- Thread starter
- #2,481
I sometimes wonder if living in the country or "on the farm" lends itself to keeping more things around - just in case you need to fix something and then don't need to run into town. My DH worked hard in his shop a couple years ago to clean out things that had accumulated from when his Dad passed away. A lot of things seemed to migrate to our place. I don't think he misses much of what he got rid of, but every now and then he bemoans the fact that he took something to the dump and now he could use that piece to fix something. We've been asking ourselves the same types of questions - what should we get rid of now. 3 or our 4 parents have died and close friends of ours are cleaning out 60 plus years of stuff and clutter from their parents' house. What a lot of work! We don't want our kids to have to go through that. And yet if we get rid of everything old, we end up spending money to replace it when something breaks. There must be a balance out there somewhere and the hard part is finding it. The big thing is not to look down on others that don't think the same way as us. We're all on different journeys and like Bee mentioned earlier, what we have lived through or whom we've been close to impacts how we see "stuff".
Hope you all have a wonderful Sunday!
Yes! I think that on a farm they don't call it hoarding, it's just stuff we may need.... but in town they call it hoarding.

And that is very true...as in all things in life, a balance is essential to good health and well being for all creatures. Striving for that balance is probably what most folks do with the majority of their lives....I think the only way for humans to find balance is to weigh every possession and action in their lives by how God sees it, not how we see it. If our possessions seem to give us more of a feeling of security than does our faith in God, then it's time to review where one's heart is. A person cannot have two masters...but that objectivity is something we all struggle with. The only way to try to see things through the eyes of God is to read His word about such things and actually apply it and therein lies the hardest part of all.
I've been working on trying to see my life and the lives of others through the eyes of God for the past several years and am constantly learning how poor my vision has been and still is, so I keep reading and trying to improve my vision. May I never stop trying to correct my vision on that matter and may the Holy Spirit help me to do so.