rod
Retired 22 years
I learned this hen my parents pas away. You never really own something--you just pass it on.Then we expire and our kids fill up dumpsters. My wife inherited a house. We filled 2 big dumpsters of junk.
I learned this hen my parents pas away. You never really own something--you just pass it on.Then we expire and our kids fill up dumpsters. My wife inherited a house. We filled 2 big dumpsters of junk.
My wife hired an estate expert. They priced everything of value, then had a sale. They charged 20 percent. We ended up making like $4500. Some junk is worth some bucks.I learned this hen my parents pas away. You never really own something--you just pass it on.
You can't keep everything foreverWhen my Dad passed away (my Mother had passed years earlier) my 2 brothers and I had an auction. Dad was a collector (not a horder) and had a lot of neat stuff. Instead of trying to divide his different collections up we decided just to sell it all. Some stuff went dirt cheap and some stuff went for way more than it was worth. One thing we laughed about was a life size cardboard stand up John Wayne which to this day I think you can still buy on the internet for like $25-30 bucks. Anyway it went for $130.00. We all regretted later on not keeping a few more things of his.
I kinda agree with what you said.Anyway it went for $130.00. We all regretted later on not keeping a few more things of his.
You keep nothing forever.You can't keep everything forever
Do they have a service like that with women ?I have recently gotten into something called "card breaks", they are pretty damn fun. You buy a spot which is usually a random team and they open boxes of cards and you get all the cards that go to the team you bought. I have got some pretty good cards from it so far, it's a fun way to collect cards I think.
You have to buy your way in. That takes earning wealth.Do they have a service like that with women ?