Follow
Share

My 90+ parents moved into assisted living recently -- not planned, necessitated by my mom's stroke. Dad picked out all the things they wanted from the house and either took them to their apartment or stored them. Now I'm stuck having to go through the lifetime of their stuff (and much of my grandmother's and beyond). I'm not their only child -- one brother predeceased me, the other lives 3 hours away and...isn't very helpful, more because he's just kind-of useless when it comes to this.
My mother made it clear all her life the importance of keeping All The Things -- family history things, her personal childhood things, her writings, everything her grandkids ever gave her (and a few from us). I have an issue with emotional entanglement with my mom (yes, I'm in therapy) -- love her to pieces, but this is really making things hard, as I am pretty much the only one to go through all their stuff now. Dad's done, Mom's not able to, brother has what he wanted and that's good enough for him.
I am not physically healthy. I have a number of chronic illnesses, and having to be in charge of this (well, do a lot of it myself, though my adult son helps when he can) is making me sicker. My husband (who has taken on the role of Person to Sell The House -- i.e., setting up all that) has hired a company to do an auction and cleanout, but we still need to get out those things that we want to keep.
But I don't know how to decide what's important anymore. Her beanie from her college dorm with her name on it? Her Girl Scout handbook with her childish signature in it? All their piles of underlined and notated Bibles? Her wedding dress? Her baby doll from childhood?
I'm also having to curate the stuff for the other family members -- saving photos and such for my nieces and nephews (who live out of town). What to keep? What to throw away? I've taken photos of Mom's knickknacks and sent to the nieces, and they're having me pull things for them.
We had a "treasure hunt" day on Saturday, where I invited my brother, and my deceased bro's ex-wife (we're all still friends). Nephews came. We got the attic unloaded into the carport. Bro took what he wanted and drove back home (3 hours away), couldn't help otherwise because he "didn't know what to do" (even with my instructions). XSIL helped for awhile but then left. It was just me and my son for 5 hours (hubby had just had foot surgery) going through a 3,000 sq ft house full of memorabilia, treasures and mostly junk. I've never felt so abandoned.
And it is nowhere near done.
But that's my pity party. The truth is, I can't go through everything, the auction may turn up some things we missed, but ... I'm overwhelmed and just need to figure out how to stop being the curator of my mom's life. She expected that of me. But I can't, now. I just don't know how to let go of that and let go of her things. I somehow ended up the family historian, but we don't own a museum.

Find Care & Housing
If you don't REALLY want it, get rid of it. You don't have to keep a single item. It's not your responsibility. Also, try reading The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning. Remember that everything you keep, is just something someone else has to care for later. You aren't making decisions, you are passing them off to someone else. Likely your son or his partner.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to MrsLebowski
Report

Another thing to keep in mind is that there are companies that will clear out the junk for you. They will charge you for this but they will often tell you if anything is worth selling as well. This burden is really on you alone. You don't have to take it. The memories can be saved, the things can go.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to SamTheManager
Report

Stop looking for things for other relatives . If they don’t come take what they want then they don’t get .
You are correct you don’t own a museum . But you do have a trash truck that comes . Whatever can not be sold or donated goes in the trash .

Take pictures of items and let the item go . Don’t perpetuate the problem by leaving a mess for the next generation to clean out . They will put it in the trash anyway , might as well do that now .

Don’t feel guilty . Your parents should have had family come years ago to take what they wanted and gotten rid of the rest .
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to waytomisery
Report

Throw most of it out. She'll never know.
Donate the items of value.
Stop being so agreeable about things like taking photos of knickknacks!
That's just more work for you, and the nieces can figure out a way to get there themselves and take what they want.

You don't "have to" curate the stuff for others! As with the nieces, let everyone show up to get it. You have in some ways brought this upon yourself, and you can get out of it by changing the way you think. Give them a deadline, step back, then have the auction, then donate the rest, then it's 2026 and your New Year's resolution is that you are permanently out from under.

A major truth is that younger generations do NOT want the lifelong belongings of people in their 90's. They are more minimalist; if they want to see a picture of great-great grandma Francesca Feodorovna, they can find it online, and they don't care for Hummel figurines. Or musty old velvet sofas or the sword that some ancestor brought back from the fight with Pancho Villa.

Your mother's life of keeping All The Things is sadly almost over. She'll have no need for them in the next life. Neither will you!
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Fawnby
Report

I am sorry you have to go through this overwhelming task. It is an emotional and arduous process for sure.

I went through this process this summer with my uncle who didn't disgard anything EVER. It was my grandparents house before he bought it and he never disposed of any of their items either (they have been gone since the late 1980's). Upon first glance there were nice items but as you inspected there were obvious flaws from dog chews to water stains on the antique items. Sadly, many items were also stained yellow from years of cigarette smoke. What was in theire eyes very expensive and high value items were in fact not worth anything. And there was A LOT!!

What I did was tell my close relatives three dates with a 2 hour time frame that I would be at the house for them to arrive and take whatever they wanted. If there were any takers that is the time to get the items. Yep, I did get some push back but this forum has taught not to succumb to those trying to undercut you.

After that I spent 1-2 days a week for a total of 10 days sorting through items and boxes. That was icky because there was rodent infestation in many boxes. Cardboard boxes do not protect anything. I contacted a local estate sale company and they accessed all that was left and declined to hold an estate sale because it wasn't profitable enough. I took many items to the curb with the help of my young and able son and daughter and their friends. I posted on buy nothing facebook group the items at the curb. Many items were taken and what was left my son and his friends loaded on the pickup and took to the dump/salvage yard.

It was emotional and I felt grief that some of their items were just dumped but I couldn't justify keeping in my basement for my children to deal with. I can't put them through what I am going through because it really does suck to be dealing with that and a family member declining.

Hopefully the process I did helps you organize and be able to deal with this stressful process. I wish you the best.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to AMZebbC
Report

If your parents are in their 90s, then you’re likely in your 60s, or thereabouts. So, you’re not a twenty-year-old just starting out who needs a toaster, or such, regardless of its age or condition. At your age, you have ‘stuff,’ and really don’t need more.

Things are not valuable just because they’re old, and the antique market is really quite poor now. Things like old appliances are of a negative value because they are not efficient, and sometimes just not even safe. I inherited a huge pile of phonograph records, World War I era, so over a century old, and can’t even get rid of them for free. No value. There may be one or two rare collectible ones in there that could be worth up to $50… if I spend hours and hours of time searching each title. Worth my time? Not really.

I found that after ten years of clearing out my parents’ ‘stuff’ - and they had a large farm full - I have really gotten down to one small item for each parent, small jewelry items, and find that sufficient. Photos, slides, and home movies I have digitized. Unidentifiable ones (unlabeled people no one knows), or scenery shots just got tossed. No historical society wants an old photo just because it is old. They want ones with identified people.

Your “treasure hunt” day sounds like that was ideal! Everyone got the chance to find a tidbit or treasure meaningful to them. As far as going through all the rest… I recall a day after my mom had passed away when a relative tried to make me go through a box of photos and sort them and I just begged not to and pushed it away. I had enough and couldn’t deal with one item more. I’d say you know your family’s history, and likely know off the top of your head what is genuinely meaningful and valuable to your family’s history and what isn’t. If something goes away you’re not immediately familiar with and know to find, oh well, it’s gone and you’ll never know it, but you’ll be free of the burden.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to Goddatter
Report

Many of those items could go to a museum, local scouting, church, etc. I don't want to put any pressure on you but if it's do-able, there is a peace of mind that comes from donating these items to specific groups. My sweetheart had a real WW2 bomber jacket. It needed to be restored but the artwork was incredible! I donated it to a military museum. Donate the rest or have a yard sale. You only need a few small things to remember your Mom! Release the guilt.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to Caregiveronce
Report

This is emotional but you have to realize it's not good for you or anyone to be attached to stuff. It isn't useful. It's just weighing you down. The objects are meaningless.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to SamTheManager
Report

Work on the non emotional items first. i.e. Donate the kitchen stuff. Set a timer on your phone and work for 25 minutes. When the timer goes of go outside and take a break. Then resume again...timer on 25 minutes.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to brandee
Report
AMZebbC Nov 4, 2025
Very good advice. It is so overwhelming that forced breaks are essential.
(0)
Report
a very hard one indeed and youre not alone there. Your mothers had a stroke i doubt she will ever be in a position to know what you have from what you dont have with her things.
i would get boxes and throw into designated boxes - dont know - (so that prob means a charity collection job)
meaningful things to your mum- anthing really obvious like personalised stuff or something she was always fond of - rest int he charity or dont know box
photo box for albums and such
clothes - in a pile for charity to collect. i even left some stuff outside with a note saying help yourself and the amount of people who came and the stuff just disappeared!
then issue an ultimation to family - theres a box of miscellaneous stuff that the charity are collecting - come view and take what you want by xx date otherwise it will be gone. Youre nto sorting anything - they come look or its gone. Anything with names on it - (pictires ornaments) could be worth money so auction area or
charity shops will make good use of your stuff so it will never be disrespectful getting rid of it because you are literally giving life to someone else.
id start by seeing what you can get charity to collect - do it in chunks as it goes down you will be more motivated to be more ruthless. Its hard but youre not a museum and its a fact clutter around you can be detrimental to your health Maybe you can bring an impartial friend or work colleague to help you? get charity to collect miscellaneous stuff and furniture not needed and clothes - how many piece of clothing does a person need - especially one with mobility issues now they've had a stroke? it is depressing and overwhelming - be ruthless if mother asks its in storage just keep anything - make it a point say 5 items of stuff she is attached to. My father came to ive with us and he had so much stuff - i was overwhelmed - it was affecting my wellbeing - i got someone to come sit ith me one day and we boxed up - what doesnt fit in a cupboard charity or bin - with someone's help we whizzed through the task and i cant tell you how amazing and clear i felt afterwards
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Jenny10
Report

This is a ridiculous burden that never should have been dumped on you. Send an email to all family members telling them to come to the house by whatever date, or on a certain date, to get what they want, no more trying to find and save things for anyone. If they don’t come, they don’t get. I cleaned out my parent’s home mostly on my own. I had to focus hard on separating my emotions from it and just plowing through. Some bigger things I sold, most I donated, some went to interested relatives, some was trashed, and just a little came home with me. Of the items I brought home, I now have even less of them. It’s amazing how little grandchildren will be interested in having. You’ll find it’s the memories that you want, having their stuff doesn’t help replace that. Toss far more than you’re thinking, it’s actually very freeing. Storing stuff is highly overrated, it just saves the headache for another time. I wish you courage and rest as you take this on.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Daughterof1930
Report

I'm in a similar situation: curating (and storing) antiques, vintage stuff, collectibles from deceased relatives. They are mostly in boxes in a basement.

Here's a hard truth: the younger generations are either minimalists, or don't own houses to warehouse stuff, or simply don't care. There is a decline in the number of young people and an increase in elders since the Boomers are now retiring and there's a glut of stuff available to buy second-hand. You will find that even thrift stores are now extremely picky about what items they take. I ended up throwing out a box of antique dolls (in FL) that I could not give away on either Nextdoor, FB Marketplace or craigslist. It broke my heart but this is just the reality.

If I were you, I'd pick out things to keep that only YOU really really wish to keep. Hopefully it's something you can display in your home so you can see it every day and it will bring you joy. If something doesn't do this for you, get rid of it. Then have a giant estate sale. Absolutely do not store anything you feel ambivilent about and do not pay for storage. Your Mom wants to make you a hoarder by proxy and this just isn't something you need to agree to. Keeping "heirlooms" is a generational value that young people today do not understand or share. You don't have to tell your Mom what you're doing with the stuff. Just do whatever works for you. Taking pics of it may help you adjust.

I also still have all my original Brownie and Girl Scout books, uniforms and badges. I have a pair of white lace ladies gloves that my Aunt made. Christening gowns, ad nauseum. I have a 5-yr old Granddaughter who *may* be interested in seeing it or playing with it "some day", but once that happens and if she doesn't want it, I'm throwing it out. My jerk of a FIL had lots of very old Boy Scout stuff (vintage) but guess what? Nobody wanted it even for free. Oh well, out it goes. Then move on with life. Wishing you a very successful estate sale.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Geaton777
Report
StacyAa Nov 3, 2025
Yeah, I'm seeing the reality of that truth that Millennials on down don't want our stuff, or their grandparents' stuff. I have a Millennial son who is just now realizing what the "stuff" means to the family (because of going through a similar thing with my in-laws over the summer). But he'll say, "I don't want it, but I hope it can stay in the family, it'd be a shame to lose it." Sweetheart, that's not helpful!

Thanks for the good wishes. They've already told us not to expect much. My mom's Seraphim angel collection may have been valuable once, but nobody wants that stuff now. Not even the nieces who always said they wanted it.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
You really have to harden yourself. Go from room to room. Lets start with the kitchen. Donate anything you don't need or want to thrift shops or Habitat. Get those boxes with lids. I had one for each sibling. Pictures I found of their families or thought they would like I threw in there. Things I found of theirs which for my brother was a pottery thing he made, I threw in his box. Moms bear and doll she may like to have at her apt. Papers and things your not sure of put in a box to look at later at home. China, crystal and silver. If no one wants it, get rid of it. If you don't want it or need it, get rid of it.

My Mom had us clean out her attic long before she went to AL. She then used an extra bedroom for storage. While she still lived at the house, I sat her down in the room and made 3 piles. Keep, give away and throw away. She sat while I asked her, keep, give away or trash. Went a lot faster this way.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report

Oh how I can relate to what you are experiencing. You have done so much already! You are right--you can't go through everything.

Two years ago I chose to travel to care for my 92 year old aunt who was in the hospital with cancer. She never married, my brother was her POA. Lots of nieces and nephews, but they all live out of state.

She passed about two weeks from the time she went into the hospital. She had a will that was changed just before her death. Initially she left specific items to my cousins, but then changed her mind. But she had a house full of furniture that once belonged to my grandmother, and cases and cases and cases of dolls that she had collected her entire life. In paperwork that was left regarding the dolls, she wrote "These dolls are very important to me, please take care of them" or something to that effect.

I videotaped the contents of the entire house and sent it to my cousins and nieces, asking if they wanted anything. Some chose a few things here and there. Then I shipped everything to them. The POA traveled to help me pack up a mini van with items to bring to my mom (her sister). Then everything was sold in an estate sale.

(I also singlehandedly packed up my own childhood home just months before this, when my parents were moved when they needed care. I fretted over what my mom would miss--turns out her dementia prevented her from remembering what she had. She recognized her bedroom set and furniture from the den and her kitchen table, and a few other items. But she forgot about the rest.)

I've learned that documenting everything in a photo makes much more sense than having the actual item. At least to me. You can still reminisce. You can see the item, no matter what it is. It is preserved, in a way.

The hardest part was reading my aunt's words of just how significant those dolls were to her and her world. I had to realize that yes, they were very important to her. But, they weren't to family members. I'm so glad she never found that out. And I'm glad she was able to enjoy them during her lifetime.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to DaughterofAD3
Report
StacyAa Nov 3, 2025
The single aunt with no kids thing (or even married aunt/uncle with no kids) is hard. I'm sure I'll end up tossing almost all my great-aunt's stuff that got shoved into a box in my grandmother's bedroom and now has to be dealt with. It's sad, but this is the hard truth I'm realizing -- a generation or two after we're gone, we just...fade. Names on a genealogy site, maybe a few things passed on to others. And nowadays no one cares about taking and passing on most of the stuff.

I'm sure we'll get through it. We'll miss things that will get sold or dumped. It's just going to have to be what it be. And yes, the things our loved ones enjoyed, their collections -- those were for them, not us. Not ultimately.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter