Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Know what you need.

You can't know what you need if you don't know what you have.

Much shopping, impulsive and otherwise, comes from thinking you need _________.
So you toss __________ into your cart,
you get home and discover you already have 
two boxes of __________ on the shelf.
Or three pair of ____________ hanging in the closet.
Or four bags of _____________ in the freezer.

Having items organized, grouped like with like,
and stored where you use them creates a visual inventory.
When you can see and are aware of what you already have,
and you've decided how many is enough, you'll know if you really 'need' more of something and 
your shopping habits will change.

Use lists (a great use of your smart phone) so you can note when you need to make a purchase.
If you write it down you don't have to try to remember how many you have left or if you emptied the container.

(Oh, and just because it's on sale, doesn't mean you need it)

Know your limits.
Shop accordingly.


Thursday, July 20, 2017

Aim lower

"The perfect is the enemy of the good."  Voltaire.

Set aside perfection.
Abandon your inner Pinterest wanna be.

Aim for small improvements, little changes.

Don't worry about eating off the floor. 
Start with being able to see the floor!

Sometimes people wait to declutter and organize until
they have a whole day to work on the project,
or they have the perfect storage containers,
or they purchase another bookcase.

Realistically, you can find an hour to work on one area.
Realistically, matching baskets look nice but won't solve the problem.
Realistically, you will be less cluttered if you sort the books you already own.

It's okay to lower your expectations from perfect to good.
(and much more likely that you'll arrive in that place.)

Accept that you only have a limited amount of time, energy and interest.
Remember who and what is most important in your life.

Having a color coded, neatly lined up sock drawer would be perfect.
But unnecessary.
Having a drawer where socks live, and are easy to access.
That's good!

Let good be perfect.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

More space in under ten minutes

This week's idea:
Three things you can do in ten minutes or less to create space in your life.

Remove all the empty hangers from your closet.
Toss the cheap and flimsy ones.
Take ten of the good ones to the laundry room so you'll be able to hang things directly from the dryer.
Gain space in your closet without having to try on a thing.

Sort the container of pens on your desk.
Sort the contents.
Remove anything that doesn't really live there.
(I won't ask how some of that stuff ended up in there...)
Test every pen/pencil.
Throw away the dried up ones, cheap ones, stubby little pencils.
Figure out how many is enough and limit the container to that amount.

Clean out your wallet.
Take out every item, scrap of paper, card, receipt, photograph, fortune cookie fortune.
Toss/recycle the expired, unnecessary, unreadable and irrelevant.
Decide what really needs to live in there.
How many credit cards do you need?
What id needs to be with you all the time?
If you're keeping receipts-why?

Choose one little project.
Spend a few minutes.
Change the look and feel of one space in your life.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017


Putting things away when you're finished with them is key to eliminating clutter.

However, before you toss a dried up pen back in the drawer,
put a chipped cup back on the shelf,
hang up a shirt that's a tiny bit too tight,
or make room for another book on an already crowded shelf;
ask yourself, “Is it worth keeping?” 

Take a moment to stop and consider if you really need
or want to keep the item.
If you don't, then let it go. (You know-recycle, donate, toss.)

No matter the size of your home, your space is limited.
Don’t waste space storing things that don’t support the life you want to be living.

Oh, and let's not forget the mental or emotional items we're keeping.
Is it helpful to hold onto that grudge or resentment, anger or fear?
Would letting go of those stories and memories make space in your head and heart?

It’s your decision what you need and want in the life you're living right now.

Thoughtful decisions about your home and relationships reflect what you care about and value.