nvtribefan
Member
- Location
- Reno, NV
For those of you who are, or know someone who "collects" things: Where do you think the line is between collecting and hoarding?
When you cannot wade through your home, you are a hoarder.
The worst is animal hoarders. I knew a woman who had 65 cats in her house. Animal Control got called, and they had to destroy all of them because they were too far gone and nearly dead with diseases like calicevirus; cats tend to get pretty unhealthy when there are too many of them in an enclosed space like that. She even had cats living in her lower kitchen cupboards because they were afraid to come out. They did some horrible damage to her home too.
The difference is very simple. Hoarding is keeping what should be thrown out. I mean actual garbage. Collecting is having what pleases you. You may wish to look at an item frequently or you may simply enjoy owning it.
My only book hoarding that hasn't been helped by Kindle is cookbooks. I've made myself wait at least two weeks and if I still want a cookbook, I order it. I like my cookbooks to be actual physical books so I can't hide them with electronic gadgets.
The woman who had the cats isn't evil, but she lost touch with reality. I feel very sad for the man with the rats and my heart goes out to him because he obviously loved them very much. If he wasn't harming anyone by having them, the government should have let the man and his pets live in piece. They could have at least been humanely euthanized or, better yet, relocated if they actually posed a threat, something that I doubt.I saw one of those cat hoarders on the Hoarders TV show. Just heartbreaking how cruel people can be. She even had a dead "favorite" in the freezer!
Another guy loved his pet rats, which multiplied into the hundreds, ate through his mattress so he slept on a mattress full of rats. They lived in stuffed chairs, cabinets, cupboards and the walls were infested. He actually cried with grief when the exterminators came. Heartbreaking in more ways than one.
I sorted my cookbooks a while back, so everything I've got now I'm keeping.
Every six months I go through my regular books and take what I don't want/need to the VA. The local VA has a long-term rehab unit which is for the most part guys who've come back from combat with major injuries. The first time I took books to them, the unit supervisor called and told me it was like Christmas on the unit. The guys are bored out of their minds so they love a new supply of books to read.
I have quite a collection of cookbooks, too. I was thinking recently that I would like to get rid of most of them, though. A trip to Goodwill may be in my future.
In order to be a hoarder you have to buy lots of stuff, in order to buy lots of stuff you have to have money.......I'll never be a hoarder.
For those of you who are, or know someone who "collects" things: Where do you think the line is between collecting and hoarding?
I've collected several things for well over sixty years. I've never sold any.Hoarding? You never sell or part with anything. Collectors sell and trade.