@fleschler
Sorry for the mistake - I multiplied by seconds instead of minutes and didn't see the word POTENTIALLY, but you are making my point even more clearly. If you listen to 15 LPs a week, that's 780 per year or about 5% of your inventory, even less if you hit your goal of 3 listens per year. At that rate, you would listen to your accessible ones that you intend to play once every 20 YEARS! (I don't look at anything other than LPs since they take up way more space).
@chakster - I have a real passion for listening to music that I am passionate about, live or on records, not collecting records. In fact, I really don't see the point of collecting anything you don't use/enjoy unless it is gives you pleasure to look at it, like art or maybe baseball cards, stamps, coins, etc.unless you are using it as an investment vehicle. I doubt fleschler gets pleasure out of looking at 28,000 album covers, but maybe I'm wrong. It annoys me that I may never listen to maybe 20-25 of my 300 records. No sure what I was thinking when I bought them a long time ago. Maybe they were part of the Columbia Record Club I was a member of for their initial shipment. I don' think I've bought a record in that group in 40 years. When I was a kid, I collected baseball cards because I was and am a big sports fan, and was always told they'd be worth something some day. That is only true if they are in mint, almost untouched condition. That's tough for a kid who traded and flipped them. I have a few years of the entire series' in the early 70s and in total they're worth about $15!
I've heard of Maria Condo, never read or saw her, but she is into simplicity and organization and I agree with what I hear she preaches: if something doesn't give you joy or you don't wear it or use it, etc, get RID OF IT! I get anxious anytime I look in a "junk" drawer or closet and feel the need to throw out 90% of it. My wife doesn't want me to ever look in one. She won't throw out an empty pill bottle. Opposites attract I guess.
I hate wasting anything - time, space, money, etc., and I think of collecting anything never touched as organized hoarding. Worse is if it is not organized - it's just hoarding. Anything not fit for the house or "overstuffed", put in the garage if you have room. If you haven't touched it in a year or two, throw it out or sell it or give it away, or put it in the shed or crawlspace or attic and start the clock over.