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Sunday, February 5th, 2006 05:15 pm
OK, it's a contest! What's the most useless, silly, superfluous stuff CJ has?

[Poll #667449]

I may have to have a second voting round on the most useless single item. After all, I'm nowhere near done cleaning this stuff up yet.
Monday, February 6th, 2006 04:46 pm (UTC)
*sigh* I wish I'd kept more records. Every time I moved, I'd say, "They'll never ask for this," and trash it.
Monday, February 6th, 2006 06:42 pm (UTC)
Have you ever been burned by not having something? Bad decision on an audit due to no documentation, or anything like that? I ask because I suspect your approach is really the saner one, and I wonder whether it has hurt you.
Monday, February 6th, 2006 10:45 pm (UTC)
I have. Tom was a packrat extraordinaire, and apparently his late first wife was even worse. When we got married he had 27 years of financial records -- cancelled checks, paid bills, receipts, everything! When we moved into the house we bought together I made him throw the old stuff away except for the last few years' worth. We looked through them, chuckling at how cheap things had been, and then pitched them.

The house Tom and his first wife had lived in was in her name. Her will stipulated that when it was sold, the proceeds were to be split four ways among her three children and Tom. That didn't seem like an issue until he got sick and we were getting his affairs in order ... and I learned that she had owned the land before they'd been married, but that Tom had actually paid for building the house, and made all the mortgage payments over all the many years they lived in it! He felt so badly about leaving me with so little -- that was the main part of his "wealth" and he wanted to make sure I was taken care of -- and realized that the arrangement he had thought was fair (because the house had stayed in her name) wasn't fair at all.

The lawyer said Tom had a very sound basis for challenging the will and claiming sole right of the portion of the sale price (which included very substantial appreciation) that was represented by all the improvements on the land. But of course we'd need proof that Tom had made all those payments rather than his wife -- any records would do, such as cancelled checks, or receipts, or even old check registers....

Oh. My. God. He had had plenty of proof ... but we'd thrown it all out two years earlier, never imagining that 27-year-old cancelled checks could possibly be needed for anything.

I don't throw out any financial records any more.
Throw out all the other useless stuff, but stick the financial records in a corner somewhere and hang onto them. You never know what they might be needed for.
Monday, February 6th, 2006 11:37 pm (UTC)
Ouch. That's brutal.

I don't throw out any financial records any more.

I can certainly see why. Now I gotta ask: how many file drawers' worth of paper do you have?