I prefer the term "pack-rat."
My grandparents were born during the Great Depression and couldn't throw anything away. When we cleared out the house we found gobs of completely mundane and sometimes inexplicable things; e.g., a garbage sack full of used twisty ties. Whenever we would ask them if they wanted help cleaning up/throwing things out they would reply that you never knew when you would need (Fill-in-the-blank ____________).
They didn't hoard any one thing - they just kept everything.
Me too. I'm the opposite of a packrat. I get rid of things at the slightest provocation.
Which is weird, really, since no one else in my family is like that. My dad, for example, is a doctor and is very conscientious about keeping stuff. He's got records of everything. But since he raised me, I guess that would make him...doctors without hoarders.![]()
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When I play Dragon Age, my inventory is always full. I sometimes have to throw away items in order to pick up new loot. Does that make me a hoarder?![]()
My grandparents were born during the Great Depression and couldn't throw anything away. When we cleared out the house we found gobs of completely mundane and sometimes inexplicable things; e.g., a garbage sack full of used twisty ties. Whenever we would ask them if they wanted help cleaning up/throwing things out they would reply that you never knew when you would need (Fill-in-the-blank ____________).
They didn't hoard any one thing - they just kept everything.
Pack rats. My parents grew up during the Depression and they are the same way. My mother used to volunteer for the Crusader Thrift Store (A Lutheran Charity) and bring home crap all the time, back when I was a kid. It would piss me off because she'd "give" me crap I didn't want and then gripe that my room was a mess. They live in a 2-story, southern Colonial with a full basement. Even with all 5 of us kids gone, there is barely any room to walk around most of the rooms of that house. My oldest brother stated that when they're both gone, there's no way in hell we could even hold an estate sale because of how our mother has the propery (three acres) landscaped![]()
My dad, for example, is a doctor and is very conscientious about keeping stuff. He's got records of everything. But since he raised me, I guess that would make him...doctors without hoarders.![]()
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My Mother does this with bags and other "useful" things. If something belongs to somebody else, however, she's very eager to throw it away as "junk."My mother used to hoard, in a very mild way: plastic containers, old newspapers, that sort of thing, stashed away in the cupboard under the stairs "just in case it's needed". I try not to do this, and clear out the house every couple of years or so to get rid of stuff I haven't used in that timeframe. I don't necessarily chuck out absolutely everything that would fall under that criterion, but it helps me largely keep on top of things.
The show Hoarders focuses on people i personally would not consider to be "hoarders". I would consider them to be mentally ill (mind you, I'm not a doctor, I only play one on t.v.)...Those people have houses full of garbage.
I was once in a house of a woman that i would consider a true hoarder. She was a 'doll hoarder'. She had every doll ever made, from like, every era. There were boxes and boxes of unopened dolls throughout the house. There was, literally a narrow pathway that you could use to walk though the house. The pathway was about a foot and a half wide. The rest of the floor was covered with boxes of dolls. Dolls lined the walls. There were thousands of dolls in that house. I went up to the attic and it was more of the same. Every inch of space was covered with a stack of dolls. Now THAT woman was a hoarder.
Packrat Suzy
Packrat Sam
Hoarding a lot of useless crap
Out in Packrat land
Floatin' like the heavens above, looks like
PACKRAT LOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE
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