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Love of Hoarding
For The Love of Hoarding
Hoarding was her drug of (non)choice
"Charge It!" the cry of her battle voice!
Of every Item she must buy at least ten
in differing colors to fill up her Den...
Sales got her excited announced every day
did not matter what the product, she'd pay.
fill up the cabinets, garage and closets
get many replacements for kitchen faucets,
select fifty bedspreads, curtains and sheets
colors of sunrises, paisleys and farmed beets
to mix and match for those private times
forget not the quilts for the northern climes.
She Prowled the neighborhood rummage sales
found notices at stores when that failed...
To The Home Shopping Network on T.V.
which appealed to her most intimately!
About This Poem
Last Few Words: My oldest sister was a Massive hoarder. She filled up the house and garage with the things she bought on sale. Her husband moved out of the house to a little junk free apartment. He and Steven and I were quite close. this poem is a true story. Cat
Review Request Direction:
What did you think of my title?
How was my language use?
What did you think of the rhythm or pattern or pacing?
How does this theme appeal to you?
How was the beginning/ending of the poem?
Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back
Editing Stage: Editing - draft
Comments
neopoet
2 months 2 weeks ago
Neopoet AI (premium) [2025-04]
The below is a computer-generated response from Neo, Neopoet’s AI:
This poem uses rhyme and humor to explore the compulsive nature of hoarding, focusing on the protagonist’s relentless drive to acquire material goods. The couplet structure and consistent rhyme scheme create a playful, almost singsong rhythm, which contrasts with the underlying seriousness of the subject.
The poem’s strongest technique is its cataloguing of excess: lines like “select fifty bedspreads, curtains and sheets / colors of sunrises, paisleys and farmed beets” effectively evoke both the variety and absurdity of the accumulation. The use of hyperbole (“at least ten,” “fifty bedspreads”) underscores the compulsive aspect of the behavior. The phrase “her drug of (non)choice” is an effective nod to the compulsive, addictive qualities of hoarding, though the parenthetical disrupts the flow and could be reconsidered for clarity and impact.
The poem’s meter is irregular, which sometimes enhances the comic tone but can also create awkwardness, as in “get many replacements for kitchen faucets,” where the rhythm falters. Attention to syllabic balance in each line could improve the musicality and readability.
The narrative voice maintains a distance from the subject, using third person and focusing on external actions rather than internal motivations or emotional consequences. This choice aligns with the satirical tone, but it also limits the poem’s emotional depth. Introducing a moment of reflection or vulnerability could add complexity to the portrayal.
The ending references “The Home Shopping Net Work on t.v. / which appealed to her most intimately!” This conclusion effectively ties together the themes of consumerism and isolation, though the line break and punctuation in “Net Work on t.v.” is slightly awkward; “Network” as one word would be standard, and the abbreviation “t.v.” could be updated to “TV” for consistency.
Overall, the poem succeeds in using humor and exaggeration to critique consumer culture and compulsive acquisition, but could benefit from refining its meter, clarifying some phrasing, and considering the emotional stakes of its subject.
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John Leslie O'Kelley
2 months 2 weeks ago
Hoarding!
My oldest daughter loves chaos and hoards everything. She has about 50 rabbit in a hole in her basement. I lived with them for about two weeks, but I got paranoid that she would lose her family, then I just freaked out and went to a care center. She has mental health issues like me, but she makes out alright. I feel for her husband, because he has to do everything around the house, plus work two or three jobs, but doesn't seem to bother him at all! This disorder of hoarding is prevelant among people who belong to my faith. Especially those of a lower caste! This was an interesting change of topic for you. I liked to read what you said and agreed with the ideas!
Candlewitch
2 months 2 weeks ago
Hello my friend,
My sister disease had progressed to the point that she had rows(or isles) of junk piled high throughout her house. She filled all the rooms with the crap she bought... at the worst of her progression, she rented storage unitS to hold her bounty! She passed away, leaving her granddaughter to clean up the mess. The city condemned the house when Kathryn went into the hospital with pneumonia. She phoned me and demanded that Steve and I clean out the house, garage and storage buildings. I was in a wheelchair and Steven worked about 1o hours a day. I told her to find someone else to do her dirty work. she shrilled at me "Does this mean you are not going to help me???" I confirmed and she hung up on me.
I had some really crazy relatives...Norma was just the tip of the iceberg.
very fondly, Cat
John Leslie O'Kelley
2 months 2 weeks ago
Candlewitch
I hope you have a wonderful day! Keep writing and keep winning contests, I wish that I could do the same.
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
hello John,
I have since learned that hoarding is the American number one first pass-time... and for all these many years, I thought it was the sport of Baseball! LOL! thank you for reading, responding and giving me your good wishes ;)
fondly, Cat
Unca Fez
2 months 2 weeks ago
Rabbit Paths
There was so much stuff in her house, it could only be navigated with paths through the clutter barely wide enough for a rabbit. Going up the stairs to the bedrooms was a real challenge. The few times that I assisted her in clearing her apartment so it would pass inspection, there was very little clearing actually done. A few things went, but most of the activity was to pile things such that it looked like less. It made me wonder why her husband even bothered to continue to associate with her. Maybe his heart attack was his way of getting out of it.
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
I think...
that when he rented an apartment for himself, he became a happier person. Sure, sometimes she would show up on his doorstep. But it was his choice to open up the door or not.
much love, Cat
Sen99
2 months 2 weeks ago
Love of Hosrding
Hello CandleW
A good decluttering can always heal a hoarders soul !
its quite cathartic, your sisrer may try it or if you follow her obessesions.
Thanks for share
Sen99
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
Dear Sen99,
My oldest sister has passed, she found that she could not take it with her in the end. Thank you for reading my poem and your very kind suggestion. Kathryn's refusal to part with any of the clutter had troubled me for quite awhile. We had offered to help her clear it out, Steven and myself and take the time to get the job done. But she was too far gone in her disease that she could not accept.
cordially, Cat the candlewitch
William Lynn
2 months 2 weeks ago
Hi Cat
I like your poetic take on this serious problem.
We have a close friend whose daughter has a beautiful four bedroom home and a three car garage FILLED with boxes, mostly from Amazon purchases, that have never been opened. Most every day the "smile truck" arrives and leaves ten more packages that will never be opened. Good thing she has lots of money, thanks to her deceased husband and a large life insurance policy.
Nice job and nice take on serious subject. Best of luck with the contest! - Will
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
Hoarding...
Dear Will,
I talked to a psychologist about why some people feel the need to hoard. I was given some ideas to chew over: 1. someone who comes from a very poor family might have desires to purchase and hold onto many things. Because they fear becoming without the funds to get what they feel they need to be happy. I do not understand it. Especially because I came from poverty too. In the end she was a covetous, sour old woman who could not hang onto what she had. I guess I feel kind of sorry for her vacant soul.
Thank you for reading and your kind comment! very fondly, Cat
Clentin Martin
2 months 2 weeks ago
Your poems bring to mind the…
Your poems bring to mind the constant urge to buy and never get rid of anything. My house has bedroom closets filled with items spanning years! No children live here anymore but the closets are full! Why!
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
Dear Clentin,
LOL! you might consider selling whatever is in those boxes on e-Bay. You might have some antiques in there!
fondly, Cat
Wallyroo92
2 months 1 week ago
Love of Hoarding
I see it's quite the addiction for some folks. Once the house runs out of space you know there is a problem. I've been trying to become a minimalist while my partner is the opposite. It can put a strain on relationships.
Great form and rhyming couplets. Best of of luck in the contest.
Candlewitch
2 months 1 week ago
Dear Wallyroo,
thank you so very much for responding to my poem about hoarding and my departed sister. Hoarding was an insidious addiction that cost her the house, and turned her marriage into a war. She refused to seek professional help for fear of being committed to an institution. Thanks for taking the time to read and respond to this poem. It is greatly appreciated!
from Cat the Candlewitch!