MIL is moving to an independent of ALF soon. We are in the process of helping her clean out her home. Cleaning out her stuff. She's emoting! It has been really stressful and I don't believe she really wants to move but does understand (I think) that it is time. So, we are trying to winnow down her belongings to decide what to keep, take or pitch. She can tell a story about every item, it seems, and gets very emotional about the item.
Does anyone have any advise in dealing with her, i.e. how to comfort her? Of course she will take some things with her, but some will just need to be pitched or sold. Some of her stuffed animals smell...
Thanks in advance!
When we did it with my MIL certain items were given to family members but we all
lived out of state so mementos were limited. She had good friends in her city and she gave items like freezers extra beds and dressers to their grandkids who were just starting out.
She was moving out of state and her apt was alot smaller so she had a limit of what would fit, but believe me she still brought alot and most of it is now stored in pur garage.
My mil didn't want to be involved much in her move I think she was in shock or overwhelmed so we had to bring it to her if we thought it was a maybe and then listen to the stories of where she bought it and what year it was bought.
To this day she still complains that she wishes she had some of her items even though she would never use them. Some of her things were donated to charities and some tossed. We also hired a cleaning company/ movers to deal with items that we could not take to a donation center or that they could pick up and they could do with as they pleased with the items.
I wish you luck, I know I never want to do that task again in my life.
Also my kids have been instructed take what you want and donate the rest. Just make sure they have bingo where I move to. :)
When the box is full, she will look at it and maybe switch something out. Take those boxes with her. Then later when she is not there, box the rest up, labeling it.
Get a small storage space (either rent it or in someone's home. Put her stuff there. And wait. She will let you know what she misses or wishes she had.
For stuffed animals that smell, if it is mold, it is bad. If it just has an odor, put them in a dryer on fluff with febreeze, then take them out, put them in a box with dessicator bags, and some lavender or something she likes the smell of, tied in cheesecloth. Close the box. Open it two weeks later, and air them out. If they still smell bad, the odiferous component is permanent. Otherwise, they were just in stale air.
Oh gosh, trying to get one's parent to downsize isn't easy. For the past two years my Dad has been going through file drawer after file drawer of stuff... and like your Mom, he has a story to tell on each sliver of paper. Just recently he finally pitched his physics papers from college in the 1940's, or those papers could still be sitting in the "maybe" box.... [sigh]. And my Mom downsizes by donating one knick-knack per year.