns were under the actual setee.grin

Aveline Tue 04-Jan-22 12:52:48

MayBeMaw I never think 'showhomes' look like homes at all.
In Victorian times, apparently, it was important to have either an open book or piece of needlework lying out so that any visitor thought they must have interrupted you while doing something virtuous. I suppose we could leave the TV on? Doubt we'd we'd be fooling anyone.

PinkCosmos Tue 04-Jan-22 12:40:00

I like to be tidy but seem to have accumulated too much stuff over the years.

I am currently sitting in my WFH office which also contains:

1. Four boxes of Christmas decorations waiting to go in the loft. They can't go in yet as I need to sort out the loft and find the photos (four big boxes) which I intend to sort through to get rid of all the unnecessary ones e.g. elephants at the zoo from the 1960's.

2. DH's golf clubs

3. DGC toy box

4. Our dog's spare bed that she never sleeps in

5. A pile of magazines.

I am ordinarily a tidy person but have found it hard to motivate myself during the pandemic.

I did sort out my clothes a few months ago and took about eight bin bags of clothes to the charity shop.

I also sorted out my bedding and got rid of some of that. I was contemplating getting an ottoman bed to put my many bedding sets in but then I thought it was cheaper to get rid of most of them instead.

I have a kitchen cupboard stuffed with plastic containers. How many do I really need. That is my next job.

I find that I am better at having a clear out when I am in a good mood rather than a maudlin mood. I am more inclined to get rid of things when I am upbeat.

I couldn't live in a minimal house and like things with individuality e.g. unusual mirrors etc.

Friends of ours have just moved house. It looks like a show home. Lots of grey and no personality at all. Their previous house was the same.

Forestflame Tue 04-Jan-22 12:39:10

Loving this thread. I am desperately needing to do decluttering. Have already got some things put by for a car boot sale in the Spring, but need to do much more. It is dragging me down living in a mess and I am glad to see that I am not alonesmile

Josieann Tue 04-Jan-22 12:38:24

I think needing a bigger house to accommodate stuff is a bit of a myth. However many rooms or extra space is available, it still manages to get filled.

icanhandthemback I tell myself it probably won't come in useful and if I really need it then I can go and buy it again. Not so easy with irreplaceable sentimental things though.

Lupatria Tue 04-Jan-22 12:36:34

my house was ok until i took in my grandaughters as they were taken out of their home by social services. my daughter came to and gradually my house got messier and messier. younger grandaughter was on the autistic scale and just dropped things where they fell. unfortunately their room got worse and worse and i despaired as i'd had two operations in two years and couldn't get things sorted and my daughter didn't bother.
in december 2020 they left with no warning (and i still don't know where they are!) leaving me with an indescribably untidy, messy and dirty room to clear up - loads of sweet wrappers, empty drink cans and, unbelievably a used sanitary towel under the bed!
so much rubbish - all their bedding and mattresses plus everything else including two dining room chairs!! 15 blsck plastic sacks, two mattresses and the chairs in all.
a year later everything which is out of place (i couldn't put things away when they were here) is piled in the conservatory but most of the house is now clear but not tidy.
i suffer from arthritis and can only do a little before i have to sit down and i find cleaning/dusting difficult. but i have to tidy more away before i can have a cleaner.
it does get me down but i'll just soldier on until it's done - but anyone is welcome for coffee as they know my circumstances.
although i don't think i'll ever be comfortable in a too-tidy house.

MayBeMaw Tue 04-Jan-22 12:31:39

I have a good friend of whom I am very fond, a graduate and retired teacher, but there are no books on show anywhere in her house and any “ornaments” and what I think is called “wall-art” both minimalist and chosen to complement the decor.
Hmm - mine all have sentimental value - framed pictures of the grandchildren and of Paw , pictures on every wall, mostly originals, some inherited , some given , some bought.
We are good friends but she probably despairs of me.
She was really flattered recently though when a visitor complimented her on her house, saying it looked just like a “show home”.
I’d have been totally underwhelmed!

icanhandthemback Tue 04-Jan-22 12:29:14

I need to declutter! We want to downsize but I desperately need to get rid of "stuff" that might come in useful! However, as much as I'd like to be on a thread that encourages me, looking at this one, by the time I've read through it all, I'd have no time left to do what I have to. grin

Today the Xmas decorations will come down; it'll be August before I get them into the loft!