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<p>[QUOTE="springfld.arsenal, post: 277690, member: 54"]Wow, I wanted to see some TV I missed due to one favorite show (Gong Show, the new one) being replaced by football game, so got trial subsc to "Hulu." Ms. Spring found A&E series "Hoarders" and it was scarier than many horror movies. All real serious hoarders suffer from some kind of mental trauma. I was surprised to see how similar their homes looked inside, which I won't describe as some would find even a verbal description too offensive. Anyone else seen it?</p><p><br /></p><p>I guess I'm a hoarder too but my stuff, unlike a lot of theirs, is organized, has some value even if only scrap metal, is mostly in working condition, doesn't include anything readily identifiable as trash, and doesn't include organic material except wood and certain minerals. When I find broken tools, all but the expensive, repairable ones go right in the trash. Except for broken tungsten-carbide tool bits-they go in a coffee can to be sold due to high salvage value.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="springfld.arsenal, post: 277690, member: 54"]Wow, I wanted to see some TV I missed due to one favorite show (Gong Show, the new one) being replaced by football game, so got trial subsc to "Hulu." Ms. Spring found A&E series "Hoarders" and it was scarier than many horror movies. All real serious hoarders suffer from some kind of mental trauma. I was surprised to see how similar their homes looked inside, which I won't describe as some would find even a verbal description too offensive. Anyone else seen it? I guess I'm a hoarder too but my stuff, unlike a lot of theirs, is organized, has some value even if only scrap metal, is mostly in working condition, doesn't include anything readily identifiable as trash, and doesn't include organic material except wood and certain minerals. When I find broken tools, all but the expensive, repairable ones go right in the trash. Except for broken tungsten-carbide tool bits-they go in a coffee can to be sold due to high salvage value.[/QUOTE]
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