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Downsizing The Family Home: What to Save, What to Let Go (Volume 1) (Downsizing the Home) Paperback – January 5, 2016
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It’s a rite of passage almost no one will escape: the difficult, emotional journey of downsizing your or your aging parents' home. Here, nationally syndicated home columnist Marni Jameson sensitively guides readers through the process, from opening that first closet, to sorting through a lifetime's worth of possessions, to selling the homestead itself. Using her own personal journey as a basis, she helps you figure out a strategy and create a mindset to accomplish the task quickly, respectfully, rewardingly—and, in the best of situations, even memorably. Throughout, she combines her been-there experience with insights from national experts—antiques appraisers, garage-sale gurus, professional organizers, and psychologists—to offer practical wisdom and heartwarming advice so you know with certainty what to keep, toss or sell.
Winner of: the 2017 Gold National Mature Media Award; the 2017 Silver EXCEL Award in the General Audience Book category; the 2016 Silver Nautilus Award; and the 2016 Bronze National Mature Media Award!
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUnion Square & Co.
- Publication dateJanuary 5, 2016
- Dimensions5.75 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-101454916338
- ISBN-13978-1454916338
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Product details
- Publisher : Union Square & Co.; Illustrated edition (January 5, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1454916338
- ISBN-13 : 978-1454916338
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #77,658 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #76 in Aging Parents (Books)
- #150 in Buying & Selling Homes (Books)
- #935 in Home Improvement & Design Books
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Back in 2003 -- and because it was cheaper than therapy -- I started writing a weekly column about all the frustrations I had with remodeling, decorating, managing a hectic household, buying and selling houses, getting a grip on clutter, and how to live beautifully on a journalist's budget. You know, problems like dealing with the tile mason who has a drinking problem, or the teen who wants to paint her room lime green and black, or the clearing out of my parents' home of 50 years in one week. In other words, the stuff of life, which always hits home.
My newspaper column, which became nationally syndicated, provided me access to some of the nation's top experts on all these topics, so I was getting free advice and passing it on to my readers. Hence my books: "The House Always Wins," "House of Havoc," "Downsizing the Family Home" and now its companion, "Downsizing the Family Home: A Workbook." I hope you will laugh, identify, learn, and live better and more beautifully as a result of joining this journey.
What else? I was born in California, went to college in Kansas and Vermont, had a seven-year layover in Colorado, and now call Florida home. I have built three homes from the ground up, lived in and staged six over the course of four years, and, after moving nine times between 2011 and 2018, during which time I met my husband, the amazing DC, have settled into my forever Happy Yellow House. Along the way, I have been a health reporter, writing for the Los Angeles Times and the Orlando Sentinel, have written for major magazines (Woman's Day, Family Circle, Child), and shared advice as a guest on TV and radio shows. Not least, I have two daughters who keep me humble, three step children, two dogs, and one most tolerant husband.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2017
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Left behind are two homes, both fully furnished, one with a lifetime of memories, collections, and household items. The stacks of mail are still there, in their slit-opened envelopes. The magazines are still stacked, complete with the blown in subscription cards which seem to multiply in the dark. Who is going to deal with this? When? There are three grown sons, each with his own new family and full household. Each is a busy professional and none are happy with the seemingly sudden aging of their parents into a dependent state that is far more desperate than graceful.
I know without reservation that the emptying of the primary home would not be a task embraced by any of these three sons. I know also that the one son who has the temperament to handle the giant project has used all his patience and forbearance on the day-to-day management of the needs of his parents. If the burden of this house is ever going to be lifted from the family shoulders, and if its value is ever to be contributed to the care and feeding of its former occupants, the process of doing so would fall to me.
Fully aware of the irony inherent in purchasing three books on downsizing, I wasn't able to discern from the reviews and blurbs which was the one book to answer my need. I ordered all of them on amazon and did nothing other than post a photo of them to my instagram account inviting my acquaintances to enjoy the irony. I set the books aside, thinking I'd done enough for now.
I brought the least daunting of the three books with me to a medical conference, knowing that the subject matter would seem less daunting in an environment of intense learning. I read the introduction and was stricken by not only how practical this book is, but how thoughtful and kind. I expected practicality from a publication from the AARP, but never knew that the advice I'd find would be so respectfully and pleasantly presented. Liquidating a family's memories and treasures is never a happy task. I didn't think I'd get my husband and his brothers to consider reading on the subject, but I will enthusiastically offer to give them copies of this book. My hope is that we can tackle this project with love for one another and respect for the lives their parents have created. That this simple-appearing book offers solutions and advice to that end, is something that has surprised me in the best of ways!

Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 2, 2017
Left behind are two homes, both fully furnished, one with a lifetime of memories, collections, and household items. The stacks of mail are still there, in their slit-opened envelopes. The magazines are still stacked, complete with the blown in subscription cards which seem to multiply in the dark. Who is going to deal with this? When? There are three grown sons, each with his own new family and full household. Each is a busy professional and none are happy with the seemingly sudden aging of their parents into a dependent state that is far more desperate than graceful.
I know without reservation that the emptying of the primary home would not be a task embraced by any of these three sons. I know also that the one son who has the temperament to handle the giant project has used all his patience and forbearance on the day-to-day management of the needs of his parents. If the burden of this house is ever going to be lifted from the family shoulders, and if its value is ever to be contributed to the care and feeding of its former occupants, the process of doing so would fall to me.
Fully aware of the irony inherent in purchasing three books on downsizing, I wasn't able to discern from the reviews and blurbs which was the one book to answer my need. I ordered all of them on amazon and did nothing other than post a photo of them to my instagram account inviting my acquaintances to enjoy the irony. I set the books aside, thinking I'd done enough for now.
I brought the least daunting of the three books with me to a medical conference, knowing that the subject matter would seem less daunting in an environment of intense learning. I read the introduction and was stricken by not only how practical this book is, but how thoughtful and kind. I expected practicality from a publication from the AARP, but never knew that the advice I'd find would be so respectfully and pleasantly presented. Liquidating a family's memories and treasures is never a happy task. I didn't think I'd get my husband and his brothers to consider reading on the subject, but I will enthusiastically offer to give them copies of this book. My hope is that we can tackle this project with love for one another and respect for the lives their parents have created. That this simple-appearing book offers solutions and advice to that end, is something that has surprised me in the best of ways!

The amount of very helpful tips I kept wondering (head slap), why didn't I think of that. She thought of everything and I started cleaning today and making changes. One thing I took away from the book is that unless you have heirlooms that you want to pass down or your children have shown an interest in a certain object, don't save the stuff that you have wonderfully bought and cherished for 40 or 50 years, saving them for your children for their children. Personally I saved my children's baby clothes and toys just knowing that my kids would smile, cry, and through their tears thank me. You want the truth? My kids looked at me and said Mom we don't want this old stuff. I thought what? The minute my kids left to go home I literally threw out all that old stuff. This book is exactly the book I needed to get my bottom in gear and start throwing so much away, giving it away putting things into the metal boxes. Yard sales, consignment shops. I went crazy! Only because this book showed me how to get started. Save a few items that you cherish or heirloomes you want to pass down. But, hey if you haven't used it in four years chances are you never will use it. Get rid of it. Love this book and so will you.Highy recommend.
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