Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

allnurses

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.
Discussion

How Much Junk do you Keep?

A question for non-hoarders please :)

I've been sorting through stuff and reevaluating my relationship to things this year. I've gotten rid of a lot of stuff. Right now I'm going through a lot of old nursing training handouts, powerpoints and stuff from the last decade, some old stuff from school, other training I've had or continuing education. Some of it is obviously recycling, some is still good information.

I think I'm going to slowly read through the stuff that I've forgotten as a refresher for the next month or so, then probably ditch most of it. Perhaps certain information will point me towards things I absolutely should know and am rusty with now.

So it made me wonder about how much stuff other people keep.

-What do you keep?

-How do you keep yourselves current on information you don't use very often in your practice?

-Do you even bother?

-Are there other areas of nursing you're interested with and don't practice, but maybe like to keep more current?

Featured Replies

  • Guides
[ATTACH=CONFIG]27956[/ATTACH]

Hey watch it, I happen to like Eddie Money. :laugh:

  • Experts
That is awesome!! We went from 2300 sq ft 4/2.5 home to a 2000 sq ft home, but the second one had a less open layout and didn't feel like 2000 sq ft. We gained a family member (our daughter) and downsized to a 1785 sq ft townhouse that has a wonderful layout for our family. I got rid of four 6-foot bookshelves in the process (donated a ton of books) and a lot of clothes and shoes, but I still need to downsize more! I have a lot of Danskos that are lightly worn, so I am going to check out the local consignment places for those.

Hmm - consignment. Could be a way to earn a few dollars. Thanks for the idea.

  • Experts

This is a current topic for me as I've been clearing out old clutter. The only nursing paper I keep is a reference I have on insulin. It has the onset, peak, etc. on all the different types of insulin and I've found myself referring to it several times over the years (I keep it updated). Its been handy-dandy. Everything else including my nursing books have been trashed. BTW, I have found so many little treasures I had forgotten I had while decluttering.

I still have my anatomy and physio book, my pharmacology book and critical care book, ACLS and PALS manuals. I may have TNCC manual too. I'm not a total hoarder, but I'm sure I have things that I don't need. I would want to donate them or something. I don't want to just throw them in the garbage.

  • Moderator
Hmm - consignment. Could be a way to earn a few dollars. Thanks for the idea.

Yep! I usually just donate things, but Danskos are a rather pricey habit. Lol. I am also changing jobs from a hospital where nurses wear royal blue to a hospital with navy blue, so I am going to see about consignment for some of my scrubs, too. There is also a local scrub shop that buys used scrubs for resale, they pay $2 per top or bottom. Not great, but it's something!

  • Experts
I'll keep CEU's certificates, but only if I am afraid that

they will not easily be found online.

[ATTACH=CONFIG]27958[/ATTACH]

  • Experts

I keep nothing - I'm the anti-hoarder.

The only papers I kept were my clinical logs from my post-MSN certs as I might need them if I pursue a DNP

I only kept my big binder with ALL of my work from school that I created and cared for a whole year for my overall grade. It was my life for that school year and I am going to keep it... in storage.

  • Moderator

I have next week off, and I am inspired to get rid of more STUFF!!! :) I have a bunch of Army uniforms that no one seems to want among my active duty peeps, so I will see if the local surplus place will take them. I have less than 120 days remaining in the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR), and it's not likely they'd call me back with the recent heart failure and all that jazz. Yet I am somehow superstitious about getting rid of those uniforms!! lol. I also have old files and paperwork (like 10-15 years old) that needs shredding. I will probably take it to a shredding service rather than doing it myself. Has anyone ever done that?

I got rid of everything that didn't fit on our sailboat and sailed it away. That means the only books I kept were diesel maintenence and navigation charts.

  • Author
I will probably take it to a shredding service rather than doing it myself. Has anyone ever done that?

If it really is that much paperwork, then many of these shredding services can come to you in a large shredding truck. Call around to see if they offer such service.

I have been a nurse for 42 years. I have cleared out 2 houses from in-laws and parents who died, and "inherited" those just can't give away things. I still have some science books, like A/P (does that change or just the sand in the body move), chemistry (for those days I can't get something clean and don't want to blow the house up). Each house clean-out was a major toll on my mind and back. I swore I would never put my kids through that. We have lived in our house 40 years, 40 years of our memories. And now I have started going through and reducing, minimalizing, giving away, selling, any thing I can do to get the accumulation down. But do you just throw text books away, who wants old ones? And then I find books from the 1800's, a family bible from the late 1700's, coins from the 1870's, I can see my kids tossing these, but there comes a point where I just want to toss too! WE actually got rid of a storage shed and sold a lot of things. But there is so much left to go. And I can't look at my sister's house without thinking I hope I go first (it will be up to her son and me, and they are both hoarders). Becoming a minimalist is a cold-hearted job, but someone has to do it!

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Add a Comment

Currently Reading 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.