Andtototoo
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2010
- Messages
- 2,997
Yeah, I have to agree.Who came up with that number.Minnesota said:It should NOT take 9 days to clear out a house. Maybe 2 days for packing, 1 day for moving it, 1 day for cleaning. 2 max. So 5 days or so total.
When the time comes for my mom, I have one sibling, and should he not be able to help...OH WELL!
It took us a month to get through my grandmothers stuff and 1 week we hired a professional to come in when we had to return home.
LOL, No way on this planet could I pack and have my house empty in 9 days unless you consider just shovelling stuff into garbage bags as packing.
When we cleaned out my mother's one bedroom apartment, we had 6 days. It took us three solid days to do so, a fourth day to sort her papers, then another day to clean, then another day bringing stuff around to the various places we were donating it and/or wait at home for pick up She wasn't a hoarder and had only moved there 10 years before, but she also died very unexpectedly, so we had to find her financial records and other important papers. Then you have to go through belongings and determine who's getting what and then from what no one wants -- where does that go? As it was, we did it too fast and now regret some of the things we chose to give away, but we did the best we could.
When my grandmother died, it was also unexpected and we weren't cleaning out a house, just her room. Nonetheless, it took us one solid day to go through her clothes and books -- she had been stashing cash in pockets and between pages. We found $8K in that one day. Worth the time.
When my dh's grandmother died, having outlived her dh by some years, we all cleaned out their house. They had lived there for 52 years. They were not hoarders and were very frugal people, so there wasn't a lot of stuff. Nonetheless, it took nearly a month (8 people after work and on weekends) to clean it out.
My coworker's mother was a hoarder. It took nearly 250 hours of work just to sort the stuff and empty her house. Some rooms were easy -- newspapers ad magazines could just go into the dumpster. Other rooms were not so easy and the items had to be sorted and divided. Then you had to do all the work to prep it for sale.