YOURS, MINE AND OURS. How To Blend Two Households And Stay Sane
In The Process
YOURS, MINE AND OURS How To Blend Two Households And Stay Sane
In The Process
How exciting, to be getting married! How joyous the occasion!
How much extra ?stuff? you?ll now have! Gone are the days when a
girl had a hope chest where she saved the things she?d
eventually need for marriage. These days, people are getting
married later in life, which means they often come into the
marriage with a full house. Suddenly, you?re the proud owner of
two of everything and not sure what to do.
Here are a few tips to help make blending your lives easier and
help others in the process:
1. Go through each house together, and identify which items are
duplicates. Talk about each item honestly. This is the time to
decide whose wine rack you?ll keep, whose kitchen table you?ll
keep, and so on. If you can legitimately use two of something in
your new life, such as televisions or stereos, go ahead and keep
both.
Try not to be too attached to something simply because it?s
yours and realize that the more you streamline now, the easier
your move will be. If your kitchen table is circa 1971 and your
partner?s is only two years old, be realistic about which to
keep. The idea is to choose the things that will blend well to
best furnish your new place, not to fight to keep everything
that is yours.
2. For things such as silverware and kitchen items, cookware,
and other small items, do the same evaluation process as for the
larger items.
3. As you decide which things to keep, tag the things you are
letting go with brightly colored sticky notes.
4. If it?s not winter where you live, pull your tagged items
outside and have a yard or garage sale. Don?t be greedy.
Remember, you want this stuff to sell quickly so you don?t have
to move it.
5. Everything that doesn?t sell, donate to an organization that
can use it, such as your church or synagogue, The Metro Atlanta
Furniture Bank (404-355-8530), a homeless or day shelter, or the
Salvation Army.
Presto! You?re down to one set of furnishings and you?ve donated
things to people who can use them. When blending your personal
files from two separate households, remember, it?s not necessary
to keep all your files in the same file cabinet. You don?t have
to combine your household files if you aren?t comfortable doing
so. Just be sure that your filing system is easy to navigate in
case your partner needs to retrieve any of your filed
information.
If you do elect to combine your household files, be sure keep
files of the same type together, in a truly integrated filing
system. For example, keep both your auto insurance information
under the same category, instead of filing yours under CAR and
your partner?s under INSURANCE. Also, don?t keep all the
paperwork for any given subject in one folder. Divide it into
two folders, one labeled with your name and one with your
partner?s. You can successfully blend two households if you take
the time to set it up right in the beginning.