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Pare down and strip
away
- Use your
space as a guide. If you devote a space to a certain thing or type
of thing, then get rid of the things that don't fit into that space. If
you already have two bureaus filled with clothes and you are not the
type of person the public expects to see in a different outfit each day
of the year, then stop buying clothes! Or make a deal with yourself to
get rid of something whenever you buy something new.
- Keep it
simple. You can get extra space by using clear plastic boxes on
your closet shelves for items you use every once in a while. It's very
satisfying to be able to lay your hands on the exact thing you need
when you need it, but looking after all that stuff can be more
stressful than simply making do without.
- Become a
detective of your own life. Watch yourself when you come in the
house. Where do you put the keys, the mail, your bag, the newspaper?
Does it all go in one place? What about your jacket? Then where do you
go? Make things easy for yourself. If you have a front hall, put a
table there big enough to accommodate the mail and your bag. If you
don't, set up an incoming-outgoing station as close to the door as
possible where those things can be parked. You get the idea.
- Assign
“homes.” This is the way to avoid CHS-itis. CHS stands for
convenient horizontal surfaces, which get filled quickly and easily
when there is no assigned place to put something.
- Pare
down and strip away. Michelangelo believed that his sculptures
were the result of liberating the figures that had been imprisoned in
the stone. Think of your home as that chunk of marble. Develop a vision
of how you want your home to look. The stronger your vision, the easier
it will be to chip away those things that don't belong.
Claire
Tompkins ·
Clutter Coach · 510-768-7913 ·
claire AT
cluttercoach DOT net
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