Stuff: Compulsive Hoarding and the Meaning of Things (2010)
by Randy O. Frost, Gail Stekeete
What possesses someone to save every scrap of paper thats ever come into his home? What compulsions drive a woman like Irene, whose hoarding cost her her marriage? Or Ralph, whose imagined uses for castoff items like leaky old buckets almost lost him his house?
What possesses someone to save every scrap of paper thats ever come into his home? What compulsions drive a woman like Irene, whose hoarding cost her her marriage? Or Ralph, whose imagined uses for castoff items like leaky old buckets almost lost him his house?
Randy Frost and Gail Steketee were the first to study
hoarding when they began their work a decade ago; they expected to find a few
sufferers but ended up treating hundreds of patients and fielding thousands of
calls from the families of others. Now they explore the compulsion through a
series of compelling case studies in the vein of Oliver Sacks.
With vivid portraits that show us the traits by which you
can identify a hoarder - piles on sofas and beds that make the furniture
useless, houses that can be navigated only by following small paths called goat
trails, vast piles of paper that the hoarders churn but never discard, even
collections of animals and garbage - Frost and Steketee illuminate the pull
that possessions exert on all of us.
Whether we're savers, collectors, or compulsive cleaners,
very few of us are in fact free of the impulses that drive hoarders to the
extremes in which they live. For all of us with complicated relationships to
our things, Stuff answers the question of what happens when our stuff starts to
own us.
See: Coming Clean by Kim Miller.