My parents are fucked up. Our house is so full of stuff that you can barely pull out any of the dining room chairs to take a seat before it bumps into a piece of furniture. We have a huge filing cabinet and tool chest/organizer taking up like a third of the space in the dining room. A filing cabinet they haven’t opened in probably fifteen years. Nearly every horizontal surface in the house is covered with unsorted papers of some kind.

My dad has ADHD and the house is full of half-finished projects and renovations. At work, his office desk is covered in a mountain of papers and books. It takes him forever to find anything. He agrees that the house needs to change, but he expends absolutely no effort to make it so. He leaves everything in the hands of my mom, as he did with our parenting.


I think my mom might be a hoarder. She recently added shelves in the hallway such that only one person can walk through it at a time, and still have to twist their shoulders to squeeze through. She has eleven pairs of flip flops and slippers that are too worn out for her to wear, but won’t throw away because someone, somewhere could use them.

She’s always taking stuff out of the trash can that we had throw away, like my sister’s hair ties. She destroys them now before discarding. For a month I used a leg brace (~$30 from Amazon) for a broken ankle. When I had healed, it was falling to pieces and soaked with half-dried sweat. I threw it directly into the bin outside. My mom took it out, because “someone could use it somewhere”.


My parents are paying a total of probably $400/mo on at least three storage units filled with junk they never use.

My father had a huge metal shed built on the lot of property he has in the rural outskirts of town. It is filled to the brim with his father’s junk, including a band saw from 1924 and a rusting mixing bowl from a WWII-era battleship kitchen that’s five feet in diameter. His father has been dead for 24 years. My dad told me he has nightmares about his father asking “where is my stuff?” He obviously needs therapy, but considers it a waste of money and hates rich doctors. My mom agrees that he needs emotional help, but has never talked to him about it.


I told my mom that the single thing that she could do to help my depression would be to discard as many things as she could bare to. I tried to introduce her to Marie Kondo’s method, but she reacts with heartbreak whenever I criticize her style of house organization. She retorts with “our house is just too small for the five of us (mostly true); I’m doing the best I can.”

I want to have a family meeting so I play this video, and communicate my feelings.






Edit1:

A silver lining is that the house isn’t “gross” dirty. There’s no more than a normal amount of filth and dust, and the dishes and carpets are cleaned regularly. And there isn’t much stuff on the little open floor space that we do have; all the junk is piled onto desks or tables. We have way too many end tables.






Edit2:

This may be a tangent, but whenever I try to express my feelings, my mom interjects to minimize it (I think that’s the right term).

Example: When I moved back in with my parents after financial ruin two years ago (six months later my brother would do the same), I threw all my belongings in a hurry into dozens of plastic totes. No organization; it was just to make it through the move. Once home, we packed most of my totes into a storage unit (I’m part of the problem, but at least I know it). There is a lot of stuff in there that I need periodically, but which would be too much trouble to fish out.

I told my mom that my mom that I wanted to sort through all of it, because having my belongings packed away that way gave me anxiety. The only response she could give was “it’s not that disordered! The stacks of totes are very orderly.”

I never get validation. It’s always “oh sweety, there’s no need to feel that way!”

  • Chronicon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    20 days ago

    Edit1: A silver lining is that the house isn’t “gross” dirty.

    So much this. However that doesn’t mean that it’s a safe, livable, healthy environment either.

    Having to squeeze past shelves to get between rooms isn’t at all safe for egress in case of an emergency. And this level of clutter really fucks with some (mayb people’s mental health. And having most of your earthly possessions packed away in some remote storage unit isn’t good either, that would drive anyone bonkers long term. You are 100% valid for not wanting to live like this. it’s doubly important to keep this under control when there’s a lot of people sharing a small space, because as it is there isn’t much space to use. Could you say, start doing yoga or exercising at home, in that environment?

    Frankly though, it’s going to be an uphill battle for a long time to resolve. you might be able to carve out some space for yourself and not allow them to fill it with stuff (if you don’t share a bedroom, this is a good place to start) but I wouldn’t assume that there will ever be a light-switch moment where everyone in the house gets on board and helps you clean it all. Call outs and interventions may be more traumatic than helpful. I wish I had better advice but honestly I would lose it living like that, especially when you described the taking ruined items out of the trash because someone might need them…

    If you have the opportunity to leave again, probably take it. Its easier to help from a position of health, outside of the mess, that’s the lesson I’ve learned from my good friend with hoarder parents.