A Hoarder’s Heart

Or how watching a YouTube Channel I would never normally watch made me feel less alone…

Here it is, A Hoarder’s Heart, the YouTube channel of Melanie Renee, commonly known as “Miss Heart!” as for a while she was anonymous; this was during COVID, I believe, so the face mask was forgivable, if not the dark glasses she used to hide her identity. And hide it she did, because she was concerned with the stigma that hoarding has. She is now out and proud on her web site at https://hoardersheart.com/

“Oh, the perkiness!” Annoyingly cute!!!

We have probably all watched those “hoarders are broken” shows on TV. So, you can understand why Melanie decided to remain hidden until she felt confident enough to ‘own’ her disorder. And, inadvertently, YouTube (as well as journaling) was a source of strength for her to face her affliction. A casual acquaintance put me on to her online offerings and I was sceptical; this is totally not the kind of channel I would follow. And yet…

…I seem to be ok with it. It’s not how I would do a video channel, but until I actually start discussing my own journey, who am I to talk? In the meantime, her “perky” message is quite endearing, and I feel supported. Damn her! The big thing she does is NOT discuss it all clinically; she’s never going to mention the DSM-5! And she is definitely not going to castigate hoarders the way some shows – I’m talking to YOU “Hoarders” and “Hoarding: Buried Alive” – delight in doing.

Reality (TV) is broken

These shows are controversial and have been critiqued many times as exploitative and harmful because of their “intervention agenda” aimed at ‘quick fixes’ in TV timeframes. Unfortunately, these discussions are often aimed more at support workers and practitioners than those dealing with HD. Or they are just as exploitative and misrepresentative…

Is Hoarders real or fake?
The ‘truth’ about “Hoarders”
Watch from 8:01 to see the emotional damage!
A daughter’s reaction to her
Mom’s “Hoarders” experience

I’ll leave this article here to summarise the bad feelings this kind of thing engenders:

Stop watching “Hoarders”: our lurid reality TV obsession with mental illness has crossed a line

It also suggested, by way of a ‘near miss’ dialogue, what a good programme about HD should include, which is (I guess) where I come in. It also links to these two articles:

Hoarders: Exploiting the Ugly and the Poor

which asks “Where are the Rich and Middle Class hoarders?” When I owned the bank owned a six bedroom house my hoard was a collection; everything away or on display. Only when I was ‘downsized’ did it become problematic. So, David Boles has a point.

How hoarding shows cured my hoarding

where Heather Havrilesky struggles with decluttering her father’s detritus. I know how this feels! It’s harder to face the rejection that removing other people’s stuff brings. I really really really REALLY DON’T need to watch any of these to start my own journey.

The little exposure I have had to this ‘genre’ – mostly from researching this piece – instilled an initial “Well, at least I’m not that bad!” sentiment, but there is the trap. No, I don’t have dead dogs or faeces under piles of crap, but I do have to ‘limbo’ my way through rooms. I’ve watched enough to hear similar logic applied to justifying the keeping of stuff: “That might be useful one day.” or “That IS a project I want to complete some time.” I may not be as bad but I am bad.

How to cease being a Dad

The fear of loss – unsustainable acquisition and aversion to removal; small losses – is an echo of greater loss. Loss. LOSS. In my case, from childhood abuse (loss of innocence) all the way to my messy divorce (loss of family). Not through death, but the choices of others.

They say “You never stop being a parent.” but what if your children decide this is what they want? Or need! So, I used to be a father. That is my most immediate loss. Loss of choice. Loss of control. Loss of the chance to be a carer. Because, although I have ‘rights’, what is the point if I have my ex-wife (and, presumably, my daughters) setting the agenda of not wanting me?

All I was left with was to be a source of money each month. And a six bedroom “family home”, costing 2/3rds of my monthly salary, only kept because the ‘plan’ – for them to live with me half the week, “sharing childcare and minimising disruption”- lasted not even a day after they all moved into their nice new refurbished house. Just before Christmas…

Living 100% with the mother, not my choice or what we had agreed, meant I was then liable for full child support, in addition to a massive mortgage. So, when the roof started leaking and the boiler broke I couldn’t afford to make repairs. Then Covid hit and the housing market slumped. I lived a bare essentials hermitage to keep up with the bills.

When I did eventually sell, at a loss, the trauma of packing was left to a removal company; they were great, moving and arranging storage in a large number of units, because a LOT of what was left was the discarded belongings of my family. They had the luxury of just walking away from it all, letting me know they weren’t coming back in a brief phone call. The day after the move into their new place. It’s no wonder why I really hate “That End Of Year Period” (TEOYP) now; not that I was a fan before…

The need to quickly vacate the family home, when it was sold, meant I had no time (or emotional energy) to do more than ruthlessly cull my family’s discards. Even though I knew – they had confirmed – they didn’t care, I did. Having all that space hid an already problematic hoarding issue, of course, but it wasn’t just my belongings.

It should have been easy to get rid of these things, but I took months (actually, years) to recover. Barnardo’s received a good deal of it, but only the easy things. I paid (and am still paying) for those storage units and, only now, am I beginning to be able to face further reductions.

I’m about to be made redundant and face forced retirement. I cannot (and never really could) afford £200/month to store stuff I’ve not needed or used for five years! Half of which isn’t even mine. This is why my much smaller house is filled with stuff; to reduce my additional storage costs. This is what is sapping my soul as well as my wallet.

So, if you know someone who is suffering under the weight of Hoarding Disorder (HD) you might want to point them at Miss Heart’s videos instead of Reality TV. And give them a hug to let them know you accept them for who they are!

Goat Paths/Tracks/Trails*

*opinions vary as to which is the official version of this phrase. I’m going with ‘path’ here

So, how am I doing? Well, ok(ish). I’ve realised that, for the most part, when I ‘tidy’ I am just clearing the narrow paths I use to get from room to room; not necessarily a bad thing as it enables me to keep living here, but also a “Sisyphean Task” that is never finished. I’m not impacting on the piles of stuff so much as the gaps, which one expert called “goat paths”. It gives the illusion of progress but without the actual progress:

Progress LITE‽ Available at all

good hoards everywhere!!!

Hmmm… this is a concern. I’m pushing that rock up the mountain every day. But, like Sisyphus, I’m actually chuffed with even the tiniest bit of progress. After all, he never let it grind him down and owned the punishment the Gods meted out; possibly even being happy, as proposed in this fun video.

My plan is to sell stuff or give it away. To be realistic about what projects are no longer a good idea. To display and use things as part of a collection. To only pay for new things with the proceeds of selling old things:

My eBay Listings

My FaceBook Marketplace

Wish me luck as I weave in and out of piles of stuff. And thank you Melanie!

Let there be (flash) light…

How to resurrect an AGFA Blitzlampe and (start to) save your soul

Mid flash captured at 200fps

I have increasingly too many cameras. Not “too many” too many – you can never REALLY have TOO many cameras – but I have had to come to terms with the fact that I am a “hoarder”.

Hoarding Disorder (HD) is recognised “by the eleventh revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5).” 

Src: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoarding_disorder 

It is an actual mental health disease now. Well, that’s reassuring! So, in order to accommodate my increased interest in old cameras, as well as to be able to SEE the floor in at least some of my rooms, I am going to acknowledge I have a problem. 

Part of the issue with HD is that sufferers don’t (initially at least) see it as a problem; this is why it has been separated from OCD in the above tomes. Previously, it was defined as a type of O… wait… C.D.O. (there, that’s better, it’s now in alphabetical order!), but the two are quite different. OCD hoarders do it out of fear. Hoarders do it out of love. Every thing has a uniqueness, a (potential) purpose, a value. But enough is enough. There’s barely room for me and my long suffering cats, let alone the possibility of visitors.

So, out with the old – games, books, consoles, etc – and in with the (not so) new – cameras and related film equipment. I will pay for acquisitions by selling stuff; eBay mostly, but Gex, Vinted, and even (shudder) FaceBook Marketplace are being explored. Oh, and Board Game Geek for the more specialist collectibles. And, to motivate me to let go as well as get go, I’ll be recording it all here, on my blog, and on YouTube; see https://youtube.com/@drmikehoarder and https://doctormikereddy.com/hoard/ for further details of my progress.

Now, to the new (?) shiny shown above. This is an AGFA Amateur Flashlight for Flash Powder, probably from around 1909 when the patent 230110 – embossed on the cover – was issued.

AGFA Amateur Flashlight DRP 230110

It is a clockwork powered flash gun – you can hear me winding it in the short Slowmo video – that used magnesium flash powder with flash paper to create large flashes to illuminate photographs. Like this:

1909 Victor Flash Lamp

Timed sequence over 1/40th second (in five 1/200th s jumps)

The spark begins 1/5
Sparks fly 2/5
The largest spark 3/5
The heat of the sparking wheel 4/5
The remnant heat 5/5

This was (and still is!) a potentially very dangerous thing. However, I have several old cameras; the oldest dates to 1893, a KW Cycle Poco No.3

KW Cycle Poco No.3

It is for this that I’ve done some acquisition. One of the biggest issues with HD is acquiring stuff; the other main one is not getting rid of stuff. That’s how ‘clutter’ becomes catastrophe! So, what did I let go, to get it (and the camera, in fact)? This:


Halo 3 Legendary Edition (aka the “cat helmet”)

This Halo 3 Legendary Edition (complete in box) I’ve had since the launch event; I reviewed Halo 3 – it got a 10/10 BTW – for “Games Night”, a show I guested on then presented for Portland TV’s XLeague channel years ago. I also scored the Grand Theft Auto 4 limited edition, but that is in storage somewhere, and will be sold separately.

So, now I’m just waiting for the flash powder and flash paper to try the flash out “for real”. While I am waiting I will have to decide what to sell next to make space. It will be an MB Vectrex and multicast I’ve had since it was released in 1983; I still have the original receipt!