Crucial Skills®

A Blog by Crucial Learning

Crucial Influence

Helping a Hoarder

Dear Crucial Skills,

Help! I am the wife of a hoarder. My husband buys and keeps everything. He has a hobby room, garage, and a rented storage unit full of stuff, including twenty-year-old key chains from vendor booths, console TVs from the 1970s, empty boxes, old magazines, plastic silverware, and anything others don’t want or need. It is in no particular order and the spaces are chaotic and embarrassing to the rest of the family. His space at work is in the same condition!

I spoke to him about cleaning up, sorting through, and getting rid of unnecessary items with no success. Do you have any advice on how to approach this?

Signed,
Stuffed Full

Dear Stuffed,

Yes, I have advice!

Before I start, please note that my response won’t give you specifics on dealing with hoarding—which is a psychological problem with its own characteristics and about which I am not an expert. I hope some of what I’ve written helps you think about the common challenge every reader of this newsletter faces—the challenge of influencing those we love to change habits that are far larger than a crucial conversation.

This is not a Crucial Conversations issue, it’s an influence problem.

Crucial conversations are great at influencing change when all it takes to change is surfacing an issue and providing straightforward advice and accountability. We have spent twenty-five years studying and writing about these methods because they are often the simplest step forward and the step people are most reluctant and incapable of taking.

But sometimes the behavior won’t yield to a ten-minute conversation and a bit of follow up. For example, a dear friend recently suffered his third heart attack. After his first, his doctor counseled him to change his eating habits, exercise more, and take blood pressure medication. Terrified of the heart attack, he complied with this advice. For a while. But within a few months, he was eating cheesy burritos, channel surfing, and failing to take his medication. Then came the second heart attack. And the second recommitment to changing his behavior. And the second descent into old ways. And so on.

As all this happened, his children and wife had many crucial conversations with him—pleading with him to change, reminding him of how they had almost lost him. But the more they tried to help, the more resentful he became. They became nags, and rather than influence change, they provoked his resistance to change.

When we treat an influence problem as a crucial conversation, we not only fail to produce change, we can (with all the best intentions in the world) become nags in the process. Perhaps you haven’t crossed the “nag” line yet, but if you continue down this path, it is most likely coming!

So how do you escape this trap?

Recognize the size of the problem. The problem is not only that your husband lacks the will to change. The problem is that he is blind and outnumbered. And so are you! He’s blind to how many sources of influence are sustaining his hoarding habit. And he’s outnumbered because there are far more sources working against him than for him.

We often think overcoming a habit like hoarding is just about personal motivation (The first source of influence), but it’s not. It’s also about personal ability (the second source of influence). Your husband likely has powerful impulses that drive him toward this behavior and lacks the skills he needs to retrain those impulses. He needs coaching and mentoring—and maybe even professional help—not just encouragement. If you try to motivate someone who is unable, the result is not change but depression. If you want to help him increase his ability to change, you’ll need to identify the strategies people use to successfully escape hoarding.

Please note that this is an example of just one of the six sources of influence that are likely at play here. Make a study of the six sources of influence and reflect on which are part of the problem. Our forthcoming book, Change Anything: The New Science of Personal Success, will be a useful tool in helping you explore all six sources in the context of personal change.

Control your own behavior. The most powerful human impulse is the need for control. People resist any attempt to constrain or force their behavior. Untold millions have gone to war and given their lives rather than submit to tyranny. We do the same, even when defending our autonomy to behave badly.

If you want to increase your influence, give up any desire to control your husband’s behavior. In fact, the first question you should ask yourself is, “How can I prepare myself for this behavior to continue forever?” You need to get to the point that you decide how you will control your own choices without centering your life on his choices. If, in the extreme case, you would prefer to live without him rather than with his hoarding, you need to be clear on that. If you can cope with the hoarding and would prefer to continue the marriage, lovingly, maturely, and respectfully set boundaries to make it work. Don’t “use” these boundaries as a way to manipulate him.

Help him motivate himself. The most common question we’re asked by those trying to influence a loved one is, “How can I help them want to change?” When it comes to personal change, the answer is, you can’t. However, you can influence their personal motivation in two ways:

Stop standing between him and consequences. Direct experience is life’s great teacher, but we often undermine people’s motivation to change by standing between them and the natural consequences they would otherwise feel. For example, a drug addict who is financially supported by those who want him to change is protected from the financial misery that might help him connect his choices with consequences he doesn’t like. The first thing you and your family can do is examine the ways in which you enable your husband’s actions by not letting him experience the natural consequences of this habit. If you are doing this, find a healthy way to change. If the change will be jarring to your husband, be sure to have a crucial conversation to help him understand what you will change and why.

Help him find his own reasons to change. With most bad habits, people have moments of clarity. Moments when we feel a desire to change. Skillful influencers can help others extend the potency of these moments by reacting with a motivational interview rather than a motivational speech. A motivational interview is a simple, structured way to help others explore and crystallize their own reasons to change and plan for doing so rather than taking control and forcing our own agenda on them. How you react during small moments of motivation can either help others capitalize on them or overpower them with your own well-intended but overwhelming motivations.

Again, I am not an expert on hoarding, nor is this a complete plan for change. However, I hope some of these insights help in the challenge of influencing a loved one to change potentially destructive behavior.

Best wishes—and please let me know what you learn about influence in the coming months and years.

Joseph

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The ideas expressed in this article are rooted in the principles and behaviors taught in: Crucial Influence.
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20 thoughts on “Helping a Hoarder”

  1. Tweets that mention Crucial Skills » Helping a Hoarder -- Topsy.com

    […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Hauke Borow, Crucial Skills. Crucial Skills said: Crucial Skills: Helping a Hoarder http://bit.ly/hfgS1r #newsletter […]

  2. CJ

    As a person with ADHD, I can easily get overwhelmed with my own clutter and am unable to deal with it. I have a high tolerance for clutter but am much happier when things are neat and orderly. If someone sets up places to put things for me, then I can follow it (most of the time.) I have great trouble setting up the system to keep things neat.

    My suggestion would be for her to aske her husband if he would like things neater but does not know where to start and is overwhelmed. This way she can hire a company to set up a storage system for his stuff and he can keep what he wants and know where to find it. What will happen, in my experience, is that he will throw some of it away during the process.

    I have a room filled to the brim while the rest of the house is neat. I would love someone to clean it out and arrange things for me… maybe I will take my own advice!!

  3. Mike

    I’m a person with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder which makes me want to hoard stuff. If her husband has OCD and this is the cause of his hoarding, he’ll likely get bad anxiety anytime he thinks of throwing something away that might come in handy sometime. I’d recommend finding a therapist that specializes in dealing with OCD. Without a coach/consultant that understands obsessive compulsive thought patterns, it can be really hard to learn the techniques necessary to change.

  4. Joseph Grenny

    Thanks for the comment, Mike. I appreciate you weighing in with your first-hand experience because so often those who don’t know what it feels like tend to think it’s all just a motivation problem. You persuasively argue that social support and coaching are a huge part of necessary influence with a challenge like this.
    @Mike

  5. Gwen McNatt

    WOW! That is great advice. My husband is not really a hoarder but never puts things away or throws things out and the outcome is very similar. Crucial conversations as well as yelling, nagging, and threatening have done ZERO to change the behavior. Now I understand why… Thanks

  6. Julinda

    I have a similar issue, and this article was helpful – and the comments also gave me some ideas! Thanks.

  7. Julie

    Thanks for the article. I have suffered from too much clutter for years which has blossomed into a full house, a packed extra room, a $100 per month storage, and recently boxes in every nook in my home. My family is embarrassed and I am full of stories. Too tired, too stressed, and too anxious to go through the “stuff.” I have read every clutter book and every attempted every method of labelling, re-packing, and storage system. I suffer from depression and anxiety so when I do see a therapist, we deal with other issues and not the stuff. I am tempted to call a “TV show” to come help me but the thought that everyone “would be in my life” terrifies me. I see myself slowly slipping into becoming a hoarder and your comments help me see that I need more focused help and more focused goals. I just don’t know how to break this barrier and take the first step.

  8. Kathy s

    I married a wonderful man that could not throw anything away. I made that choice and now it has become overwhelming. The amount of clutter has intruded on my feelings for him. I am embarrassed, my family has never visited me in my house and I have been married for 11 years. Threats, yelling, trying to help by cleaning up don’t help. What can I do short of leaving him? I don’t have the resources to leave.

  9. editor

    @Kathy s If you’d like to see an answer to your question in our weekly Q&A column, please submit your question here: http://www.crucialskills.com/submit-your-question/.

  10. Karen

    I sympathize with you Kathy S. I’ve been married 37 years to a hoarder. It got really, really bad when he retired 10 years ago (and I didn’t) as he now has control of the house. I just spend more and more hours at my shop to avoid going home and living with the clutter. And yes, Sharon, mine can no longer throw anything away…the cut-off top from a bag of peanuts, used paper towels, receipts and more receipts (gas, groceries, drug store, whatever). Beer caps when he pops one goes from his pants pocket to the dresser top.

    We had a garage sale; I wanted to donate the stuff that remained. No. He was going to have another one (this was 6 months ago). Junk still in the garage. I put an old stained chair out for the garbage pick-up. It came back into the garage.

    I have thrown and donated stuff when I could get him out of the house for more than 6 hours. If he finds out, he’s furious at me.

    To top it off, he’s a major cheapskate. He’s in charge of grocery shopping and won’t buy anything unless it’s on sale and then he goes overboard! Do we really need 8 boxes of macaroni noodles?? I’m actually trying to figure out how to financially separate us so I can leave.

    My son’s wife of 2 years has never been to our house (he’s too embarrassed to bring her). The kids have volunteered to help get rid of the trash, but that would just direct their father’s anger at them. Better it’s me. It’s hard to undo a lifetime, but I’m about there. We no longer have any friends (never able to reciprocate invites); my life is work and sleep. Not how I want to spend my senior years. I’m almost 64.

  11. Judi Grassi

    I read your response to this woman, and I was okay up until you pointed out the lack of descresion on the drug addict. It is the same disease. As a coach and a mentor or people in recovery, people do learn by their limitations, that is correct, however you leave out an important fact. That when someone is dealing with a stressor, and they don’t have tools options before them they will revert back to the old ways. It is a hormonal response also that impresses how that growing to change is done. We are our Brothers Keepers not to do it for them, but to support them going forward. Helen Keller: her father supported her and Anne Sullivan trained her. She is a true inspiration to how this disease is battled. It’s daily, and over time there will be results. Learning to mind our own business’ is also an act of Love. Marriage has nothing to do with managing the disease. We all have a moment in our days where we do something against ourselves to the dismay to others. That’s Life!!
    Coexisting is Love Patience and tolerance to those moments shows and enforces Love. If it doesn’t go our way, who are we? But if they are truly maing bad decisions that effect others outcomes we are those that love enough to assist them to people who know how to deal with these imbalances. It’s a hormonal imbalance, otherwise better known as diabetes. Death and perception of loss interupt these pathways and make memory on our brains, teaching us reaction. If we react with equal force we will be okay. If we over react we need help. It’s that simple, to get us back to same same reaction. Homeostasis.. There will be a stretch in elasticity of these stretches depends on how fast you recover. That’s instinctual for survival.
    People went to war for the wrong reasons, manipulated for greed. However, sometimes it was for rights of the underdog. Keep that distinction as well.

  12. Minimalist.

    Hoarding is a really chronic relapsing illness, Not seen many that beat it, I would leave myself. That or throw a match into it all, from insanity in the end, awful illness to have. I’m a minimalist…but i know someone who is like this, it sends me insane. It’s like they are married to the stuff, it fills a void of something else, a wardrobe is like a hit of heroin or a new cupboard. Not to mention it’s a huge fire hazard all this stuff. Live on your own, i know it sounds mean but leave the person, living with one would send me nuts.

  13. bld

    i am coming into this conversation at a very late point, only having found this site in a moment of desperations. 37 years of marriage have found me in the same position for 33 of those years. Except I can pinpoint the time it began. My husbands parents both passed away within five months of our marriage, he had no siblings and soon after the hoarding started. I just thought he was getting messy, because he was not before, his parents home was clean altho decorated to where there was no space on any surface. So over the years it necessitated a move because our home was embarrassing, our children were embarrassed, and I still did not understand “Hoarding”, my view was that he just didn’t care, it was on purpose, etc. Over the years I have realized it isn’t jut a motivational issue, no matter how many times I helped him clean up, organize, it would return back to the same condition sometimes only a week later! …..We moved into a bigger home and he switched the manner in which he hoarded! His vehicle, his office, and our garage were almost beyond hope, until a child moved home temporarily and became furious, and cleaned and organized the garage. This hoarding has caused innumerable arguments over the years. However wee agreed to let his office and his truck be his problem, but recently my husband has been making his corner of the living room worse than its ever been. I explain its embarrassing when company and family come over, but he says people ‘know him’ and its no big deal. I have definitely seen signs of depression and OCD in his life, and although trying to make room for areas in which he needs counseling, i still feel upset and frustrated a lot of the time over having to deal with an ongoing issue that affects every area of his life, because what I have discovered over the years, at least for him, is –messy rooms, truck, etc. equals messy finances, strained friendships, and a perfectionism that has caused many things to not be finished. I love him but surely believe this will be an ongoing struggle, until the personal desire is so strong to heal, that he takes it upon himself to do it.

  14. amaxwell888

    My cousin is quite a bit of a hoarder and I want to help her clean, but don’t really have the time or skills; I may just have to stick to the motivating part. I am looking into a professional company to help me get rid of a lot of her unnecessary things. Thanks for your comment to motivate your friend that’s a hoarder to let go of some of the things they truly don’t need. I like how you said that it’s important to give them a reason to stop this habit. http://www.redshaulingservice.com/hoarder-cleanup.php

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