Jersey Girl, I appreciate you being so willing to share your personal stuff here. It is obvious that you've clearly got a great grasp of the work to be done, even if some of the details are yet to be ironed out.
Jersey Girl wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 11:54 pm
Anyway, it wasn't all that a complicated because I was the only one making decisions.
I will say this was about the one saving grace to the whole thing (that and a highly supportive spouse). Although he had remarried, they had not been together for very long and she is the kind of person that is very differential to others. She was more than happy to let me take charge and only chimed in on a few things that she felt strongly about or that Dad had shared with her.
Jersey Girl wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 11:54 pm
I've purged most everything accumulated over the years that I could on my own. I got really good at it, too, and it's freeing! It took years for the Boy to get on the same page because he's accumulated way too much inventory devoted to "just in case", but he's coming along if at a snails pace. Got rid of two vehicles and when I went to do thrift store drop offs, he started by handing me one book. Then more and more things. When I read your comment about your Dad's belongings...pretty much the same mindset and approach, and it's not fair to the children involved who have to go through everything as it is. If personal belongings are in a state of disorder, they shouldn't have to go through that and compound the situation they are faced with. I'm still working on a few categories myself and then...I have to compel him to rip the band aid off of what's left.
I think this is one of the hardest things for everyone to tackle. It is difficult to realize that all the things you have accumulated over the years, things that may have been deeply sentimental or meaningful to you, may not be desired by those left behind and just complicate the process. He had been saving several furniture sets, boxes of chachkies that may at one point had meaning or story but were now unknown, and a wide array of tools... all of which he thought that I would want some day (we'll ignore for a second that he wasn't even using them, and they just sat in storage

). Of course, I already had basically everything of his I wanted apart from a few sentimental personal items and a small set of hand tools that belonged to my great-grandfather. Leaving behind a storage container full of things that were mostly too nice to trash, too trashy to sell, and difficult to donate. It certainly has me eyeballing my own possessions and really trying to put motive behind why I own them. Am I just holding this for some unknown reason? Do I intend to ever use it again? Would someone actually want this passed to them? I've never been prone to hoarding, perhaps in response to my parent's own habits, but it has me putting extra thought to it.
One of my biggest undertakings before all this was finally digitizing all the family photos for both me and SO. We just had countless large boxes full of family photos clogging up our closets. A few evenings every night we'd sit down and scan photos in and try to label them with any information we had as to the who/where/when. When we were done, I provided a hard drive and cloud storage link to every last one of them (I did a nice digital frame for some of the less tech savvy relatives that cycles through them all). I then informed everyone that my intent was to discard the physical copies if I didn't hear back from them. I offloaded a few of the physical ones but the vast majority went unclaimed. But now we've taken all those boxes of unseen and unappreciated photos and put them in the hands of our loved ones in a very usable way and removed the need to process them later.
Jersey Girl wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 11:54 pm
Lawyerish things
We had a family friend do the third-party seller option with a lot of success. She had a fairly long run-up to her passing and was able to make quite a few considerations. Part of that work included bringing her few children over and literally marking items for them she wanted. The ultimatum was issued that anything they didn't mark and claim then would be subject to sell/donate/trash will of the estate seller. That obviously may not be viable given your current situation, but I always admired her directness on the matter. She had one child that was reluctant to engage but her forwardness was able to push her over the edge and commit to some things. Personally, I've begun to catalog those few things we have the I know people want, just a simple excel spreadsheet with the pertinent details. I'll keep sending those positive vibes out into the universe for you.