I once went on a road trip with a coworker and along the way he wanted to visit his high school friend before we head on. Upon arrival, the house looked abandoned despite being in the suburbs type neighborhood - probably built in the 50s. Entered the house and the nightmare began. I smelled mold the moment I entered the dimly lit house late in the afternoon. To my right, the father sat slouching over watching TV in the living room. I figured, old life style, so nothing new. Turned to my left to see the kitchen/dinning area and there I saw a huge pile of trash filled up the entire dining area. Lots of old pizza boxes and McDonalds bags. I wanted to leave but I thought we were only there to say hello for a couple minutes. As we proceed to the his friend's room, more trash on the hallway like used tissue paper and cardboard boxes obstructing the pathway. Surprisingly, his friend's room wasn't that bad with the window open and all and his girlfriend was there sitting on the bed with him gaming. Got up to use the restroom and holy shit, more trash on the sink and all over the floor. Basically, they never used the sink so I wondered how the hell do they even brush their teeth?. We were there for about 30 minutes but it felt like hours. After we drove off, my coworker said his friend's dad has a cancerous tumor growing out his neck. I didn't notice because it was so damn dark in there. I thought no shit, I always hear people developing some cancer symptom from hoarding. Still traumatized whenever I think about it, but I realize that I learned a survival skill that day. Either never enter a friend's home that looked abandoned or make the excuse to head out instead of being in there for more than a second.
"I might need it later." Recently, I had to buy stuff that I remember disposing years ago. Yeah, it's not good to hoard but... you know, there's a chance you'll need them later. 🤣🤣
So at least for my goodwill ecosystem (I'm in Washington, we have two different goodwill companies, diff missions) donations go to the stores, then their salvage (unsellable product) goes to the bin/by pound outlets. If it's not sold there, it get separated by contents and sold to after markets to try and diminish as much trash/waste as possible.
No, he isn't. He said the neighborhood is near where Subin lives. And he went "hard" on the hoarder because he understands that it isn't fair to the neighbors to be forced to live by a landfill of a house, which saw the neighbors having mice, rats and cockroach infestations to deal with. That wasn't what the people who bought homes in that neighborhood signed up for.
Its not about coddling, its about having compassion for their struggles; people tend to intertwine the two but it means and looks different. To be compassionate one still holds the party accountable, and sometimes its in the form of tough love. That said, from what I’ve experienced living with loved ones who behaved as this hoarder guy, I think the guy sub-consciously is building a fort (literally a wall of trash, HIS trash) to protect himself from the world/ppl; its unresolved conflict being replayed and triggered by anyone’s criticism and judgements. The truly sad part is people only think about clearing up the mess (maybe even kicking the guy out as well) but this guy needs help recoding his problem solving skills, and I don’t mean a habit of taking out the trash though metaphorically that works lol.
lol do you mean on the cost of the dumpster to haul their crap away? Nah. 😂 Like Bart said, it is a health violation. Esp. when it attracts rodents and/or if it smells bad. It's a cease pool for disease.
He's not living his passion 😂😂😂. I was on plenty of fish years ago and went to this guys house, and you could hardly walk into his living room. I didn't want to sit down on the couch, I had to get out of there.
No, actually he isn't. Subin vibes very well with the group. That is why they keep asking him back onto the show. And giving him the merch to wear. He is an unofficial Careful Boyz member. An ex. of how well he fits in with the crew.... "Off The Record: If You Could Be Any Race, Age, Gender, etc. for a Day..."
This could have been takin care of YEARS ago
That could have been takin care of YEARS ago
Hoarders have mental issues 💯. My mom is legit mental.
06:32 I was thinking Adam Sandler too😂
I once went on a road trip with a coworker and along the way he wanted to visit his high school friend before we head on. Upon arrival, the house looked abandoned despite being in the suburbs type neighborhood - probably built in the 50s. Entered the house and the nightmare began. I smelled mold the moment I entered the dimly lit house late in the afternoon. To my right, the father sat slouching over watching TV in the living room. I figured, old life style, so nothing new. Turned to my left to see the kitchen/dinning area and there I saw a huge pile of trash filled up the entire dining area. Lots of old pizza boxes and McDonalds bags. I wanted to leave but I thought we were only there to say hello for a couple minutes. As we proceed to the his friend's room, more trash on the hallway like used tissue paper and cardboard boxes obstructing the pathway. Surprisingly, his friend's room wasn't that bad with the window open and all and his girlfriend was there sitting on the bed with him gaming. Got up to use the restroom and holy shit, more trash on the sink and all over the floor. Basically, they never used the sink so I wondered how the hell do they even brush their teeth?. We were there for about 30 minutes but it felt like hours. After we drove off, my coworker said his friend's dad has a cancerous tumor growing out his neck. I didn't notice because it was so damn dark in there. I thought no shit, I always hear people developing some cancer symptom from hoarding. Still traumatized whenever I think about it, but I realize that I learned a survival skill that day. Either never enter a friend's home that looked abandoned or make the excuse to head out instead of being in there for more than a second.
"I might need it later."
Recently, I had to buy stuff that I remember disposing years ago. Yeah, it's not good to hoard but... you know, there's a chance you'll need them later. 🤣🤣
yeh, it be like that sometimes 😭🤣
My brother had a horder next door after the city cleaned it it rose his hose price because it was a better “neighborhood”😂😂😂
This video made me want to clean my house.
So at least for my goodwill ecosystem (I'm in Washington, we have two different goodwill companies, diff missions) donations go to the stores, then their salvage (unsellable product) goes to the bin/by pound outlets. If it's not sold there, it get separated by contents and sold to after markets to try and diminish as much trash/waste as possible.
I usually need stuff after I throw it away 😭
😔it be like that sometimes, lol 🤦🏻♀️😂
Wish steve was here for this one lol
I hoard fishing lures and fishing equipment haha
For a local gov that doesn't even do sh*t about criminals and squatters you think hoarders are on their priority list?
I could never be a hoarder, I'm too clean. I can literally live with chair, tv, bed & I'm cool
4:16 if this clip existed back in 2018 when there was a new meme every month, it most def would have went viral 😭 good times
Was Ryan his neighbour ? My man went HARD on the hoarder all episode
No, he isn't. He said the neighborhood is near where Subin lives. And he went "hard" on the hoarder because he understands that it isn't fair to the neighbors to be forced to live by a landfill of a house, which saw the neighbors having mice, rats and cockroach infestations to deal with. That wasn't what the people who bought homes in that neighborhood signed up for.
Dude I was blowing at my screen so many times cuz there was dust on it
Turns out Mr Nick the ear just had an accessory on his head
Its not about coddling, its about having compassion for their struggles; people tend to intertwine the two but it means and looks different. To be compassionate one still holds the party accountable, and sometimes its in the form of tough love.
That said, from what I’ve experienced living with loved ones who behaved as this hoarder guy, I think the guy sub-consciously is building a fort (literally a wall of trash, HIS trash) to protect himself from the world/ppl; its unresolved conflict being replayed and triggered by anyone’s criticism and judgements. The truly sad part is people only think about clearing up the mess (maybe even kicking the guy out as well) but this guy needs help recoding his problem solving skills, and I don’t mean a habit of taking out the trash though metaphorically that works lol.
Is Subin a careful boy now?
He is an unofficial Careful Boyz member.
Everybody with a dirty house is real quiet in the comment sections 🤣
I'm like Joe 😅😅😅😅
Looks like grown Peter Brady
lol do you mean on the cost of the dumpster to haul their crap away? Nah. 😂 Like Bart said, it is a health violation. Esp. when it attracts rodents and/or if it smells bad. It's a cease pool for disease.
Literally probably kept every little thing. I've seen inside of vehicles where it's mounds of trash.
N the back off the bed of a truck
He should pay a fine
What's that thing on their nose
He's not living his passion 😂😂😂. I was on plenty of fish years ago and went to this guys house, and you could hardly walk into his living room. I didn't want to sit down on the couch, I had to get out of there.
it’s giving steven crowder “that doesn’t work EITHER!”
I want years ago guy to meet the little bit of time lady
Subin is a male version of Julia. He does not match the vibe and energy of the group.
Love jk been supporting for many years.
No, actually he isn't. Subin vibes very well with the group. That is why they keep asking him back onto the show. And giving him the merch to wear. He is an unofficial Careful Boyz member. An ex. of how well he fits in with the crew.... "Off The Record: If You Could Be Any Race, Age, Gender, etc. for a Day..."
And this.... "Off The Record: Getting to Know Our New Friend Subin Choi" and this one.... "Off The Record: Putting Subin Choi in the HOTSEAT!"