How to Declutter Sentimental Items (The 5 Item Legacy List)

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 28. 07. 2024
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    Today we're talking about how sort, simplify and declutter sentimental items. We're using the method called "the Legacy List" created by Matt Paxton and outlined in his book "Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff."
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    đŸ–€ TIME STAMPS
    00:00 The Legacy List Game Plan for Sentimental Items
    02:00 What is a Legacy List?
    04:00 What should I do with childhood artwork?
    05:50 How do I sort keepsake items?
    09:38 Did this help me become who I am today?
    11:33 What do I do with collections of things?
    13:22 What should I do with old or unfinished scrapbooks?
    17:54 What do you do with old year books?
    20:03 How do I handle other people's special items?
    26:51 What about old instruments?
    29:15 Record the stories of special things
    30:43 What to do when you feel overwhelmed with sentimental things
    34:00 Letter jackets, prom dresses & graduation gowns - oh my!
    35:32 What should I do with my old wedding dress?
    36:31 How do I sort & declutter old photos?
    39:14 You've got this!
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Komentáƙe • 419

  • @TheMinimalMom
    @TheMinimalMom  Pƙed 20 dny +18

    Thank YOU for watching and thank you Helix Sleep for sponsoring! Click here helixsleep.com/minimalmom to get 30% off an Elite or Luxe mattress (plus two FREE pillows!) - or take 25% off sitewide - during their Fourth of July Sale. If you miss this limited time offer, you can still get 20% off using my link! Offers subject to change. Have a great day!!! - Dawn

    • @SnowySpiritRuby
      @SnowySpiritRuby Pƙed 19 dny +3

      Speaking of hearing their voices again after they're gone, my grandpa died 7 years ago, and a couple years ago I had almost forgotten what his voice sounded like, when I came across an hour long youtube video that a good portion of it was my grandpa speaking at an event (actually an event I had wanted to be at but wasn't able to) - needless to say, I downloaded that video so that I wouldn't have to worry about the channel that posted it taking it down.

    • @artmakeslifemeri
      @artmakeslifemeri Pƙed 18 dny

      Dawn, I think you and Diana are AMAZING! I have gotten rid of 80% of my stuff and grown spiritually over the past year. My life has changed for the better in so many ways! However, you and Diana need to get ALL your stuff out of your Mom's house. No more excuses. I'm sure your Mom doesn't mind, but it's like you're using your old room as a storage unit. Even if you and Diana simply put your stuff in boxes and take it to your own houses to go through at a later date. All of our old bedrooms at our parents' houses could become spaces where our parents can experience the benefits of a decluttered and peaceful room in their homes without having to do any work. Truly a wonderful gift to our parents who have sacrificed so much for us. I love you and hope you have a really great day.

  • @cindiiscurious
    @cindiiscurious Pƙed 20 dny +183

    My mom died when I was 13, 34 years ago. I moved boxes of her memories all throughout my 20’s and 30’s. I changed my perspective to - what might my daughter want from my mom? I narrowed it down to one memory box of clearly cool items that represented her, since my kids would never meet her. That my mom and her mom died young of a genetic disease that I may have, I’ve always kept the perspective toward making things easier for my kids in terms of “stuff”.

    • @Oyimtalkingtoyou
      @Oyimtalkingtoyou Pƙed 19 dny +9

      Sorry to hear about your mum. I feel like t8me changes what you think is important too. After my mum died I wanted her clothes straight away, but was happy to part with them a few yrs later. Since my dad died mum’s jewellery has had more meaning for me. So don’t be too hasty too

    • @cjhoward409
      @cjhoward409 Pƙed 21 hodinou +1

      I kept everything of my moms after she died 9 years ago.
      Now I’ve paired down to the most sentimental items.
      Going thru old family pics now. What is meaningful to my kids and grand kids. I’ve probably so far only kept 10% of the pics. I just can’t keep them all

    • @cindiiscurious
      @cindiiscurious Pƙed 20 hodinami +1

      @@Oyimtalkingtoyou oh yes, once her smell was gone, the clothes didn’t have the meaning. I have her wedding dress (from Sears in 1970) and the robe she always wore. I’m thinking of getting a piece of each of them framed as art and maybe one of my 3 kids will want it but if not, I enjoyed it!

  • @sherryfisher6048
    @sherryfisher6048 Pƙed 19 dny +85

    I’m 63
my wedding dress had its stages. Haha. It first hung in mom’s closet. When the kids were about 5, I cut part of the skirt off and altered it some myself so they could play dress up in it. About 5 years later I took it apart and the skirt became a Christmas tree skirt. Then that transformed into 2 pillows. Finally
the trash! It had a fun run!

    • @alexisblake6381
      @alexisblake6381 Pƙed 12 dny +1

      I've been debating on making my dress a Christmas tree skirt too! I don't have daughters and I doubt anyone will ever wear it. I dont think i can fit into it anymore either. It's still hard to actually cut it.

    • @cjhoward409
      @cjhoward409 Pƙed 21 hodinou

      I wore a size 2 wedding dress. I had 3 boys who obviously didn’t want it. Have a grand daughter now who I knew would be more built like her mom (taller and muscular) so she wore my dress as a princess dress up item when she was ages 6-9. By age 10, sh could no longer fit into it. Lol

  • @uteme
    @uteme Pƙed 20 dny +106

    When I was decluttering 'big time' I took digital pictures of unused sentimental items. I also prayed over all items...that the next 'steward of my stuff' will be blessed & have a happy life. Doing these 2 things made & still makes letting go a breeze! ♡

    • @ppia5700
      @ppia5700 Pƙed 18 dny +8

      This is a beautiful way of sending sentimental items to another recipient.❀

  • @abbyabell1251
    @abbyabell1251 Pƙed 20 dny +80

    Dawn, I think a huge part of your legacy too is how you have helped so many of us declutter and be able to curate homes full of things we truly treasure. I think your channel is part of your legacy list! ❀ Your advice and calming presence are treasured by so many. â˜ș

    • @courtneymullin3332
      @courtneymullin3332 Pƙed 19 dny +8

      Agreed! I have a hard time listening to others about decluterring because it's just not Dawn. It's her personal character that gives me perspective and keeps me engaged better than others. She definitely shines ✚

  • @CindDJo
    @CindDJo Pƙed 20 dny +65

    I always remember a story that Peter Walsh shared about a shirt he had from his grandfather. He had so many memories of his grandfather wearing the shirt. He even had a picture of them fishing and his grandfather was wearing the shirt. Peter decided to take only a small piece of the shirt and make a mat for a photo the fishing photo. He displayed the photo in a nice frame with the shirt as the mat. He still has a small piece of the shirt but now it has context. I guess the point is this; if it's significant enough, find a way to honor it. Don't just put an old shirt in the back of your closet.

  • @kathystonum2569
    @kathystonum2569 Pƙed 19 dny +25

    I did keep my wedding dress for years and through about 10 moves - in the huge keepsake box! For me it actually paid off as my oldest daughter wore it for her wedding. It doesn't always work out this way, but for me it ended up being a special memory we were able to share. My husband tells people he walked the dress both up the isle and down.

    • @teresaremaniak856
      @teresaremaniak856 Pƙed 19 dny +3

      Regarding your husband and walking the dress up and down, that’s wonderful!! A bazillion memories with two weddings! 🎉🎉

  • @bethluksha9728
    @bethluksha9728 Pƙed 20 dny +46

    My husband and I moved a heavy box of our high school and college yearbooks around from apartment to apartment, house to house. Now in our 50s we came to the realization that they mean very little to us and we decided not to keep any of them. They're the kind of thing you feel obligated to keep but when we finally asked ourselves whether we wanted them the answer was No and it felt so good to be free of that heavy box!

    • @leighchristopher220
      @leighchristopher220 Pƙed 20 dny +11

      I finally tore out the few pages that were meaningful and don’t miss the rest.

    • @whitneyj6545
      @whitneyj6545 Pƙed 14 dny

      I didn't realize they were all online. I might just take out some of the pages people wrote on and toss the rest

  • @aprilhoover3481
    @aprilhoover3481 Pƙed 20 dny +27

    On yearbooks: My husband and I each had yearbooks from 7th grade through college. I also had my parents' yearbooks for the same period, plus a few from family members. We also had a yearbook for every year of Hub's lengthy teaching career. We had LOTS of yearbooks. They lived in the bottom two shelves of our bookcase. One day we had a surprise Kitten Diarrhea Incident where tiny, poopy feet climbed all over our yearbook collection. It was a nightmare. Every yearbook went in the trash. This was 3-4 years ago and we haven't missed a single one. It's a relief to have them gone. They aren't as valuable as you might think.

  • @janetcovington6938
    @janetcovington6938 Pƙed 19 dny +17

    Wedding dress! I had my dress all boxed up professionally after my 1973 wedding. It has moved with me and always kept inside a closet. I have 3 sons and now 4 grandsons-so on our 50th anniversary we gathered, I got out all our wedding albums, a box of other trinkets, and THE DRESS for an unboxing and story telling. We had so much fun, lots of laughter-then, I donated the dress to my favorite local thrift store in our small town.

    • @zeldasayre555
      @zeldasayre555 Pƙed 18 dny +2

      Mine has been boxed up since my 1996 wedding. Love that you had an unboxing on your 50th - great idea!

  • @wandrousvindella716
    @wandrousvindella716 Pƙed 19 dny +24

    Having lost my son a few years ago & having a daughter that is a minimalist has helped me declutter tremendously. Along the way of purging and doing "Swedish death cleaning" I have no issues putting most everything in a burn pile. Yearbooks, photos that no one will recognize, memories...all burned. It's so freeing. Anything that someone could use or benefit from, I have donated or given away.

  • @liliandaven5380
    @liliandaven5380 Pƙed 19 dny +19

    I kept a spoon from my dad when he passed. That®s it ,that really captured him. He ate oat meal every morning my whole life with that spoon. Everything else either went to the trash or if we could use it in our home for practical use- we would keep it. But that spoon. That was "him"💖

    •  Pƙed 19 dny +1

      That’s so sweet đŸ„Č

    • @albertafarmwife
      @albertafarmwife Pƙed 19 dny +1

      ❀

    • @ediefolta9494
      @ediefolta9494 Pƙed 18 dny +2

      Frame the spoon with a photo of your dad!

  • @azwife35
    @azwife35 Pƙed 20 dny +40

    I read several years ago about a company in the Midwest that collects yearbooks because there are some people actually looking for them. I’m 67 and still have mine and treasure them and still go through them. I have a cabinet in my craft room that my husband built a few years ago. It holds my favorite books from my childhood as well as some of my dolls and other sentimental stuff. It’s all contained in one place, only 27” wide and 7’ tall. My mom died when I was 16 and my father moved our family from Connecticut to Arizona and everything changed abruptly. My stepmom threw out most of my possessions including my swimming ribbons and trophies, Barbies, stuffed animals, books and all of our Christmas ornaments and decor. My husband calls that time in my life “the end of my innocence “ so I am pretty attached to the few things I have from that time. But it does stay contained and I’ve given our children permission to toss it all when I’m gone. These are my memories. I just need to mark the few that have some monetary value for them. A woman I know just lost everything, including several animals, on July 4 because of some idiots with fireworks in a residential area. So I know to not hang on to stuff with too tight of a fist. I just enjoy what I have every day.

    • @everythingthathinders6922
      @everythingthathinders6922 Pƙed 20 dny +7

      I'm so sorry that that happened to you. My mom got rid of my childhood things and I had so many memories that I wasn't sure were true! A few years ago after my mom passed away, I inherited her photos. That's where I realized that my memories were real! I truly did have those items and it explained, for me, why I had weird aspirations of things that I wanted to buy for my children!
      Anyway, I think some people don't realize that it's better for us to part with our own things when we're ready. Maybe they think they're doing it as a favor and don't realize the effect that might have. People are different!
      I hold on to things much more lightly now at the age of 60. And with a lot more understanding. I love my yearbooks also! 😊

    • @dianasimplifies
      @dianasimplifies Pƙed 20 dny +7

      That's so sad about the woman who lost her things and her animals. I have started hating fireworks. They just are not safe. I like the big displays with the fire depts present. Otherwise I'm over fireworks.

    • @HappyLife-nf7wb
      @HappyLife-nf7wb Pƙed 19 dny +2

      Sorry for what happened to you and your neighbor. Here in Hungary, we're not allowed to do fireworks in residential areas. We have to do it in huge wide open space like football field. One fine new years eve, my husband and I and our 2yo little boy went to this field and lit out fireworks, we saw many people from the apartments nearby looked outside from their windows to see us with our fireworks. But maybe not so much with animals... But again we live in Hungary where pets are not common in apartments... I hope we didn't scare the animals during that 5 minutes fun... 😔

    • @JamieM470
      @JamieM470 Pƙed 19 dny +1

      @@HappyLife-nf7wb I wish they were banned in residential areas in the US. My neighborhood sets fireworks off every night until around midnight for about 3 weeks around July 4th and Jan 1st every year. My cat spends those weeks in a closet. For some reason it's his safe space.
      I always feel so bad for the squirrels, rabbits, birds, and pets that are treated like back-yard ornaments.
      Not to mention babies, ex-military people with PTSD, and folks like me who have to get up early in the morning to work.
      Then there's always the risk of fire. That poor woman in the original commenter's post. I can't imagine what she went through.
      Another danger they create is covering up gunfire. A few years ago there was a home invasion in my neighborhood, but no one recognized it as gunfire because of all the fireworks.

  • @susanm.3029
    @susanm.3029 Pƙed 14 dny +5

    I have 5 children all grown and on their own. One Christmas I made memory boxes for each of them. It took me 4 months to go through all my photos. In the end, each of them had a box with every photo every taken of them that I had. Some were with family/friends we had lost. I added a coffee/hot cocoa mug along with their favorite snacks. All 5 opened their gift at the same time. They spent the next day going through them together. The laughter and tears from the dining room table was amazing.

  • @nikkigutman1397
    @nikkigutman1397 Pƙed 20 dny +24

    Funny to me that Dawn still has stuff at her mom’s even though she’s been a minimalist for many years. 😉 I’m glad she shared this process with Matt’s tips.

    • @doriscassan6996
      @doriscassan6996 Pƙed 20 dny +5

      My Mom would never have tolerated it so I am glad for you Dawn that you have such sweet parents.

    • @laurenpigott885
      @laurenpigott885 Pƙed 18 dny +3

      Agree! Was surprised to see - almost as surprising as the storage trailer of items from several years ago. But a great way to share a helpful resource with everyone. 👍

  • @juliec3437
    @juliec3437 Pƙed 20 dny +25

    Was just evac'd here in rural small town ca for fire. If we'd lost our house, I realized in the end there were rly only a handful of sentimental items i would truly miss, like the quilt my aunt made, and some photos. It puts things in perspective. But since it didnt burn up, now i have to sort thru it, lol. Feel blessed tho we're all ok. Thx for the video. 😊

    • @bellaluce7088
      @bellaluce7088 Pƙed 20 dny +8

      Asking myself what I'd deeply miss or have to immediately replace if all my things burned in a fire is one of my most helpful decluttering questions! So glad your home survived and you're all safe! ❀

    • @juliec3437
      @juliec3437 Pƙed 20 dny +3

      @@bellaluce7088 thank you, and God bless

    • @bellaluce7088
      @bellaluce7088 Pƙed 20 dny +2

      @@juliec3437 : - ) ❀

    • @pnwflipper2089
      @pnwflipper2089 Pƙed 17 dny +3

      Put the quilt in a bag for easy transport if there is a next time! Scan the photos so you have a digital back-up in a cloud etc.

  • @pameehanson3866
    @pameehanson3866 Pƙed 20 dny +19

    I had a cedar chest given to me by my grandparents when I was in grade school. It was stuffed full of memories and when my husband passed and I moved to another state I gave the chest to my neice. Everything inside was not anything my family would want so I took photos and tossed all of the stuff😱 The only thing I kept was a small hand crocheted lamb made by my great grandmother which I now display I have all the memories of my chest when I look at my lamb 🐑 Realize how few things can invoke many memories without having the physical items❀Thanks for sharing your room of memories

  • @user-oy8kk4hh4t
    @user-oy8kk4hh4t Pƙed 20 dny +57

    I donated my wedding dress to be used for Angel dresses. My niece was born with an extremely rare disease and she took her last breath in my arms at 18 months. The hospital gave her a beautiful dress, so I was happy to give mine for other families. 🙏

    • @kimhouchins1103
      @kimhouchins1103 Pƙed 20 dny

      I love that!!!

    • @hollybetts5838
      @hollybetts5838 Pƙed 20 dny +2

      This is a wonderful idea! I just signed up to be on the wait list to donate my gown đŸ„°

    • @user-oy8kk4hh4t
      @user-oy8kk4hh4t Pƙed 20 dny

      @@hollybetts5838 that is so cool.... I thank you for the families you will help comfort in such an unbelievably difficult time âŁïžđŸ™

    • @barbaradrath8864
      @barbaradrath8864 Pƙed 17 dny +1

      This just moved me to tears ❀ Thank you for sharing

  • @user-sl8cm7fv3g
    @user-sl8cm7fv3g Pƙed 20 dny +29

    Oh my gracious goodness! ! ! ! This is THE video I needed. I am 72 years young and have literally thousands of family photos going back over 100 years! A couple of years ago I decided to scan them and do many of the things you've discussed here, BUT, after purchasing the scanner, doing research on the process, pulling out all the stuff, I just got completely overwhelmed. And yes, I do feel the weight of it all and guilt - "I'm just being lazy" (that is true) - but you have helped me see the legitimate additional factors that continue to keep me from making progress.
    Just last week it finally hit me that I am doing this all backwards . . . I should have sorted and decluttered everything else, then come back and dealt with all the pictures and really special items. I can definitely say a big Amen to that concept. It is also exciting to hear you have much more information in you groups to help me actually complete this here-to-for unending project. Having watched the Legacy List and other programs, one thing really stood out as important is the retelling of the stories of these item. I have had the collection of vintage Salt & Pepper shakers that belonged to my favorite Aunt Ophelia for decades; and always thought it would be fun to use them at holiday meals. So recently when we were all together I broke out box and it was amazing how much we all enjoyed going through the collection. Turns out there were about 80 sets! Our 5 Grands are ages 11 to 19 and it was illuminating to watch them each pick their favorites! It was a great memorable day and now at Thanksgiving each one of us will have our very own special set of Aunt Ophelia's S/P shakers at our place setting.
    Bless you, sweet Dawn, for all you do through the Minimal Mom and all the other things you do for the Lord, your family and friends, and all of us out here in CZcamsLand. For HIS glory, Juliaann [yep that's the correct spelling :)]

    • @pkb1647
      @pkb1647 Pƙed 16 dny +1

      Hey, when you start doin your photos: I picked the number of photos I was going to keep from each "group, generation, or event" from the boxes we were saddled with when 4 relatives died and added to our pesky boxes of prints We had, and had never gone through. I figure you should be able to see a generation or a memorable event on 1-2 pages. it guided the process and I tossed over 12 pounds of duplicates, or multi pics of the same aunts, uncles...ie, got page of 5 pics of my aunt's n uncles from the age range I REMEMBER THEM best.
      5 pics of my hubbies aunts n uncles.
      10 pics of our parents weddings..
      Start by sorting into piles of the generation or the person. Then an event might jump out so make it it's own pile.
      Then just keep going through the piles weeding them down to the 5-10 photos that really capture that group. (This can take weeks). Or whatever number works for you. Key is less is more and stick to your numbers. Good luck!!!!!

  • @Lickyknee
    @Lickyknee Pƙed 20 dny +9

    My mom's friend was paying $$$ for a storage unit. My mom convinced her to empty it out and they took photos of all of the family heirlooms before getting rid if them. My mom put a photobook together and her girlfriend was thrilled. That was enough for her -- after years of saving items she never touched.

    • @dianasimplifies
      @dianasimplifies Pƙed 20 dny +2

      Yeah I'm too cheap to pay for a storage unit. My MIL was paying for one for years and years. It was literally filled with junk my hubby had to throw away. She could have bought a nice used car for what she paid all those years.😱

  • @cathywojcik2420
    @cathywojcik2420 Pƙed 19 dny +7

    I donated my High School yearbooks to our town's historical society. They were very appreciative to receive them.

  • @getliftedup2905
    @getliftedup2905 Pƙed 20 dny +63

    I was literally just hoping you’d do a video on this! Praise God!!! You are a treasure, and the content you’ve shared have transformed my life and now my children’s lives!!! Stay encouraged and keep going!!!

    • @TheMinimalMom
      @TheMinimalMom  Pƙed 20 dny +10

      THANK YOU! That means more than you know!!!

    • @lyneljohnson2960
      @lyneljohnson2960 Pƙed 20 dny +6

      Me too!!!!! Perfect timing. Yesterday I put ‘Organizing memorabilia’ in my CZcams search bar.

    • @creatingwhimsy5536
      @creatingwhimsy5536 Pƙed 20 dny +3

      Same here!!! I even messaged her IG reel!! I have the decluttering muscle built... this is the final piece for me!!

    • @kelliconlan8133
      @kelliconlan8133 Pƙed 20 dny +6

      Same!!! God's timing is the best!!

    • @ReiverGrad14
      @ReiverGrad14 Pƙed 6 dny

      Lol😂😂😂😂😂

  • @clairewatkins1720
    @clairewatkins1720 Pƙed 20 dny +15

    I hated middle school and high school, so a few years ago I read through them then threw them away! I saved my Senior yearbook but felt lighter after launching the others! 😅

  • @fionaschiffl8065
    @fionaschiffl8065 Pƙed 19 dny +9

    Was wondering if your Mum wanted you to clean out the room when you left home or gave you both a time limit? Did you feel like it was too much to do years ago and put it off? Was it only left there because your parents had room to house it? Are you going to ask your kids to pack up when they’re about to permanently leave home? Sorry if these questions are too personal so feel free to ignore them. I was wondering if your years of minimalism has given you any ideas as to how to tackle this issue. I’ve said before my kids refused and in the end I had to pack it up for them and send it to them against their will as I lived with a hoarder in a smaller home.
    I’ve got my sentimental stuff down to a small box as I didn’t like my childhood or marriage and I was just keeping the stuff because it’s old. I like the idea of a legacy list but think that’ll start with this new chapter in my life as it’s the first time I’m starting to be me.

  • @JulieDeOutdoors
    @JulieDeOutdoors Pƙed 20 dny +27

    I threw out almost everything from K-12 school items, I hated school every moment. College wasn't so bad but still threw out almost everything, from all the years, even the year books. The grad robes, prom dresses or anything related was either thrown out or donated.

    • @JamieM470
      @JamieM470 Pƙed 19 dny +4

      I don't know why we save that stuff for so many years, when it's a reminder of bad times in our life. When it's gone, your home literally feels lighter and more peaceful. :)

    • @pinkroses135
      @pinkroses135 Pƙed 13 dny +2

      Yes to not keeping the bad memories

  • @voiceojane
    @voiceojane Pƙed 19 dny +6

    I used the toe curl test: if I looked at it and my toes curled in embarrassment, it needed to be gone! Old letters, academic things that had made me miserable, and yes, middle school yearbooks for sure! Now I’m at the point of purging career type things, which is really hard in terms of identity
but it’s time.

  • @lauramccollum5686
    @lauramccollum5686 Pƙed 20 dny +8

    I love the canvas you saved, and I can see that hanging in your home on the wall by your kitchen table.

  • @Stephpope19
    @Stephpope19 Pƙed 19 dny +4

    I just did this in my childhood house and it was days and days of effort. We donated prom dresses to the high school (they were SO happy to have them) and my mom huge sewing room of endless sewing and craft supplies to our middle schools sewing class. These schools are thrilled to get these items and will truly be loved and used

  • @nicholetteburris3925
    @nicholetteburris3925 Pƙed 20 dny +24

    I would totally buy a print of the painting in your hall/office. I think it might be fun if you offered prints of some of your art work. You have such a cool vibe. ❀

  • @kimmey73
    @kimmey73 Pƙed 19 dny +4

    I threw all our photos away except what fit in a shoe box. I was overwhelmed and anxious. I don’t regret it though. My kids are 28 and 30. They don’t care. Pictures take a lot of time. I enjoy your videos. You have helped me be able to let clutter go all over my house. Thank you.

  • @jackiechoate6163
    @jackiechoate6163 Pƙed 20 dny +8

    Some public libraries and genealogical societies will collect the yearbooks. Our county does. We have yearbooks over one hundred years old! We have a few missing years. As people pass away relatives will donate those type of items. They are fun to look at.

  • @cherylwilsenach3082
    @cherylwilsenach3082 Pƙed 20 dny +16

    Hey Dawn such beautiful art!!!!! I bet so many people watching your programme would have been happy to bid on it for money towards your charity in Mexico!!! I realise this would have been a lot slower, but a win win outcome for so many people!!!

  • @smathykins
    @smathykins Pƙed 19 dny +11

    It boggles my mind how adult children leave their stuff at their parent’s house. It seems you are now cleaning it out, but aren’t you girls 40? When I finished college and moved out, my parents made me take ALL of my stuff. Your parents are extremely generous to let you keep your memory clutter at their house.

    • @LynnS971
      @LynnS971 Pƙed 18 dny

      Totally agree

    • @ginac7235
      @ginac7235 Pƙed 17 dny +6

      Generous, yes, but it may also be a way for parents to hold on to part of their kid’s’ childhood. Kids grow up so fast; it eases the transition to allow some items linger.

    • @k.johnson1256
      @k.johnson1256 Pƙed 12 dny +2

      I was thinking the same; when I moved out I had to take *everything* with me! I'm sure if I left anything my mom threw it out LOL! That's why at 50 my thirty years of moving from house to house has forced me to consolidate my keepsakes down to two boxes- out of pure necessity. :) I do realize now that my mom is a natural borderline minimalist.

    • @SimplyBeautiful516
      @SimplyBeautiful516 Pƙed 11 dny

      Agreed. I think we need to make “ leaving home means taking your stuff “ normal again. 😂
      The day I moved out I was responsible for my own belongings. Same with my grown children. If they didn’t want something I was able to keep it for a few years in case they changed their minds.

  • @wyoag12
    @wyoag12 Pƙed 18 dny +3

    I kept the sash off my wedding dress to offer to my daughter to wrap around her wedding bouquet . The rest of it went to an angel gown program for stillborn babies. Such a helpful video!

  • @lifewithlarsandsusie8315
    @lifewithlarsandsusie8315 Pƙed 19 dny +8

    That was nice of your mom to let you keep stuff there so long! As my kids are moving out I’m making them take everything of theirs! But we don’t have room to keep anything extra

  • @getliftedup2905
    @getliftedup2905 Pƙed 20 dny +12

    You’ve impacted my family’s life so beautifully, I had a dream about meeting you and giving you a huge heart felt, “THANK YOU”!!! 💜

    • @TheMinimalMom
      @TheMinimalMom  Pƙed 20 dny +1

      Thank you and I hope we get to meet in person someday! I would love that!!!!

  • @lindabourcet1349
    @lindabourcet1349 Pƙed 20 dny +5

    Photos are emotionally and physically taxing (taking them out of albums and recycling the pages and binders) so I break it down in small chunks of time. Usually your videos are 30-45 minutes and you keep me entertained while I decide which photos to keep and which to toss. I can’t handle more than that amount of time. Most of my family has passed so instead of feeling guilty about tossing them, I ask myself who besides me will ever want to look at them. We have one adopted son who wants his childhood photos archived but has no interest in older ones. So realistically they will be tossed when I die so I only keep ones that have meaning to me and I write the history on the back (which is also why it takes so long).

  • @andrearobbins9450
    @andrearobbins9450 Pƙed 19 dny +3

    I had 38 photo albums and deconstructed them, divided them among family, mailing the photos to people who could appreciate them. I then acquired two large plastic storage containers of my mother's photos when she passed away, as well as those given to my husband by his family. It took almost a year but they were disbursed, leaving me with 8 albums😊

  • @susanm9708
    @susanm9708 Pƙed 19 dny +5

    I actually cut up my wedding gown to make a christening gown for my grandkids! I found it a very ‘full circle’ moment and no regrets!

  • @ashleymckee1140
    @ashleymckee1140 Pƙed 19 dny +4

    Within a few years of graduation, I donated my graduation robes to the school for others to use. I also donated my prim dresses to a local program that let's young ladies borrow dresses for events instead of purchasing them.

  • @ChelseaLampinen
    @ChelseaLampinen Pƙed 20 dny +10

    I guess I’m confused as to why people dont clean out their childhood bedrooms when they move out for good. We shouldn’t be leaving all these things in a space that takes up room in your parents home whether they need that bedroom or not. I guess because I moved out at 18 and never moved back in with my parents I find it very weird that people still hold on to anything after moving out for good good.

    • @dianasimplifies
      @dianasimplifies Pƙed 20 dny +3

      I never took all my stuff, my mom gave me some of my things she had saved for me one box at a time and that sat in my junk room not getting dealt with for years, I finally threw most of it away. Anyway I understand why her stuff is still there.

    • @phylliscrowe9891
      @phylliscrowe9891 Pƙed 19 dny +3

      I have nieces who totally resent their mother for wanting her kids to take their stuff with them when they go, giving them a deadline after 5 years. "I have kids! I live in a small house! You have a big empty house! WHY???!! This is My Stuff!" It's an interesting power struggle (to watch).

    • @ChelseaLampinen
      @ChelseaLampinen Pƙed 17 dny +1

      @@phylliscrowe9891 yes I totally agree! I didn’t take it all with me right away. I’m 38 now and prob a few years ago my mom gave me two boxes she thought I’d want and I really have no desire to keep anything in there. I’m trying to be super mindful of things I hold on to now for my kids because I don’t want to unload a while room on them later on in life either and feel pressure to keep things.

  • @lorettacali10370
    @lorettacali10370 Pƙed 20 dny +9

    We found games in the attic from the 60s and 70s. Really bringing back memories.

  • @cindyrae3423
    @cindyrae3423 Pƙed 20 dny +7

    This was so timely. My widowed dad is starting to go through his things to declutter. Just an idea for prom dresses, organizations will take them for underprivileged girls to pick out for their proms. As always, thank you for your video.

  • @betholabecker3219
    @betholabecker3219 Pƙed 19 dny +3

    Just be glad that there are people who keep things for museums and such.

  • @magpie3571
    @magpie3571 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    A couple years ago, I was telling my then therapist about some artwork from 9th grade that I still had (from 1986-87). She suggested I frame my favorites. With new eyes, I looked through them to see what was frame worthy. Nothing. I was finally able to let go. One had gone to a show at a mall. And another was really cool. But lack of air circulation in our house caused damage to a lot of other things too.

  • @ruthrobertson630
    @ruthrobertson630 Pƙed 20 dny +7

    I think you've done a great job sharing and educating about what to do with sentimental items. Not lacking at all. And the "maybe" pile is your time-will-tell bin!

  • @beverlyness7954
    @beverlyness7954 Pƙed 19 dny +2

    I love the bookshelf. I was happy to hear your grandfather made it and you'll be keeping it. As a grandmother I have several 'kid' and Norwegian 'kid level' cultural books for my grandchildren and I to read together. A small shelf is a perfect storage area for us to store their books and other fun stuff. I truly appreciate the idea of doing FaceTime with the family members who will need to help with the sorting. By scheduling this job with that person, the job just got smaller and more manageable. No deciding what to lug to someone's house to go through and sort, or to the beach for a memorabilia sorting retreat. Those ideas sound fun as a group job, they just never happened.

  • @melindadrew4440
    @melindadrew4440 Pƙed 20 dny +6

    Matt Paxton is such a nice guy! I met him in Alexandria, VA while he was working on his show. The family he was helping was having a yard sale.

  • @vikieierdam5516
    @vikieierdam5516 Pƙed 20 dny +15

    Oh, my goodness. After watching you talk about your scrapbooks, I expected you to say that you were keeping your yearbooks. What a kick to hear you say you weren't and why you weren't. I have none of my yearbooks, I don't miss any of them and I did not keep them for the very same reasons you didn't keep yours. That is just fun to know.

    • @TheMinimalMom
      @TheMinimalMom  Pƙed 20 dny +6

      I'm so glad to hear that I'm not alone!! Sometimes I think I'm the only one who has no sentimental attachment to year books!

    • @bethdouglas4674
      @bethdouglas4674 Pƙed 20 dny +1

      I had a lot of sentimental attachment to mine. I was never popular (far from it), but I did have good memories from high school. I kept the pictures of me and any inspirational words friends and teachers had wrote me. 18 years later though, I'm not the same person I was and I now have the good memories to look back on. memories

    • @janiewerner
      @janiewerner Pƙed 20 dny +3

      Ditto. They only brought up bad memories. And other than my class picture each year, i wasnt even represented. Good riddance.

    • @theresapayne670
      @theresapayne670 Pƙed 20 dny

      You’re not the only person to feel like that. Mine gave me that yucky feeling too and they are gone now after watching this video. Thanks for permission to let them go! I love you too!

    • @kimberlytrevino2210
      @kimberlytrevino2210 Pƙed 17 dny +1

      I was not one of the cool kids and the yearbooks I keep out of guilt. I have been thinking of dismantling them to keep the very few photos of me or something real meaningful to make a high school scrap book for my self.

  • @kelliconlan8133
    @kelliconlan8133 Pƙed 20 dny +4

    I need this video today as we are in the process of cleaning/ selling our parents' home after the passing of mom on Christmas Day (and Dad is in nursing home).
    I have been doing so much better then I thought I would with not taking to much in to my home. I attribute that to the teaching of you Dawn and Matt. THANK YOU. I know I talked to you about this when I met you in person In Fairbult in February. Your kinds words both then and now have been playing in my head. "Say thank you for the memory when you see something but the item does not alway have to come home with you."

  • @KacieHeartsJesus
    @KacieHeartsJesus Pƙed 19 dny +5

    Welp, now I want spray peanut butter! đŸ˜†đŸ„œ
    Edited to add: Watching you declutter your middle school yearbooks was actually healing for me, Dawn! I lost my 7th grade yearbook many years ago due to circumstances outside my control, and whenever I thought about it I'd feel a pang of loss. But hearing you talk about your middle school experience made me think, "Oh yeah, I didn't actually love that time in my life and I'm not even close with any of those people anymore!" For the first time ever I felt relief that I don't have my 7th grade yearbook anymore! Thank you! ❀

  • @patricia.g1651
    @patricia.g1651 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    Last summer, my sister and one of my brothers finished going through our parents' 60+ year-old house to get it ready to sell. Mom was already in assisted living, and Dad had passed in 2014. We had many video chats and photo texts with the remaining 3 siblings to sort out what to keep, what to donate, what to sell, what to throw out (many roll-off dumpsters!), and who wanted their personal items back. We ended up contracting several different auctioneers (specializing in different categories like, collectable toys, model trains sets, home goods, appliances, etc, all taking a percentage of the sales as their fee) because we wanted to get the best price for these items. Once we boxed up the items, the auction companies came and loaded the boxes into their trucks. The funds went to keep Mom in a beautiful assisted living home. I say, don't wait to help your loved ones de-clutter their lives!

  • @pippas5808
    @pippas5808 Pƙed 19 dny +3

    Photos....oh my! I've always taken loads, and in the days of film processing, I kept every single photo that was halfway decent in an album. I had over 50 'magnetised' (self stick) albums, A4 size and each one between two and three inches thick. Then I realised that those were not the best albums to use - photos were either falling out of the old albums or in some cases, turning yellow through contact with the adhesive. Plus they were taking up so much space! And I'm the last in my generation, so no one is going to be interested in any of these photos once I've gone.
    I've started slowly working my way through each album, keeping only the pictures that trigger really strong and good memories. I attach these photos to sheets of card using photo corners, and I'm putting the card pages into plastic document books (the kind that have a rigid over and clear plastic pockets inside). That way, if I need to thin my photos down further in future, I just have to get rid of individual pages. So far, I've got rid of 20 albums and the document books that have replaced them are only taking up the space of one album! Doing it a little bit at a time makes it fun, because it gives me the chance to relive old memories.
    I'm also working on reducing the number of pictures I print in future. I copy any particularly special photos into a '[year] Photos for Printing' folder on my computer. Once that folder has sat there for a year, I go through it again and delete any that no longer seem important - it's amazing how many 'must print' photos no longer feel print-worthy after a year!

  • @jenbryce
    @jenbryce Pƙed 18 dny +1

    My sister, on her wedding day took pictures in our great grandmother's wedding dress before she put on her dress. It was such a special moment for our whole family, and we were so thankful we still had the dress.

  • @bonnieinthespirit6373
    @bonnieinthespirit6373 Pƙed 17 dny +2

    I love this. My mom cleared my room, called me to come get what I wanted. The rest she discarded for me

  • @monicaosterhaus6917
    @monicaosterhaus6917 Pƙed 17 dny +1

    I threw my yearbooks away and felt so free. I didn't want those insecure thoughts to continue to follow me. Some high-school girlfriends thought I was crazy😂Love your videos and all you teach us.

  • @ericag2233
    @ericag2233 Pƙed 20 dny +7

    You and Diana are fabulous artists.

  • @susanrnbc
    @susanrnbc Pƙed 17 dny +1

    Cool story about my wedding dress (from 50+ years ago). My kids or grandkids didn’t want it. My friend’s daughter is the costume manager of a non-profit theater group. They were putting on The Sound of Music and needed a vintage-y dress for Maria. My dress fit the bill and they happily accepted it. I got to see the production and Maria wearing my dress-SOOO fun. And The Sound of Music is my favorite musical-so icing on the cake. The dress is now part of their costume department and may be used for different productions in the future. It makes me so happy!

  • @judyscholfield820
    @judyscholfield820 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    About yearbooks, I have a fun story from when our second sons was born. One of the guys from my high school days became a doctor in the same hospital. We got the yearbook photo including his nickname “Hormone Hodes” and the nurses enlarged it and posted it in the doctor’s lounge. His response was priceless! I am so glad he has a great sense of humour. I may keep the photo but not the yearbook! Haha.

  • @kindredanastasia
    @kindredanastasia Pƙed 19 dny +2

    CAREFUL with other people's books! They were my storage for important documents (birth certificate, ss card, diploma, money, pictures, savings bonds) until my unknowing mother sold them while I was around college. I've mostly broken this habit since then, but still...

  • @lauranewman564
    @lauranewman564 Pƙed 19 dny +3

    The only reason to keep stuff like graduation robes is if you are faculty or administration at a college or university. They wear their most advanced hood and cap or tam at every graduation ceremony. It's way cool, and that stuff for a Master's or PhD is expensive! My son teaches at a small community college where there are only 5 PhDs, counting admin, so when he wears his stuff it's cool and people say stuff about it. Like I took pics of his back!
    I've kept my yearbooks from high school. When a friend died of cancer just over a year ago I took screenshots to add to my Facebook post about it. That was a good thing. His widow didn't want his yearbooks, so I took them to our 50th reunion and they were snapped up by someone whose friend had lost hers in a fire. I also kept just 1 of my brother's; the brother who died. It may not be my legacy, but it was part of his.

  • @vickienipp
    @vickienipp Pƙed 20 dny +2

    My husbands aunt took my wedding dress (that was ruined in a flood) and made 2 wedding dolls one for my mom and one for me my granddaughter received mine when she was 6 and my great granddaughter received my moms. It’s a beautiful memory hanging in their room.

  • @nspr8cio
    @nspr8cio Pƙed 19 dny +2

    I have digitized basically everything: photos, pictures of items that I once treasured, yearbook pages, school art & religious programs / announcements. Packed up my daughter's stuff and mailed it off to her to go through. My goal is to rid my home of at least 365 items this year.

  • @vikieierdam5516
    @vikieierdam5516 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    Letter jacket: my husband gave his to his oldest nephew. The nephew loved wearing it throughout his high school years.

  • @fionasharp595
    @fionasharp595 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    When both girls were in their late teens / early 20’s I asked if they would ever wear my dress - the answer was no because it wasn’t their style. But I kept the tiara and the veil (100” long 😍) and ultimately one daughter wore the veil on her big day. ❀ I was so happy to donate my dress and it was lovely that a small part of my day was shared. ❀

  • @lorihogg6604
    @lorihogg6604 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    Love the idea of painting a legacy picture w relevant things. Over the years, I have stashed sentimental things or things I’ve done in a box. I’d like to go through it w a legacy in mind. My wedding gown was transformed into many outfits through Angel Gowns for miscarriages and stillborn. I also saved a few appliquĂ©s in case our daughters would want to use somehow on their dresses. The woman that did it also made a few ornaments and two little purses for wedding days for our girls.

  • @KelseyHayward
    @KelseyHayward Pƙed 20 dny +5

    I threw away all old yearbooks except for mine and my husband's senior yearbook only because the notes we wrote to each other in them were cute. If it wasn't for that I could have easily tossed them all. 😂

  • @sgallant2107
    @sgallant2107 Pƙed 20 dny +1

    The year after I graduated from high school, my mother sold the house. Everybody took what they could and we pulled what remained into the driveway.
    (Yard sales weren't much of a thing at the time.)
    The neighbors came by later and took whatever they wanted.
    There was plenty to choose from, as Mom, my younger brother, and I were moving from a 4-bedroom house into a 2-bedroom single floor apartment - with just enough storage for your fake Xmas tree and snow tires.
    It worked out well, as everybody replaced what they missed with new and improved stuff.

  • @hannahcrumley3103
    @hannahcrumley3103 Pƙed 19 dny +1

    The thing that has been the biggest game changer for me with my photos was this: as I decluttered the house I freed up a metal shelf unit (5 ft tall x 3ft wide, on wheels) I almost got rid of the shelves but decided to measure them to see if they’d fit in a closet- they did but I had to move out totes full of photos
. That have me an idea. I filled the shelves with small photo boxes and labeled each box for people in my family & extended family. Now I sort photos directly to these boxes as I have time. I try to do it for 15 min/ day. I am half way through those totes of photos
. Next I’ll be sorting a cabinet of photos into the same boxes and then I’ll be done- the boxes will be delivered to the family and i will have only one small box to keep! Photos are my nemesis- this method has helped because it stays organized, I can close it up in the closet between sorting sessions, it hasn’t created more mess as I do it. Oh, I forgot to mention the trash bin beside the shelves😉!

  • @madebylora
    @madebylora Pƙed 20 dny +3

    I had an art portfolio from school and college, but I hardly ever looked at it because it was so big and awkward. (At some point in the past I’d already weeded out the rubbish). I ended up putting all the smaller size artwork in 12x12 inch scrapbook albums and then for the ones that were too big, I put a photo of those in the albums. I decided I still wanted to keep the originals of the large art in the portfolio, but It’s tucked down the side of a desk out of the way. It’s amazing how much more the art gets looked at now it’s in manageable size albums.

  • @joannafoster3423
    @joannafoster3423 Pƙed 19 dny +1

    I'm actually remembering what you've said about artwork for your kids... it's about the experience not the product. We have to have that same mentality about our art, crafts, projects, etc. I pitched all my artwork like that and it felt great actually.

  • @susanharter3945
    @susanharter3945 Pƙed 20 dny +4

    I really enjoyed this video and I know it will help me! I already ordered Matt’s book from your video the other day and can’t wait to get it. Yes, I watched every hoarder show hoping it would spur me on! As far as the wedding dress, when I started downsizing ( I have a real tiny house) I took a piece of lace and a couple of little flowers from my headpiece and put them in a little one inch bottle. I also have a tiny bottle with some rice from our wedding. That’s all I need and the dress was still wearable and donatable. I have used those little bottle for many other sentimental items. They don’t take up much room at all. Thank you for all your helpful videos!Susan Harter

  • @hopecantu5722
    @hopecantu5722 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    I donated my prom dress to a place that make gowns for stillborn babies for hospitals so they have something nice to wear. Also I had all grandparents do a recordable book for my girls for their first birthdays so when they do pass they have a nice book that has their voice being read to them.

  • @nicoleh3703
    @nicoleh3703 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    That's a really interesting concept. I have a cigar box that has two pocket knives, a comic strip, and a piece of knitting. They are everything important to me from my grandparents.

  • @nicoleh3703
    @nicoleh3703 Pƙed 20 dny +4

    Honestly, watching your videos really made me think about stuff I thought was precious to me, but wasn't exactly. I make dolls based off of characters from live-action TV shows for fun, and I have a whole bin of them. I used to take photos of them for Instagram, but all of the shows have since ended.
    A few months ago, I was able to get in contact with the executive producer of one of the shows. I shipped the mini cast out to her, and now they live in her office. Originally my goal was to get the dolls to the cast members, and one technically did. At least, until his son stole it and refused to give it back.

  • @llm5726
    @llm5726 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    I made my wedding dress in 1978. It was very simple; no lace and fussy dress for me. I kept it, and when my daughter was in 8th grade she was an angel ina Christmas play at her school. Instead of making her a costume, I got the dress out, and she tried it on. It fit well, and was appropriate for the part, so she actually wore it. I don’t even remember what happened to it after that, but I’m guessing I donated it or sold it in a consignment shop.
    For each of my grandkids, I found an app for my iPad thru which I can select photos of them from my phone, and the company prints them into little soft bound books which I have sent to each of them every six month to a year. (My daughter is much better about sending me photos of her daughter than my son is of sending photos of his son.) Granddaughter gets a book every 6 months; grandson gets one once a year. I keep a copy of each of them for myself also.

  • @user-oy8kk4hh4t
    @user-oy8kk4hh4t Pƙed 20 dny +3

    Perfect timing! God is good. I'm starting to clean my baseboards so I can paint them. I always work so much better when I work with YOU âŁïž

  • @ErinLy
    @ErinLy Pƙed 19 dny +1

    I kept my letter jacket patches Ann donated the jacket to a student at my HS who couldn’t afford one through a teacher. I used a prom dress as a bridesmaid dress. Yearbooks can be donated to the library near your high school sometimes.

  • @cajbaf
    @cajbaf Pƙed 19 dny +2

    My mom was one who kept everything and it drove me nuts. I am obviously not a sentimental person. I have two things from my dad and one thing from my grandma. I didn't keep anything from my childhood. I have a few pictures of my kids when they were younger. That's it.

  • @eileenmarieabraham4363
    @eileenmarieabraham4363 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    This was awesome! I was able to work my way through one of my mom’s art portfolios while watching this and sort out the stuff that represents what really interested her vs class exercises that she did.

  • @rhyleekendell8023
    @rhyleekendell8023 Pƙed 18 dny +1

    This is the video I have been waiting for! I don't know why my brain was exploding over journals and picture. This helped me so much.

  • @hollysmith3702
    @hollysmith3702 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    Thank you for your comments on Yearbooks. Permission to toss. It feels good to trash them.

  • @christinegomes3030
    @christinegomes3030 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    Extra helpful, super video today! I have reached this stage of my decluttering journey, SO happy to have all this information and insight!! Thank you, thank you!

  • @cherylwilsenach3082
    @cherylwilsenach3082 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    SOOO crazy that this has come up the exact evening (UK)I am sitting down to watch you and have my daughter's certificates I'm putting into a special binder for her birthday this week - compact and definitely her legacy so far.

  • @QueenMegaera
    @QueenMegaera Pƙed 19 dny +2

    I've hit pause on the "take a picture of it" solution for decluttering, because I now get stressed out about what I'm supposed to do with all those photos. I NEVER sit down with my laptop to look at photos. I have a harddrive full of photos - just because they're digital doesn't mean they're not clutter. I have to deal with that too, eventually. I don't want to add to that.

  • @brittanyk3241
    @brittanyk3241 Pƙed 19 dny

    THANK YOU for sharing this! When my parents moved to a new house 10 years ago, they gave me boxes and boxes from my old childhood bedroom / childhood. I’ve tried going through some of it but they literally saved everything and it gets so overwhelming. I am saving this video to go back to later!!

  • @babytexan3038
    @babytexan3038 Pƙed 20 dny +1

    Very helpful topic! Thank you! I always look forward to your videos.

  • @leejacobs3620
    @leejacobs3620 Pƙed 15 dny

    Great way to approach this tricky job. Thankyou for sharing.

  • @kelseyd4196
    @kelseyd4196 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    Hey! Your kids would probably LOVE to look thru those yearbooks before you toss them! My kids had a BALL looking thru mine with me and I actually got a chance to recently look thru a HS yearbook of my dad's with him too. The hairstyles, clothing-- it's a hoot! Then declutter away, my friend!!!

    • @karenrich9092
      @karenrich9092 Pƙed 20 dny +1

      Yearbooks can be scanned on a flatbed scanner and saved as a PDF file. Each page is scanned separately, and then all pages merged into one file. I know about this because I archived the yearbooks for my husband's high school. All of this fits on an extremely large flash drive.

  • @familyhistory-jennings836
    @familyhistory-jennings836 Pƙed 20 dny +1

    You both are so talented. Love the legacy list idea.
    Thanks for sharing it.

  • @blandlinda
    @blandlinda Pƙed 18 dny +1

    I went through my parent’s photo albums recently. My mother passed away 26 years ago and my Dad passed away 4 years ago. It was a process. I even found myself somewhat depressed after going through them. I planned to do it in a weekend but it ended up taking almost a month. I had to work on it in pockets of time. It was mentally exhausting. I don’t regret doing it but I totally underestimated the time it would take and the emotional impact it would have.

  • @user-fk1du6ki2o
    @user-fk1du6ki2o Pƙed 19 dny

    Great video. I spent over 3 years going through hundreds and hundreds of photos. Back when I was first married, you made at least 2 copies of everything so you could share. I sorted for months on end. I then scrapbooked albums for each of my 4 grown and on their own children ( plus my own set ) and gifted them the albums a couple of years ago for Christmas. I picked the photos that best represented the story and along with the picture documented all I could about it. It was a TON of work, but so important to me to give them this history. They have all shared how special it is to have them. What is hard now is what to do with generational history items. I have been sorting and decluttering for many years now but the history things of people now gone can be very difficult. I have a history trunk for these items so they are contained but not sure what anyone else would want to keep. So again, I am so thankful for all the work put in the albums as they are what tell the family stories.

  • @pamlure9616
    @pamlure9616 Pƙed 10 dny

    Yearbooks. Take pics of the pics you want and/ or the personal notes. You can refer to them in a digital album. 3 heavy books rarely opened now gone.

  • @kennethbailey9853
    @kennethbailey9853 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    PS I loved the black and white sketch of eggs it told a story of comfort. One persons trash is anothers treasure. 😊

    • @sl9906
      @sl9906 Pƙed 20 dny

      I loved that picture too!

    • @peacewG
      @peacewG Pƙed 19 dny

      @@kennethbailey9853 that was awesome. Thought it would be so cute in of the barns near the chicken coops.. or would make cute notecards!

  • @cynthiaslebodnik6945
    @cynthiaslebodnik6945 Pƙed 20 dny +1

    Thank you for this video. This is a hard area of decluttering. I am a scrapbooker, so I have many of these from my adult years, except for one for my birth to marriage years. My wedding gown is a must keep. It was designed and made by my best friend, so it's one of a kind. Oh, the things we save. On my family bookcase is my childhood stuffed dog, minus its ear.

  • @lorettacali10370
    @lorettacali10370 Pƙed 20 dny +12

    We just lost our mom and going thru her home. It's really difficult!

    • @TheMinimalMom
      @TheMinimalMom  Pƙed 20 dny +3

      That is so hard...I think you would really enjoy Matt's book, he talks about losing his dad and how hard it was to go through his things.

    • @pattybates83
      @pattybates83 Pƙed 20 dny

      I was in a car accident on 15 June (this year).
      I am home from the hospital and a couple of days recovery at a friend's home.
      I knew before I got back that I have to use this "downtime" (no work for 3-4months! đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€ïž) to get a handle on my clutter and make my home the space I've always wanted.
      It isn't easy.
      I have rough days dealing with my injuries (physical limitations from them) and a some overwhelm with my accumulated stuff.
      BUT
      I keep on. I know the reward is worth it.
      Many take aways from the accident, one being: the Universe's full on kick in the pants to get in gear and do everything I can to, once and for all, reduce, toss, donate my junk and come out with a tidier, breathable, welcoming home in which i can be happy to have friends drop by, host game or movie nights and just enjoying ~being~
      I have CZcams playing video after video in my living room as I go through my boxes (I work best with a body double)
      I am part of the Take Your House Back community as well.
      I'm so glad I already knew about you and Cass and Dawn so I could begin working in earnest with 3 YT friends ready to cheer me on
      I have got A LOT of work to do as I heal.
      I ready for it 🎉

    • @user-oy8kk4hh4t
      @user-oy8kk4hh4t Pƙed 20 dny +1

      I'm so sorry for your loss 🙏

    • @staycehale5903
      @staycehale5903 Pƙed 19 dny

      Hardest thing!

    • @user-oy8kk4hh4t
      @user-oy8kk4hh4t Pƙed 19 dny

      @@lorettacali10370 I'm so sorry for your loss. My mother went to be with the Lord 9/2021. I understand. I wish you peace and comfort 🙏

  • @angelalapiene-kurz2855
    @angelalapiene-kurz2855 Pƙed 5 dny

    My sons teddy was a stuffed space ship haha. I kept it. I also kept my daughters toys r us stuffed dog. We gave it to her dog and he slept under it as a puppy. Now he beats it up. Its hers when he crosses over the bridge.

  • @budeye420
    @budeye420 Pƙed 16 dny

    Thank you so much for sharing, I found this video so helpful. I appreciate you and your channel.

  • @sct4040
    @sct4040 Pƙed 19 dny +1

    Even if you don’t plan to toss something out, it’s still a good idea to take a photo of it just in case of a catastrophe. At least you still have a photo.

  • @JaneDoe-tp9do
    @JaneDoe-tp9do Pƙed 20 dny +1

    I lost my yearbooks from college in a flood a few years back... I still miss them... Mostly because my now husband wrote in them and even though we were just friends at the time, I did treasure that... Neat to see what each of us value as part of our legacy 💜