There is nothing wrong with that. I moved twice in two years, and I couldn't believe how much stuff I was able to sell and still be able to live my life without feeling crimped. Let's see, I had two cars for myself, and now I have one. No problem. Bedroom set, living room set, dining room table and chairs, entertainment center, BBQ grill, one weight scale, engineering books I'll never read again, a book case, two lamps, an AC unit, a TV, a humidifier, a tool chest, and a TKD heavy punching bag are all gone. The only things that I miss are the sofa (ah, comfy) and the TKD punching bag (well, it's better than punching someone for real).
The biggest pain was dealing with all the buyers. I didn't mind the emails and phone calls. I have several standard form answers ready to copy and paste, but it was dealing with the actual pick up that was a pain. The lady who bought the entertainment center had the movers show up but refused to show up herself. It was a very hot June day, and the drivers were sweating in their truck because it was so big that they couldn't just park it and sit in my house. When the buyer finally did show 4 hours later, she tried to use her delay as a tactic to get my speakers for free. The guy who bought the AC unit during the second move refused to come up to my apartment. He figured that if he had me carry the AC downstairs he could knock another $20 off the price (The original price was $50) because I wouldn't want to carry the AC back up. Wrong! I love exercise of all kinds especially the free ones you get from just living your life, so I started carrying the AC back, and he caved. What a tool.
These two sales also reminded me to be careful in accumulating things in the future because the pain of having to do time-consuming transactions to get rid of the stuff.