Breaking the Cycle: Jasmine Harman's Emotional Hoarding Journey

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  • Опубліковано 16 січ 2025

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  • @icameisaws4829
    @icameisaws4829 5 років тому +396

    My mother was hoarder, and people will sometimes never know what the kids are deprived of. Growing up, i couldn't have sleepovers, never was able to walk around the house barefoot, and could never find anything to wear for school. It was also embarrassing when people showed up unannounced. I remember going through winters and summers without heat or ac because our house wasn't clean enough to allow the landlord in. When the landlord finally sent someone, they complained about the conditions that my mother denied.
    I can see the effects in adulthood. If i leave the house with cleaning i literally think about it all day to the point where i rush home to clean. If one thing is out of place, i feel uncomfortable with company. If i see clutter, i just go through mental flashblacks.

    • @stacyfillmore9989
      @stacyfillmore9989 5 років тому +47

      My childhood was the same. It effected me as an adult.

    • @suem7172
      @suem7172 5 років тому +36

      I'm so sorry. It is my story too. It does make me fearful of repeating the pattern.

    • @rebeccasomebody4843
      @rebeccasomebody4843 5 років тому +17

      Same way with me. It was horrible.

    • @suem7172
      @suem7172 5 років тому +7

      @Dina G I'm sorry. That must be so difficult.

    • @suem7172
      @suem7172 5 років тому +4

      @Dina G absolutely.

  • @stringbender57
    @stringbender57 5 років тому +254

    So sweet of Jasmine patiently trying to help her mother. Jasmine is such a beautiful woman inside and out...wow!

    • @bjdavis51
      @bjdavis51 5 років тому +10

      yes she is -- I was just thinking the same thing!

    • @marijkekuit6449
      @marijkekuit6449 3 роки тому +4

      Me too

    • @jacqueschannel4538
      @jacqueschannel4538 3 роки тому +2

      Whoaaa, what have you been doing inside of her to know that much

    • @Berven-gf9jq
      @Berven-gf9jq 3 роки тому +1

      She is the most perfect woman I have ever seen 🙂

    • @BalletShoes-c1k
      @BalletShoes-c1k Рік тому +2

      Disagree! They do not deliberately manipulate, they just can’t help themselves bcs they react this way to their trauma whereas we don’t. I see it as an illness & thankfully have never met one. Empathy, my friend, is in short supply these days.

  • @SamtheMan0508
    @SamtheMan0508 5 років тому +173

    Her kids are so patient. I would have been so frustrated.

    • @billforse2687
      @billforse2687 5 років тому

      Got that right 😎

    • @gillianbrookwell1678
      @gillianbrookwell1678 3 роки тому +2

      This woman Versula would drive me insane.

    • @charliethecockatoo2159
      @charliethecockatoo2159 2 роки тому +15

      @@gillianbrookwell1678 Visula. But yeah, beats me how her daughter can claim she's such a wonderful mother when all I can see is selfishness.

    • @gillianbrookwell1678
      @gillianbrookwell1678 2 роки тому +11

      @@charliethecockatoo2159 Hoarders are very self absorbed.

    • @charliethecockatoo2159
      @charliethecockatoo2159 2 роки тому +6

      @@gillianbrookwell1678 That much is unfortunately rather painfully apparent.

  • @melmack2003
    @melmack2003 5 років тому +271

    A courageous family to allow us into their lives. I wish them well.....

    • @BrandyD1777
      @BrandyD1777 5 років тому +9

      Shows the strength of trying to understand your illness and make changes. Many are not brave enough and some may but it's all a facade. This is not, they are not. 👏👏 To you for acknowledging and being positive, sensitive with your statement

    • @tramekn
      @tramekn 5 років тому +2

      Yes. I want the best for them. We all have our struggles.

    • @susieingred
      @susieingred 5 років тому +2

      Yes good on her brave & insightful daughter who is s presenter, a great idea for a story

    • @Rockking1111
      @Rockking1111 5 років тому

      Yes

    • @JohnElliott-eq5ri
      @JohnElliott-eq5ri 9 днів тому

      Yes... thank you both so much for inviting us into your lives... what courage it must have taken to address this sensitive issue...l can only imagine... wishing you peace.❤

  • @lizxu322
    @lizxu322 2 роки тому +128

    My mother is a hoarder. If I even throw away things like old underwear or broken electronics she will take it back from the bin and stash it somewhere. If I have to throw things away I have to find a bin in a park or something. Hardest thing in my life is growing up with her. She won't even throw away rotten food, won't even compost it- she just cooks it again and eats it. I don't know how she's still alive.

    • @keiwiikiwi
      @keiwiikiwi Рік тому +20

      Same thing with my mother...horrible

    • @Ddeath.Eaterr
      @Ddeath.Eaterr Рік тому +8

      Same

    • @Amysmith29
      @Amysmith29 Рік тому +7

      That's terrible, if you are under aged you should definitely try to get help❤

    • @CrustyUgg
      @CrustyUgg Рік тому +6

      That's disgusting 🤮 I would call elder services on her

    • @starlightdreamer1999
      @starlightdreamer1999 7 місяців тому +3

      That's a whole different level to eat rotten food 🤮

  • @suem7172
    @suem7172 5 років тому +123

    This was my mother's affliction as well. We ended up cleaning it all out after she passed away. Best wishes to the family. I hope you are still making progress.

    • @pcarr51
      @pcarr51 Рік тому +1

      I'm nearly at this same point. She's 80 and in a nursing home. I'm scrambling to find important documents

  • @_Martine_
    @_Martine_ Рік тому +28

    My mom is a hoarder, every time I go to her house never feels like home , it’s so depressing , I envy normal families on holidays.

  • @camrenwick
    @camrenwick 3 роки тому +59

    "She's my mum and I'll never give up on her" Words of love at the end of this story.

  • @jubilantsleep
    @jubilantsleep 5 років тому +100

    My family is full of hoarders. I grew up with them. They've gotten worse since I moved out. I tried cleaning things out and it reappeared within days. It's so frustrating.

    • @Tony.Technics.1200s
      @Tony.Technics.1200s 3 роки тому +11

      They say that there's what, like 3 million hoarders? I don't even know how they know that since most hoarders don't even tell their own family. My guess is that there has to be so many more hoarders then they say.
      And yes, its frustrating, if not infuriating to spend a weekend cleaning up someone else's filth, just to make room for more junk.
      My ex-father in law was a hoarder, and once a year the family would show up and empty, clean, and paint the walls of every room( that part would take an entire week). Sure enough my father in law would hoard his beautiful house the very moment that the paint dried. Frustrating indeed!

    • @migbham1
      @migbham1 10 місяців тому +1

      Same. I'm only a few minutes into this episode and am cringing at the daughter's well-intentioned act of getting a storage unit. My parents' hoard now fills THREE rented storage units. Hoarders see a storage unit as a lottery and license to get loads more crap.

  • @pearlgoddess2940
    @pearlgoddess2940 2 роки тому +58

    My mom is like this. Her house is disgusting. Problem is, Noone can talk about it or refer to it then she goes into a rage( BP disorder) so I have to let her deal with it. There is truly nothing to be done and it's so sad.

    • @Fatelovesirony960
      @Fatelovesirony960 2 роки тому +8

      Same, I get emotional blackmail for suggestions

    • @oregoncountrygirl
      @oregoncountrygirl 2 роки тому +1

      Same!

    • @morganofsharick2415
      @morganofsharick2415 2 роки тому +13

      And what’s hard is that other adults who find out will cast judgement on us. “Lazy children, if my mom’s house was like this I’d help her clean it out in a jiffy!” If only it were that simple. As if we haven’t tried a million times. But as you’ve said, and as most of us have experienced, the mere mention of possibly getting rid of some things sends them into a rage. I’ve stopped talking to my parents altogether about it because to be honest I can’t even handle their freak outs, it just triggers me back into childhood.

    • @Parasi4n
      @Parasi4n Рік тому +1

      BP disorder really broke me up because of how hard dealing with hoarder with it. constant argument, screaming, and crying, and mood changes

    • @artworkjeremystudio521
      @artworkjeremystudio521 Рік тому

      ​@@morganofsharick2415❤❤❤

  • @janyou17
    @janyou17 5 років тому +220

    She has the most loving children..

    • @apprentice500
      @apprentice500 5 років тому +6

      Her daughter is beautiful, inside and out

    • @Paulo37580
      @Paulo37580 4 роки тому +1

      Yep. You're right. They're adorable.

    • @gillianbrookwell1678
      @gillianbrookwell1678 3 роки тому

      Jasmine has her home looking lovely with no clutter at all, and who can blame her.

  • @greengorillah
    @greengorillah Рік тому +25

    I am a hoarder. It is extremely hard to change (as I feel comforted by my stuff and every item is strongly connected with memories and emotions). At the same time I feel ashamed of my house as I know damn well this is beyond what is considered normal. I live alone, don't know how I could live with my (tidy) partner under one roof. Do I value stuff over people? I don't know, stuff feels safer that is true. I recently lost several close family members and it definitely made things worse. Its touching to see Jasmine help her mom. I also once sold stuff at a car boot - that is I planned to - in the end I ended up buying stuff beforehand to sell on as I could not find enough of my own things I was prepared to sell. I did sell my typewriter, and still regret it. Before I throw broken things out I will make pictures, that way it is easier.

    • @-astrangerontheinternet6687
      @-astrangerontheinternet6687 Рік тому +6

      My dear, not only do you value stuff over people- you value stuff over yourself.
      Connect with yourself. Get into your body. Give yourself the love you’re looking for through the stuff.

    • @DefiantAngel87
      @DefiantAngel87 Рік тому +2

      I can relate. Hugs

    • @theeggtimertictic1136
      @theeggtimertictic1136 7 місяців тому +1

      I'm the same ... We have such strange brains.

  • @entropyregen7438
    @entropyregen7438 5 років тому +73

    Nothing gets me doing my housework like this show!

  • @dcabral00
    @dcabral00 2 роки тому +54

    The problem with hoarders is that they themselves are not the ones suffering, are the people who live with them, without options who truly suffer.

  • @lillybrown4228
    @lillybrown4228 5 років тому +66

    I can't tell u how much this show stressed me out

    • @Gleyi07
      @Gleyi07 5 років тому

      Lilly Brown I couldnt finish watching it.

  • @davidvelez5266
    @davidvelez5266 5 років тому +72

    Jasmine is incredible! Can't stop watching

  • @KupoKaachan
    @KupoKaachan 5 років тому +45

    Wow.. this explains so much. I had a an old lady living next to me, she felt like my granny always inviting me over for tea and her place looked exactly like this and I couldn't understand why as a kid

  • @YourAverageGoyl
    @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +204

    These people have been traumatized in some way, perhaps experiencing repeated rejection from the important people in their lives. And, so, they form an emotional attachment to their 'things'. They don't need judgment, they need healing from abuse.

    • @user-hd8fi9et1r
      @user-hd8fi9et1r 5 років тому +24

      Yeah. Was curious where the father is. Dead, divorced or abandoned the family. It's like she said she can't trust people (also her upbringing of moving a lot) so, she wants to hang onto things and an object won't leave you, talk back or argue. Plus shopping and finding "treasures" gives a rush of dopamine, makes you feel competant and happy and forget for a moment the mental distress and horror show at home. It's def multi faceted and hard to deal with.

    • @YourAverageGoyl
      @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +7

      @@user-hd8fi9et1r "...And an object won't leave you, talk back or argue." Precisely, well said. I think it's also a way to feel protected from the outside world, to be surrounded by the 'things' that don't purposely or deliberately hurt her or say mean things.
      Edit: Yes, you're right, WHERE is the dad or husband?

    • @KARENboomboomROXX
      @KARENboomboomROXX 5 років тому +2

      Woooooooow, u just have me insight into my husband who is more of a functional hoarder. He hoards useful things if he can aquire them free or for little cost. It's like he's practical until it's out of control...

    • @kait2972
      @kait2972 5 років тому +1

      YourAverageGoyl way to stereotype and give a psychoanalysis on people you've never met. Thats just what mental health sufferers need, a self-righteous imbecile pigeon-holing them as emotionally frail and needing assistance.

    • @YourAverageGoyl
      @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +4

      @@kait2972 "Stereotype"? How did I stereotype her? All I'm saying is she didn't become a 'hoarder' just because she likes 'things'. Something happened to her, most likely from her parents... Some kind of repeated emotional trauma or abuse. I suppose you think there is a pill that can fix this? Fix her "mental health" (your words, not mine).

  • @oopsparis
    @oopsparis 5 років тому +58

    This woman is actually SICK, and it's terrifying, she should go to therapy, this addiction is awful.

  • @katytaylor681
    @katytaylor681 5 років тому +48

    Fascinating documentary! What a wonderful daughter Jasmine is and it was lovely to see such a caring family. Clutter is so strange - other people's always looks SIMPLE to clear but your own is difficult!

  • @suemick8709
    @suemick8709 5 років тому +55

    This makes me very anxious. I can't stand clutter that never moves.

  • @joyparker3116
    @joyparker3116 5 місяців тому +2

    Don’t be angry when people are trying to help you! Have Mercy in your heart !!!!

  • @Rockking1111
    @Rockking1111 5 років тому +31

    I was like “her daughter Jasmine looks soo familiar” then I remembered I use to watch her on the tele. It’s very brave of them, let’s hope she gets the help she needs. She definitely has family support. Bit hard to see Jasmine pouring her heart out. But sometimes tears are the only words the soul can speak

    • @jacqueline8559
      @jacqueline8559 3 роки тому +1

      I still watch her presenting 'A, Place in the Sun'. She comes across as a genuine, lovely person.

  • @TomMarvan
    @TomMarvan 5 років тому +18

    The ten or fifteen seconds or so starting at about 8:52 is very touching. Her daughter is clearly empathetic, understanding and concerned. I hope they can find a solution for her.

  • @Urban-Spaceman
    @Urban-Spaceman Рік тому +6

    The mother and daughter were on ‘This Morning’ recently. The daughter is still emotional over her mother’s condition. Very sad situation.

  • @sanablaise718
    @sanablaise718 5 років тому +50

    What an amazing loving family! Jasmine is such a beautiful person
    Inside & out. I think a hobby would help mum it'd keep her out of the charity shops! Aw hope the house stays clear once it's done, I think the mum is lonely.

    • @Msunbird02
      @Msunbird02 5 років тому +3

      Or perhaps an unpaid volunteer's job to replace 'browsing' time would help refocus her attention.

  • @povnw8985
    @povnw8985 5 років тому +96

    The things we own end up owning us.

    • @sylwia7060
      @sylwia7060 5 років тому +2

      Best coment ever 🤔 Greetings from faraway Norway 🤗♥💜💙💚💛

    • @eaakerman8829
      @eaakerman8829 5 років тому +1

      That ’s what I say😀

    • @KookaburraLove
      @KookaburraLove 5 років тому +3

      POV NW I have had to clean out five friends and relatives places. My sister was a hoarder and it was a nightmare cleaning it out when she died. What I have realised is when you die it is all (mostly) just stuff that no one wants.

  • @kraftaculousgreekgodofcraf1113

    As a hoarder of many many years… I just cried the entire video… 😫… what a beautiful supportive family. Jasmine is an angel

  • @emilyann4549
    @emilyann4549 4 роки тому +53

    I completely broke off my relationship with my hoarding parent. They decided that their belongings are more important to them than I am. I feel so much happier now. Don’t help these people, you’re abusing yourself.

    • @fyali1632
      @fyali1632 3 роки тому +2

      Don't give up

    • @annefrew7348
      @annefrew7348 3 роки тому +10

      I'd be the same i could not stand it I'd get soo angry

    • @TasyaCraft
      @TasyaCraft 3 роки тому +3

      I just dont understand, how come a children broke off relationship with their "sick" parent? If their own children gave up, whos then will help them?

    • @Itsthatchaar
      @Itsthatchaar 3 роки тому +16

      @@TasyaCraft yes they might be sick but you have to think how unwell that is making the child, mentally. It’s not fair either way. But sometimes you have to look after yourself as those people will prob not get better.

    • @TasyaCraft
      @TasyaCraft 3 роки тому +5

      @@Itsthatchaar ah i see. It is different culture anyway. I respect her choice, mental health is not a joke. May God help these people.

  • @juicylucy6488
    @juicylucy6488 5 років тому +19

    Hoarding should be classes as an addiction as well as ocd
    I suffer from both ocd and addiction and what the Mum says sounds a lot like being in the pits on addiction.
    I wish her the best in this life

    • @roselee4445
      @roselee4445 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe I could get Social security payments for disability Hoarding , then I can go buy more stuff???

  • @cut3554
    @cut3554 5 років тому +11

    Such a beautiful and supportive family.

  • @chrys77cross
    @chrys77cross Рік тому +7

    My mom was/is a hoarder. When we were taken from her and put into foster care the entire house was a foot deep in stuff. My oldest brother lived with her for many years and she moved a couple times. She had a storage unit and she had health issues but she seemed to keep on top of things with him around. I thought she had overcome and improved. When my brother left I came into town for his funeral and spent my entire trip helping her sort through the storage unit. She had made decisions to get rid of half the items in the unit. I tried to encourage her to have a garage sale and thought she had set things up to get one going. I was so proud. She moved again recently to a one bedroom apartment. I was videocalling her and she told me she was sleeping on the couch. I asked her if she had no bedroom? She shamefacedly told me all the items from the unit that we spent hours making decisions on not to keep was hoarded in that room. I am devastated. I think if she wasn't limited by her health and finances it would be much worse. 😢

  • @itscozmez
    @itscozmez 7 місяців тому +2

    The part at 15:17 was so relatable to me. It was like I was standing in the cluttered back room of my house all over again, watching my mum try to help my dad sort through all his paper stuff - old bills, rennovation contracts from 30 years ago, papers and papers of household bills and letters and promotional brochures collected by my grandfather and passed onto him. Even when you take all the stuff out and lay it in front of them, they'll still want to keep about 80-90% of the things. You really don't throw away much. And it's so tiring because you have to use up your own time to sit with them and go through each individual object, and it in the end the mess doesn't really reduce by much. And you have to go through another round again once the cupboards become full with new paper and letters and bills. God, it's so tiring even just thinking about it.
    So the context is that we were renovating and repainting the family home recently and we've had a ton of junk to clear out. Old power tools that will never be used, hacksaws, piles and piles of paper, filing cabinets that are stuffed to the brim and exploding with folders. So much of that hasn't been touched at all and it's all just caked with dust and dirt and mould. There's some relatively cleaner stuff that's just all the packaging from electronic devices he's bought over the years (laptops, phones, radios, ipads), so many cables and screws and laptop bag freebies, broken mobile phones, the list goes on.
    Most of it is concealed, so you open the drawers and cupboards and they're just packed with stuff to the brim. So tight you have push things in. Things in boxes, wrapped in clingwrap and plastic on top of the cupboards. I knew it was bad but yesterday's sorting sesison, when we took everything out and laid it all on the floor, was like a big slap in my face. I wanted to cry from how the amount of stuff to sort through seemed to be never-ending.
    There's just too much stuff for him to look at them all individually, he doesn't have the energy to look through them and he's not very keen on sorting through them either, and hence we ended up keeping most of them in multiple cardboard carton boxes from other stuff that we've bought.
    And then there's the heavy, rusty and dusty cabinets filled with all my dad's old hobbies - almost a hundred different camera lenses, cameras, VCR tapes (we don't even have a VCR player in the house), spoiled CD players and record players that he's keeping because he believes he'll be able to fix them in future, pictures books from when he was a kid, broken E-readers that he wants to keep as memorabilia. Like, i understand wanting to keep stuff for sentimental reasons but if you wanna keep everything for sentimental reasons, that's not being sentimental, that's living in the past.
    I actually got a migraine headache from sorting through and carrying all that stuff around the house, helping to move them so they could access the walls to paint them. The number of carton boxes we've filled up with stuff is unbelievable. And it's still not enough. I took less than five minutes to organise my things to prepare for the room painting and we took two days to sort through like half of his stuff. Yesterday's sorting session didn't really feel productive - we only threw away or recycled like 3 trash bags' worth of stuff from the six or so cupboards and chest of drawers of stuff in that back room.
    I don't hate my father - he's provided for us materially and he lost his father in his twenties so i can kind of understand where this desire to hoard all this stuff is coming from - it's just that visually, the clutter makes me feel so trapped and suffocated and the sight of all these dusty, rusty things just makes me want to throw everything away. i can't stand the dust getting onto everything in that backroom because it's where my desk is. like, everything is just so old and dusty and yellow.
    my brother and mother feel the same way too, and i've lost count of the number of times my mother has shouted at him regarding this hoarding issue.
    Watching documentaries like this is helping me to cope with my feelings. i don't think we'll get any closer to decluttering the things, but at least i can accept what i can't control.

  • @ingeborg-anne
    @ingeborg-anne 3 роки тому +6

    Bless Jasmine's heart. What a good daughter she is.

  • @five9guy69
    @five9guy69 5 років тому +82

    someone once told me this is supposedly a form of OCD. sounds like depression plays a role in it

    • @Mollecules75
      @Mollecules75 5 років тому +5

      And lack of prioritization and organization..... It's a tough battle.

    • @amenaabizar1892
      @amenaabizar1892 5 років тому +2

      It is

    • @kee-tu4cq
      @kee-tu4cq 5 років тому +11

      It differs depending on what country you're in. In US before 2013 it was classified as a sub-type of OCD. In 2013 with the release of the DSM-V it is now it's own diagnosis listed in a section titled obsessive-compulsive and related disorders.
      I personally had extremely severe ocd and went to a top residential treatment center in the US (McLean Hospital). They also treat hoarding in the same unit and the treatment is the same using CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) and ERP (Exposure & Response Prevention). Unfortunately the treatment is very expensive as most specialist don't accept insurance.
      Treatment really helped me turn my life around and my ocd is now pretty mild.

    • @sallyclay1974
      @sallyclay1974 5 років тому

      Ok

    • @Serra-81
      @Serra-81 5 років тому

      From my understanding, its a subsect of OCD. They have a compulsion to keep things, or buy things. Eventually, it gets to be too much.

  • @TakiMomoify
    @TakiMomoify 5 років тому +51

    When I was like 12, my family cleaned out my grandmother’s house. I think she started hoarding after my grandpa died (I didn’t remember ever seeing clutter before then, but I was five when he died). I still feel pretty guilty about it, because no one really gave her a chance to choose what she wanted to keep. She was already traumatized by my grandpa’s death, and then we traumatized her all over again by just throwing everything away.

    • @gunillaholmberg6506
      @gunillaholmberg6506 3 роки тому +6

      😢

    • @jessicalatorraca8507
      @jessicalatorraca8507 2 роки тому +7

      So kind of you to notice that. You were only 12. Please forgive that child - you simply couldn’t have known. 🧡

    • @madeleine1138
      @madeleine1138 6 місяців тому

      Yes that is the worst thing you can do to a hoarder. But in all fairness it's not anything most people realize unless they research and try to understand it. You have great insight into what your grandmother must've been going through. ❤ You were just a child.

  • @PeaceLoveHarmony82
    @PeaceLoveHarmony82 5 років тому +205

    I find hoarders, even the nice ones, use extreme emotional manipulation to get their way.

    • @rigelabanes699
      @rigelabanes699 5 років тому +31

      Hoarders saying "I'm ready to change" is another way of saying "I'm stalling".

    • @Rockking1111
      @Rockking1111 5 років тому +3

      rigel abanes or I’m not ready to change is another way of stalling😹

    • @jordanabeaulieu2530
      @jordanabeaulieu2530 4 роки тому +6

      I had no idea that hoarding was actually a mental illness!

    • @dellahicks7231
      @dellahicks7231 4 роки тому +29

      They absolutely will use guilt and manipulation in order to keep their possessions!

    • @ifullyunderstandwhatyoureg3298
      @ifullyunderstandwhatyoureg3298 4 роки тому +16

      I'm a hoarder, everytime something gets binned I start rlly panicking, I hate that feeling so much, I'd say anything to avoid stuff getting binned. I still get upset and panicky over stuff that was binned years ago.

  • @migbham1
    @migbham1 10 місяців тому +4

    As the adult child of two hoarders who perpetually blame each other, I honestly can't even imagine being able to get to the point where we are able to acknowledge and discuss that there is a big problem, let along set about seeking help or trying to increase recognition of hoarding being a disorder. I suspect that the recovery rate is abysmally low.

  • @youtubehandle-
    @youtubehandle- 3 роки тому +6

    What a supportive daughter she is wonderful. 💕

  • @joesmith2398
    @joesmith2398 5 років тому +42

    I work for a moving company. I've seen this plenty of times.

  • @claire99ism
    @claire99ism 5 років тому +119

    Her daughter has so much patience. Why is it hoarders stuff is rubbish really, and everything is so dirty too.

    • @susanna8612
      @susanna8612 5 років тому +11

      She the daughter is beautiful inside out. I felt sympathy toward her only.

    • @milkybar06
      @milkybar06 5 років тому +10

      One mans trash is another mans treasure.

    • @milkybar06
      @milkybar06 5 років тому +2

      @Justin Voluck my mum was like this lady . She grew up during the great depression.

    • @katherinewarren5260
      @katherinewarren5260 5 років тому +15

      claire99ism A hoarder does not see 'dirty' 'useless' . Their brains are such that that distinction is not available to them. In fact, this woman's home is much less unsanitary than some I have seen. Some have feces and urine stored in bottles and bags, food that is 10-15-20 years out of date. It is part of the disorder of hoarding to NOT see what others see. And it is the part that makes the disorder so difficult to treat.

    • @7eyesopenwide168
      @7eyesopenwide168 5 років тому +2

      Its called ENABLING

  • @Theydonotcare
    @Theydonotcare 2 роки тому +4

    My mom is the same. Thank you so much. It's not just about the child. Hoarding hurts the psyche of the family. Who wants to live a life worried about someone they love? This hurts everyone plus brings negative energy.

  • @amandawitherspoon5225
    @amandawitherspoon5225 5 років тому +30

    It's awful that people have to live in that kind of situation. It's sad that people can let things take over their lives. My maternal uncle and my sister are floor to ceiling hoarders. My sister is a junk hoarder, an animal hoarder, and a trash hoarder. I have tried everything I can think of to help but nothing is working. They don't see anything wrong with it, but I can smell it all the way from the road.

    • @meera2531
      @meera2531 5 років тому +2

      Try mindfulness meditations, guided meditations and breath focused meditation. They would start to feel lightness and focus and calm and emotional strength. There are clearly deep rooted insecure attachment issues and nothing like meditation and pranayams (breathing exercises) to take a person out of their mental blocks and make them think afresh. Else there's also electric shock therapy which helps a person come out of a set pattern of thinking.

    • @wildlifegardenssydney7492
      @wildlifegardenssydney7492 3 роки тому +6

      with the animal hoarding can you anonymously report to the rspca. ? No sentient living creature should ever live in squalor and hoarding.

    • @jacqueline8559
      @jacqueline8559 3 роки тому +3

      God awful for the poor neighbour's. I'd complain about the mess and stink

    • @Maxx_P0wer
      @Maxx_P0wer Рік тому +1

      @amandawitherspoon Hoarding disorder is a result of trauma and/or loss. Having worked in the mental health field with a number of individuals who hoard, it is important for them to be able to identify when the behaviours began and what the trigger was. Unless and until the individual is able to identify WHY they hoard, and then obtain treatment relevant to that trauma, they will be stuck in a pattern of hoarding behaviour. Hoarding is an extremely difficult disorder to treat as it is a compulsion not unlike an addiction, however it is not impossible. Children of hoarders need to try to understand that it’s not their fault their loved one hoards, and that they didn’t fail or do something wrong if their loved one continues to hoard after their home has been cleaned out. Individuals who hoard animals need to be checked on on a much more regular basis, and should not be allowed to live alone. Hoarding living beings is not the same as hoarding garbage or junk, obviously, and the neglect that these creatures experience is usually extreme. It’s not to say that an animal hoarder does not love their creatures the same way any order loves their possessions, I’ve just never heard of a case of animal hoarding where the animals were all up to date on their vaccinations and in good health, let alone had the proper living conditions and a clean environment in which to live. I rescued a husky who was one of 83 dogs being hoarded by a woman in my province in 2010. The woman had been arrested for animal hoarding two times prior, and each time she would just be given a fine and told not to do it again. The last time she was arrested, she had over 200 dogs, and this was two years AFTER Animal Control had seized the 83 dogs I adopted my husky from. She is always unable to provide clean, safe accommodation for the animals, she’s unable to properly feed them all, and they are not giving any vet care. The woman was keeping them all tied up two pieces of garbage and scrap metal on her property, the dogs were encrusted in mud, faeces and urine, and they were all starved. My husky was so emaciated that all of her ribs were exposed and her hip bones jutted out on her back. Someone like this needs to live in an assisted living facility, or with responsible family members who will keep her accountable, and they need intensive treatment/therapy for the duration of their life.

  • @markstevenson6180
    @markstevenson6180 5 років тому +15

    Her daughter is beautiful what a nice lady

  • @csea4672
    @csea4672 5 років тому +11

    Jasmine is such a good person!

    • @Rockking1111
      @Rockking1111 5 років тому

      CC S yup she’s an amazing daughter. Her whole family seem down to earth to me

  • @terpsitwinkle556
    @terpsitwinkle556 5 років тому +20

    This video hurts my heart so much, because it is a disease that is impossible to explain and it affects so many peaple, but it still remains especially heartwrenching for the hoarder. Especially knowing you are embarrassing to others and not just yourself. It can get too overwhelming. It just cannot be explained.

  • @Bel0ve01
    @Bel0ve01 Рік тому +2

    her kids are angels! Breaks my heart!

  • @ts7371
    @ts7371 5 років тому +33

    Not fair on the kids to deal with their mother's mess.

    • @dcacde9329
      @dcacde9329 7 місяців тому

      probably she allows that and agree with filming..

  • @billnalder1017
    @billnalder1017 5 років тому +115

    It seems Hoarders have a tendency to attach emotional ties to inanimate objects...like that toy Eiffel Tower, it reminded her of a person, thus she could never let it go but in reality- it was a little toy!

    • @YourAverageGoyl
      @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +28

      @Claudia V No, she doesn't. I promise you she loves them fiercely. It's also difficult when those she loves are hyper-critical of HER, as a person, because she has an attachment disorder. She needs healing from past abuse, not constant prodding and people calling her "crazy" (which is just MORE dismissal or rejection and NOT helpful).

    • @CarlaCarter549
      @CarlaCarter549 5 років тому +3

      YourAverageGoyl I suppose you are referring to her children. You haven’t lived in this environment or had your entire life affected by it. You are also just seeing just one perspective. Yes, this is clearly a mental illness. But just like drug abuse or alcoholism, it’s the parents responsibility to do whatever it takes to ensure their children are raised in a healthy stable environment. To understand the reasons for the behavior is not to excuse and co-sign it. Her family has every right to set boundaries and expectations for change. Its up to the parent to do the work, whatever that may be.

    • @YourAverageGoyl
      @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +2

      @@CarlaCarter549 You don't start someone like her on a "behavior modification" plan. You help her HEAL from her childhood trauma, abuse and/or neglect.

    • @YourAverageGoyl
      @YourAverageGoyl 5 років тому +2

      @@CarlaCarter549 "Drug abuse or alcoholism"? She didn't stick a needle in her own arm. This was done to her, too.

    • @povnw8985
      @povnw8985 5 років тому

      Just kick the old tart down the stairs and have a yard sale 💷💷💷

  • @sonjamalcolm3875
    @sonjamalcolm3875 5 років тому +19

    I'd really like to see an update on this story in a year.... to see if Mum kept clearing and kept already cleared rooms tidy would be interesting for sure.

    • @JagoffCitizen
      @JagoffCitizen 5 років тому +5

      The answer is almost certainly no. The hoarding is a symptom, and the cause has not been dealt with. The cause is apparently very difficult to address. If any hoarder has ever been cured, I'd love to hear about them, because they may hold a precious key to a miserable condition.

    • @meera2531
      @meera2531 5 років тому +2

      I would love to see the mother be taught mindfulness meditation and be given resources of guided meditations and then she may be able to overcome her traumas and the mental chaos and confusion. Else there's also electric shock therapy which helps a person come out of a set pattern of thinking.

  • @Nonolaportugaise2013
    @Nonolaportugaise2013 5 років тому +14

    ADVICE : what works for me : having a room in my house dedicated to boxes. In those boxes, stuff I need to sort out : I keep, I throw away, I sell, I give. Then, not doing it with other people, because it prevents me from being able to think calmly. What I do is I take a box, I set the timer on 5 minutes, and then I know I can do it. I do it on my own, at the moment I chose, maybe in front of the tv, or listening to the radio, anything that makes it a nice moment. And then, I do it because 5 minutes is feasible. And I will do it again because it didn’t feel like a horrible moment that I never want to go through again. Oh and, about the boxes, I have big ones, and smaller ones. So I put stuff from the big boxes into smaller ones, and it’s the smaller ones that I work on. When I finished sorting out one small box, I prepare the next one. And then, when a big box is emptied, I fold it and store it; it’s very motivating. And the role the family can play, maybe, is just that, when several big boxes have been emptied, to congratulate and encourage.

    • @madeleine1138
      @madeleine1138 6 місяців тому

      So great to know you are helping yourself. I get this so much. When people try to help me it just stresses me out. I regret giving things away when I felt pressured. I too put things in boxes but I'm afraid I'm not as diligent as you. Thank you for sharing your story.

  • @memsisters9994
    @memsisters9994 5 років тому +16

    After dealing with hoarders for 30+ years i can be sure of, 1. They are Living in anxiety & stress all through the day, 2. this anxiety paralyze their decision making process 3. Something traumatic happened in the past eg. Assault or leaving a cozy home or beloved family which make them empty emotionally from inside except for fear, 4. This fear is of the unknown

    • @meera2531
      @meera2531 5 років тому +1

      She needs mindfulness meditation and therapy

    • @ifullyunderstandwhatyoureg3298
      @ifullyunderstandwhatyoureg3298 4 роки тому

      I'm a hoarder, I don't know why... Nothing has happened in the past, I'm not depressed, nobody had died when I began hoarding.. I just think of stuff as people for some reason

    • @jacqueline8559
      @jacqueline8559 3 роки тому

      I hate feeling dirty. I couldn't even enter the property, I marvel that Jasmine does this in nice clothes. I'm OCD cleaner, no way I'd touch anything here

  • @Seiferboi
    @Seiferboi 5 років тому +55

    Many hoarding situations begin as a result of trauma. For example, the ones who have a wall of items blocking entrances and windows likely went through some kind of physical abuse. Creative people see value in everything, especially if they're crafters. They think it's better to find a use for it rather than letting things end up in the landfills. There's an environmentalist mindframe with that. In my case, when I was like 12, the "stepdad" deemed me too old to play with toys, so he threw them all away when I was at my grandma's house. Now, I spend my money collecting my childhood toys so I have them again.

    • @PMaillet
      @PMaillet 5 років тому +6

      I saw one where after cleaning out, they put in chests of drawers and told her she could stuff those drawers, but when she added something, she had to get rid of something.

    • @emilyann4549
      @emilyann4549 4 роки тому +11

      No ones trauma justifies the pain they put others through. I was deeply traumatized by a hoarding parent and I don’t get to act like a monster towards others for it. These people are emotionally manipulative and cruel to the people around them. Leave them to their belongings, they value it more than human connection.

    • @oregoncountrygirl
      @oregoncountrygirl 2 роки тому +2

      @@emilyann4549 I won’t disagree with this my mother is a hoarder and she destroyed me I developed BPD bc of it and I’m still trying to change her and she only gets worse with age it’s heartbreaking for all involved

    • @efrahome
      @efrahome Рік тому +1

      ​@@emilyann4549 i mean, that's certainly how one feels, as an adult children of abuse myself through having my mom aflicted by this adiction, i call it that because it is always trying to escape the pain and soothe. Obviously it can cause some serious issues for example i feel like garbage all the time, ive tries and tried and tried to solve and kinda save this house and My family because it is salvageble, i mean i do feel this kinda grudge because i had an abusive father growing up and of course My mom was trying to cope through hoarding, so she was gone and now i'm 30 years old with little tonno money but i'm picking myself up slowly

  • @SPLToronto
    @SPLToronto 2 роки тому +6

    Jasmine is so kind. I can't do it. My mom is a hoarder and she also is bipolar with extreme anger issues while my dad was unemployed. Once I moved out and became an adult, I felt I was liberated and got to finally live a normal life. I always tell my parents I rather jump off a building than moving back with them. After some years of independence, I start to not be able to stand their presence. My whole body and mind are rejecting them and we simplly cannot coexist. I realized I had to choose between my happiness or a relationship with them; I finally decided to give up on them and all I want to is move on with my life and leave all their BS behind.

  • @55tranquility
    @55tranquility 9 місяців тому +1

    Oh gosh, how frustrating - i see so many similarities with other mental health disorders - there is the denial, the excuses, the justifications the secrecy all very common. I also see the enabling of the family that are forced into the situation - because it's so hard to do anything else. The American lady was spot on where she says she had to make a decision in terms of her own life and leave and not return to her mums house. Im a mental health support worker, i'm not a clinician but I can see the similarities with pretty much all anxiety disorders, OCD as well as alcohol and substance dependance disorders. The 'hoarding' is the external behaviour that the person uses to deal with their internal experiences and discomfort. So many alcoholics drink to deal with their distressing thoughts and emotions and see alcohol as the only way to deal with them, same with drug dependence and also the avoidance that characterises anxiety disorders. With all these the 'compulsion' of the external 'fix' does provide temporary relief, but its very short term and then those distressing feelings return but are more distressing and the cycle continues until crises point. The hoarding never ends and gets worse, the drinking never ends, the avoidance never ends. The person has to really understand this in themselves and see that this is what they are doing and understand that there internal distress is actually normal and does not require a external 'fix' because uncomfortable and distressing feelings come and go they do not need an urgent fix - its the need to fix them, the response to ones internal distress that is the problem, not the distress itself but the persons reaction or response to it. This is why most people do not become hoarders, alcoholics etc because they now how they feel inside is transient. There is something in the minds of people like this that gets stuck and they fixate that certain thoughts and feelings must not be allowed so have to be pushed away with a behaviour - but our minds work in opposites - the more you push a thought or feeling away the more it stays and the more frequent it returns. Because the pushing away is still giving it attention, your brain responds to that attention and serves up more of the same. Trying 'not' to think about something is still thinking about something in fact its thinking about it even more.

  • @moonmissy
    @moonmissy 2 роки тому +6

    My mom’s a hoarder. It got so bad that no one wants to visit her. I told her multiple times she lives in a dump. It’s sickening. We have no choice as her daughters but to rent a huge garbage bin to dump her stuffs when she goes away for a trip. Even if she hates us after, it’s horrible to see her live in garbage. Telling her to cooperate is basically telling her to stall us.
    It’s so bad no one will step into her house.

    • @christywebster7539
      @christywebster7539 11 місяців тому

      Be careful if you do. I know someone that committed suicide after someone did that they were so sad and lost. Not blaming that on anyone. Just get her therapy. It works against itself because the more she feels alone the more she will hoard. Best of luck

  • @Gleyi07
    @Gleyi07 5 років тому +7

    I dated a hoarder.. it was very hard. Every time we went out to the street he would bring something from the street with him.. He would search deeply into garbage to find things. He did find treasures sometimes but it became to much for me.. He had too many issues that unfortunately I couldn’t help him with.. I tried helping him but without healthcare and resources it became almost impossible and draining. We gave up. It didn’t work out between us.. i hope he is well 🙏🏻 ❤️

  • @johnnypham2850
    @johnnypham2850 5 років тому +23

    It’s horrifyingly sad

  • @venessaabrams8687
    @venessaabrams8687 5 років тому +15

    She is definitely I'll. You can look in her eyes. She is so stressed. Out of site, out of mind! She won't even miss it

  • @GavinLawrence747
    @GavinLawrence747 5 років тому +24

    My mum was a hoarder. Had roots in her childhood too. Got very defensive and uncharacteristically nasty when you tried to tidy up. It had an effect on me and my Dad.
    I always joked why couldn't she hoard gold bars 😂😂😂😂

  • @misskelly9184
    @misskelly9184 Рік тому +3

    They aren't mean or mad at her, she has wonderful children.

  • @Itsthatchaar
    @Itsthatchaar 3 роки тому +4

    This actually just made me cry so much poor Jasmine :(

  • @joannewalker4232
    @joannewalker4232 5 років тому +7

    Terrible affliction, lovely lady, fantastic children, especially jasmine for confronting this. Hope they have found peace with this. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @na27000
    @na27000 10 місяців тому +2

    My question is, who pays for the storage unit? Because if she does not pay for that, she will never find it painful to have all that and they are just enablers without even knowing.

  • @daramoka2585
    @daramoka2585 Рік тому +3

    I used to keep a lot of old items that brought me good memories from the past because I was very miserable in abusive marriage at that time. So my apartment bedroom and closet were full and stashed up with old cloths and items that I didn’t need but they were sentimental to me. One day I said that enough is enough and just left my abusive husband with one small bag living everything behind. I started my life over. My ex ended up donating all my stuff. I’ve been divorced for 5 years now and I haven’t hoarded anything since. In fact my house is very minimalistic and clean. I don’t have any extra items. Pretty much if I don’t use something I donate it. I feel free and happy. I’m always busy with new hobbies and interesting people.
    I noticed that most people that have hoarding problems are lonely and have nothing going on in their lives. When person is happy, busy and content they don’t have time for hoarding and overthinking. So I believe it helps to be busy with hobbies and connecting with people, being passionate about something..For example: playing sports, dancing, playing instruments, biking, skating, gardening, having podcast, writing, working out, creating art, hiking, photography, going on fishing/hunting/boating/road trips/traveling. Pretty much doing some kind of activities or taking some kind of classes that keep you busy and give a chance to interact and bond with other like minded humans helps to first distract from hoarding until realizing that life is beautiful and there’s so many amazing things that could be done instead of sitting in a pile of trash doing nothing while overthinking or being delusional about the situation. But some people are too far gone and need a lot of therapy, love and care.

  • @KARENboomboomROXX
    @KARENboomboomROXX 5 років тому +55

    What about taking photos of useless items that have an emotional value to the person and making photo albums. I think this could work for certain people, especially this woman who is very aware of her problem and wants to change.

    • @WorkshopPops
      @WorkshopPops 5 років тому +3

      Karen Lamb that's a really good idea.im attached to certain things but just seeing photos of them would still feel comfort. are you a doctor?

    • @Rockking1111
      @Rockking1111 5 років тому +1

      That’s a smart idea.

    • @meera2531
      @meera2531 5 років тому +4

      I was thinking the same thing... It would help her and keep things in order. But she's also of that old mindset where you feel lack and want to keep things which are "still useful", except you never do use them.

    • @LuvLight13
      @LuvLight13 5 років тому +1

      OMGGGGoodness....What A GREAT IDEA!!!!! Really!!!

    • @Jeskers18
      @Jeskers18 4 роки тому +7

      That is a really good idea but I think it has to do more with actually having that item in their possession. If they look at a photo of an item they love then it's possible that they would go into a panic because they don't physically have it and they would obsess about where that item could be.

  • @snaps4emma
    @snaps4emma 4 роки тому +9

    you can tell that Jasmine had to grow up fast, I hope she begins to heal.

  • @NunyaNomi
    @NunyaNomi 5 років тому +20

    My MIL is a hoarder but she isn’t messy. She finds places, puts up shelves, rents storage units etc. it’s maddening and my husband is the exact opposite because of it. We don’t own frivolous things just to have them around. It was hard at first but now I quite like it. It means we have much more money too.

  • @johnnypham2850
    @johnnypham2850 5 років тому +14

    A fantastic Mum must absolutely make a clean environment for the children.

  • @2Savage
    @2Savage 5 років тому +288

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    • @SuperDigitalArtist
      @SuperDigitalArtist 5 років тому +21

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    • @loyalreese9900
      @loyalreese9900 5 років тому +5

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    • @johnnypham2850
      @johnnypham2850 5 років тому +2

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    • @joelromero6074
      @joelromero6074 5 років тому +21

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    • @CyberDocUSA
      @CyberDocUSA 5 років тому +17

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  • @caseylynfrancisco8226
    @caseylynfrancisco8226 5 років тому +17

    I think it will be easier if there's number to stick with, say she only gets to keep a number of things. Instead of letting her choose what she wants for keep.

    • @JB-hj2vj
      @JB-hj2vj 2 роки тому

      yes, the things that will fit into a particular cupboard or on a particular shelf etc.. - if it's too abstract, you don't get anywhere.

  • @Jo-kh1yo
    @Jo-kh1yo 4 роки тому +19

    Clutter is a physical manifestation of chaos in the mind.

    • @paulalim1476
      @paulalim1476 2 роки тому +1

      Just about the only sensible comment on this page!

  • @progressivelibertarianview8832
    @progressivelibertarianview8832 5 років тому +46

    She needs to be taught the joys associated with donating stuff you no longer use so that others can put it to good use.

    • @JeffWatchesYoutube
      @JeffWatchesYoutube 5 років тому +20

      In her mind she's not done "using" any of it though. You are trying to rationalize for a person that can't think rationally about their possessions.

    • @luvyatubers
      @luvyatubers 5 років тому +5

      @@JeffWatchesUA-cam So true, I wonder if marijuana could help with the poor thinking. If a non seasonal item has not been seen or used in a year, it needs to go to someone else

    • @progressivelibertarianview8832
      @progressivelibertarianview8832 5 років тому +4

      @@JeffWatchesUA-cam it's a behavioral condition, much like OCD. Such people have to be taught new hobbies and means of fulfillment.

    • @JeffWatchesYoutube
      @JeffWatchesYoutube 5 років тому +6

      @@luvyatubers Anything is possible, but I don't believe that would be the answer. There is likely not a singular answer. Her behavior is incredibly deep-rooted and would likely need to be addressed from many angles. Marijuana could be one of them, but just as it can be a great benefit those with a mental illness, it could just as strongly be of great detriment depending on that individual person's needs. That is something that doctors would need to determine because of how drastic of a case she is.
      Watch at 8:19 how she describes the Eiffel Tower figurine. She is not so much convincing the other person as much as she is convincing herself. Watch how she builds the justification to herself.
      "I have been to the Eiffel Tower, but I didn't get this there." [Not sold on it.]
      "I got this in a shop for next to nothing because you can't afford to buy this in France, in Paris" [Saying something like I got an incredible deal on it versus somewhere else. A sense of winning.]
      "I've got several french friends it kind of reminds me of." [As if though doing it a favor for them, not herself. Justification through selflessness]
      "One of them passed away last year and it kind of reminds me of him as well" [Stretching to tie this unrelated figurine into a memory of someone unattached to it]
      "My friend has been cremated so there is no burial places you can imagine you could talk to them" [We've now gone from buying it because it was cheap in a thrift shop all the way to it being a memorial piece honoring a dear dead friend, and how can you throw that away?]
      I believe this is an excellent example of the process her mind takes with all of the possessions she struggles with letting go of. This is exactly how she gets from 'a random object of no meaning' to 'this is something that I cannot let out of my possession or it will be taking something deep away from myself and possibly even disrespecting others'.
      Another great example of her explaining how she arrives at her deluded thinking is at 4:55
      "I don't like other people touching my things because I feel that..." [Doesn't like other people touching her things that she has inflated false value on, then searches to justify.]
      "Especially some things are quite fragile and I feel, are they going to be careful or are they going to break it and say 'oh it was already broken'" [She then says some things are "quite fragile" believing she is the only one fit to handle these things she believes to be very valuable yet the very next scene is her handling her own things by cramming a bag full of stuff on top of other things, risking breaking everything but believing she is caring for her things appropriately.]
      "...or are they going to take it?" [Convinced that all of these 'valuables' she has accumulated are so sought after by others that they would actually steal them from her.]

    • @JeffWatchesYoutube
      @JeffWatchesYoutube 5 років тому +2

      @@progressivelibertarianview8832 OCD may play a part of it but this seems like more than just that. New hobbies can certainly help inspire her other parts of her life but they can also be a distraction to stop her from dealing with the deeper issues that lead to this. Childhood trauma, depression, chemical imbalance and countless other things, or any combination of, can bring a person to this state of living. You can see how she convinces herself that she is thinking rationally at various points throughout this documentary. I outlines some of them in my comment to loveyatubers above.
      I'm not disagreeing about the OCD, which definitely may play a role here, but her behavior shows more than that to me.
      In your original comment
      "She needs to be taught the joys associated with donating stuff you no longer use so that others can put it to good use."
      I responded
      "You are trying to rationalize for a person that can't think rationally about their possessions."
      One of the reasons I feel that way is because it was talked about in this documentary. Her family member stated at 16:30 that she has donated to The Salvation Army in the past then would go days later in a panic and pay to get her own stuff back. Right after that you can see her taking things off the table that are about to be purchased because she didn't want to sell them even when the buyer, who would find joy in her items, is standing right in front of her.

  • @oshimad
    @oshimad 5 місяців тому +2

    That yard sale…same way my mom acted…taking stuff back and even buying my brothers stuff he wanted to get rid of..ooof

  • @pixieannemarie6062
    @pixieannemarie6062 3 роки тому +2

    Jasmine, Your so inspiring to watch & listen.
    All your channels have helped me understand my hoarding & enabled me to clear & tidy my house over time.
    Thank you 👍🏻. Your mum is amazing x

  • @jacqueline8559
    @jacqueline8559 3 роки тому +3

    I hope Jasmine and her brothers heal from their chaotic upbringing, and find peace and acceptance

  • @annettestadt1886
    @annettestadt1886 3 роки тому +3

    I've been listening to her speech and language and I think she speaks a lot about how she feels about her things very introspectively. I'd like to know what she feels about her family and where she is in her life journey.

  • @gloriasteadman4492
    @gloriasteadman4492 5 років тому +41

    This happens because she lost her father and she moved alit as a child so she tried to hold onto everything because it's her way of controlling her environment.

    • @alejandroramirezmartinez3676
      @alejandroramirezmartinez3676 3 роки тому +1

      Nice response Gloria, i was watching several hoarding videos and didn´t find a clear explaination of what causes this condition until read your comment.

    • @vickimerritt2832
      @vickimerritt2832 2 роки тому

      yes

  • @evynewton
    @evynewton 5 років тому +2

    i loved watchin' the transition of LOVE from her things to her love for her children... it had to have been a tough lesson to learn bc in the beginning; it was the love for the person, who left by death that cause her to want to posses those thing that reminded her of them... to witness her embrace the love for those who are still with her & put value in them, for a change... this was delightful, to witness...

  • @adellem376
    @adellem376 3 роки тому +2

    What a frustrating illness, her kids are wonderful to her.

  • @Popcorncedar
    @Popcorncedar 10 місяців тому +3

    I’d just leave and say have fun. I have my own life and kids to take care of.

  • @oregoncountrygirl
    @oregoncountrygirl 2 роки тому +1

    My mother hoards. She had abuse in her childhood, then lost her son at age 2 to cancer, then her house burned down just before I was born. She’s 88 and I’m 44 with 5 siblings. My parents have been married 65 years. Dad just avoids her and keeps quiet as to not rattle the cage. She feels ignored by him and resents him but it’s his only way to cope. We’ve all tried to empty the house all our life and she just fills it back up. She’s worse then ever in her old age. You can’t say one word to her or she has an emotional breakdown. I developed BPD bc of it. BPD is like you never develop emotionally beyond your childhood. I can see why I never did. Depression runs deep in my life. It’s heartbreaking that I can’t help her but I need to care for me now bc it ruined my life I was never able to have relationships until now.

  • @JenLovesBenz
    @JenLovesBenz 5 років тому +13

    My mom was a minor hoarder.. A basement or room full of stuff she couldn't throw out not technically garbage lol garbage to me but because of that I don't think twice about throwing stuff out I cannot stand clutter.

  • @Ravyne
    @Ravyne 5 років тому +4

    When I was growing up, once a year my mother would have us go through all of our things and toss stuff that was worn out, filthy, or we'd outgrown - this included clothing, toys, books, etc. A lot of things were donated like decent clothing, books and toys. This usually happened in October and if we didn't have it completed by the end of October, we wouldn't get Christmas presents that year. One year, I had cleared out everything except a few boxes of books that my mother decided I didn't need (they were mostly gothic novels that I'd read and re-read) so while I was in school, she hauled them all off to various places - the Salvation Army, Goodwill and the public library. I was devastated. Later, in my mid-30s, I would spend hours on eBay buying gothic novels. It really became an obsession and I finally had to force myself to stop. Now, I live with a creative husband who thinks everything has a second and third use or that he can make something creative out of things and his hoarding of these things has taken over the guest room, the living room, the basement, a good sized storage unit and encroaching upon our own bedroom. I think it is time to lay down the law on him, but I fear it will be a huge issue and could even ruin our marriage. I am in therapy because of how stressful his hoarding has made me, but he refuses help because he says there is nothing wrong with him.

  • @icelolly.m329
    @icelolly.m329 5 років тому +21

    “Useful thing that have no use” well then the word looses its meaning

  • @caseycandice
    @caseycandice 5 років тому +10

    My mom is like that. We live close to each other, she's litteraly my neighbor from next door. It's been 15 years since she started to change our appartments into a giant trashcan. I tried many times to help, she's seeing someone for that but refuses each therapy bc she works. She won't allow me to throw some things even if it's garbage. I'm scared about her getting older. If she had a heart attack in there, the paramedics couldn't come in. I don't know what to do.

  • @Jenny-nz8fb
    @Jenny-nz8fb 4 місяці тому +1

    What a loving family.

  • @nikolarosie1594
    @nikolarosie1594 Рік тому

    Both the ladies in this video are such gentle sweet souls. It’s such a tragic situation I myself have mild symptoms of hoarding. I luckily can reduce my “treasure trove” by now donating some of it to charity. I’m trying to think someone else will get a better use of all my possessions I manage to donate. I get defensive and have a genuine reason to have for everything I keep. Mine definitely steams back to childhood trauma so at least I have some insight now to how and why I live my life like this.

  • @scottscott6794
    @scottscott6794 2 роки тому +1

    You are a fantastic woman and I know the struggles that you've had in your personal life pertaining to your mother, but what you've done with your life you are helping many many people my hats off to you God bless you and thank you for everything you do continued success.

  • @mailezambrano6346
    @mailezambrano6346 9 місяців тому

    Wow she must have been a really amazing mother because I wouldn't rise to this level of commitment for any memeber of my family, her kids are going above and beyond times infinity to help her and I hope she realizes that

  • @gillianbrookwell1678
    @gillianbrookwell1678 3 роки тому +3

    I lived with a hoarder for many years and now I'm by myself; like Jasmine, I have ended up wanted to keep my home clutter free and in an immaculate condition; maybe being a bit extreme in cleanliness, having nothing out of place.

  • @sweetlorre
    @sweetlorre 3 роки тому +1

    Very loving and patient children ❤️ You're an angel Jasmin! Bless your heart. I wish and pray I can be patient and calm as you in dealing with my mom's hoarding.. We just need to keep on trying tho.

  • @Ronnymikkonen2686
    @Ronnymikkonen2686 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for your video, it helped me to be more nice and loving towards people and my self! You where so lovely, All of you!

  • @Ray-dv3nz
    @Ray-dv3nz 5 років тому +3

    My wife is a hoarder who I can no longer live with. My kids had the same problem of not being able to have friends over for all their growing years. It’s left me feeling so sorry for them for keeping them in that environment, but at least now they all have the “ don’t use it, throw it “ temperament.

    • @yvonce7309
      @yvonce7309 5 років тому +1

      ray sullivan
      Exactly!!! There hoarding and things will always come before there husband and family.
      Get out why you can.

  • @somemydayy
    @somemydayy 2 роки тому +3

    I sometimes I watch these documentaries on hoarding so I can get myself to throw stuff out, I just like buying stuff in bulk, collecting, and making things but I know it’s extremely unhealthy. Sometimes I fear it’s hereditary trauma, and hoarding because my grandma is one.

    • @WIN-sf3cf
      @WIN-sf3cf Рік тому

      Good for you to try to make small steps to improve things. What really helps is not to go shopping, because there is always something to buy. Taking walks in nature is better and cheap also!

  • @delphinium5555
    @delphinium5555 3 роки тому +2

    What a wonderfully supportive daughter. I can understand this disorder. I'm just in the midst to tackling a lifetime of keeping "useful useless" things. My oh is worse than me. This may have started for us through the loss of our child.

  • @truthbetold1366
    @truthbetold1366 Рік тому +1

    Her children speak volumes of her character and her job well done as a mum, keep going, life is not things ❤

  • @wickedbunny2020
    @wickedbunny2020 5 років тому +5

    My aunt was a hoarder and my husband and his mother is a hoarder. It’s a constant fight to keep my once extremely clean house before we married. I knew what I was getting into but the only thing saving me is he also extreme purges a couple times a year. This 2 yrs have been rough, first my mom passed then the next year a week and a half before my moms 1 year my husbands dad died even more unexpectedly. So it’s made him just grasp on everything and I’ve caught myself buying things I don’t need but “soothe” me. I can’t even sell or get rid of my moms stuff my attic is packed 🙁😐. So I get it, emotional trauma is a big reason hoarding happens.

    • @d.h.4778
      @d.h.4778 3 роки тому

      You are so strong for admitting that, knowing there’s a problem is the first step. I am sorry for your losses. It will get better, you’re already on the way.

  • @PeaceLoveHarmony82
    @PeaceLoveHarmony82 5 років тому +5

    Patience of an angel! That's all I have to say about the daughter. The son's tougher but still extremely patient treatment of his mother is what actually got the job done in the end.

    • @Rockking1111
      @Rockking1111 5 років тому

      ✨🕊PeaceLoveHarmony82 yup👍🏾🕊✨

  • @thelonereed2765
    @thelonereed2765 5 років тому +17

    I got the same problem with my mom, and she keeps buying stuff but now we are trying through therapy to resolve the issue

    • @leylamamat215
      @leylamamat215 5 років тому +2

      I know..retail therapy can gv a lot of relief. Thats y i bought gold bar..so i am a gold hoarder. I bet my kids will not throw away my gold

    • @meera2531
      @meera2531 5 років тому +3

      Try mindfulness meditations, guided meditations and breath focused meditation. They would start to feel lightness and focus and calm and emotional strength. There are clearly deep rooted insecure attachment issues and nothing like meditation and pranayams (breathing exercises) to take a person out of their mental blocks and make them think afresh. Else there's also electric shock therapy which helps a person come out of a set pattern of thinking.