The concept of Swedish death cleaning:
https://youtu.be/LIW3ttZzfkISomething of a "reduce your stuff" philosophy that I knew of, but had not associated with "Swedish". My German dad started doing this around ten years before his death - slowly just reducing what he owned. Though his death was sudden, in the year prior he went into turbo mode on this, almost like he knew. When it was time to clean out his place, while of course there was furniture, dishes in the cabinets, and a few other things, as far as "personal items", I ended up with half a pickup bed of tools and books and stuff, and that was about it. There was around a single trash bag of clothes. All the important documents were in a single desk drawer.
I'm always kind of thinking about doing this, not just for after death, but also as the video mentions, to simplify life. I seem to be going in the other direction though.
I think part of that is that I spent my younger years scrimping and saving to be able to retire early, so all the things that I might have acquired in my youth (as many of my friends (who are still working) did), I'm playing catch up with now. At some point I really need to reverse that. It's fun having lots of toys and stuff to enjoy, but at some point, maintenance makes you pay for the fun, and as I harp on in other threads around here, the older I get, the more every minute of time means to me. I'm getting pretty good about hiring out stuff like plumbing that I can do myself, but don't like doing, but some "fun stuff" has work associated with it too, and non-tangible stuff, like sitting on the porch and viewing nature, or standing in a river and waving a stick, has its own value.