Take Advantage of Your Self-Isolation

So you’re stuck at home, thanks to this nasty virus that’s going around the world. You can only binge-watch so many shows and movies before you get tired, and antsy. What to do with your excess energy?

Why not take some of it and go through your drawers and closets, removing things you haven’t used in ages? You always say you’re going to do this once you get the time. Well, now you have the time! It will keep you occupied doing something useful, and you can cross something off your mental list that’s been sitting there for far too long.

While you’re at it, watch for “I Was Gonna” items you always meant to use, and actually use a few of them. Open up that old needlework kit and start stitching, or take the brand new weights out of their dusty box and start lifting them. Doing this will lift your spirits.

Once you’ve gone through your house for things you don’t need anymore, you may not be able to donate all of your stuff right away, but you can put those “donate” boxes in your vehicle, or your garage, or even near the front door. Once the restrictions are lifted, hopefully sooner than later, your local Goodwill will reopen, and you can drop off all your extra clutter. Won’t getting out of the house and making a donation to a worthy cause feel good?

Young Declutterer

For most of my life, I struggled to keep my collection of stuff from getting out of control; I wasn’t usually successful until we were forced to move three times in four years. But I believe I first developed the urge to declutter many years before then.

When I was a small girl, I spent a lot of time (including most weekends) at my grandmother’s house. She lived in a small bungalow on the south side of Chicago. It only had two bedrooms, so it could get pretty crowded with four adults living there on a daily basis, plus my mother, my siblings and I when we visited on the weekends. But there wasn’t a lot of clutter in the house, though on weekend nights, any spare space held a rollaway bed.

There was also a closed-in porch on the back of the house. It was connected to the house by doors in the kitchen and the back bedroom. It was full of old furniture and odds and ends, including a small turquoise television. I can remember asking my grandma if we could clean up that porch and make it into a nice little spare bedroom that we could sleep in when we visited. I had ideas for what to get rid of and how to decorate the space once it didn’t have so much stuff in it. I thought it would be lovely in the summer, with its view of my grandpa’s lovely shade garden, and its many windows open to catch the breeze.

(Of course, I was too young to understand exactly how uninhabitable an unheated four-season porch would be in January in Chicago!)

Grandma would nod at my ideas, but nothing was ever done, and after a few years, two of the residents passed away, so my grandma moved out to the suburbs, by us. But I still remember that feeling of excitement, of all the possibilities, when I looked out in that porch and thought about what could be done once all that stuff was gone. I believe that is the root of my desire to declutter.

The Best Week of the Year to Declutter Your Home

Today begins the best week of the year to declutter your home.

Why? First, because we’re just recovering from Christmas. The decorations take up space and make the house look more cluttered than ever. The Christmas tree is looking a bit disheveled and will soon need to be taken down. And most of us received more gifts than we really need. As a result, we’re starting to crave some open space and less clutter.

Then there’s the fact that a new year is just around the corner. New Year’s Day always promises new beginnings, and leads us to make new personal goals. The mood everywhere is one of renewal. What a perfect time to get a handle on the extra stuff that has parked itself in all the nooks and crannies of your home.

Take that energy and use it this week to:

  • Find duplicates of things you own that really don’t need to be duplicated (gifts, calendars, hair brushes, throws, pillows, tableware, you name it) and donate them, or pitch them if they’re not nice enough to donate.
  • Go through your closet, find anything you haven’t worn in the past year and move it along.
  • Clean out the interior and trunk of your car; those fast-food wrappers are evidence of this past year’s failed attempts at healthier living, and the empty water bottles are just begging to be recycled.
  • Look in each room of your house to see if there’s a piece of furniture or a decorative item (or two) that no longer serves a purpose or makes you happy. If so, remove it and donate it.

By doing this, you’ll start the New Year with a clean slate, and a feeling of being somewhat lighter (even if you ate way too many cookies last week.)

Happy New Year!

Oh, Marie….

Decluttering guru Marie Kondo became so famous for promoting decluttering that she ended up posing on the red carpet at this year’s Oscars. But the woman known for her decluttering books and Netflix show just made a huge mistake: she opened up an online shop so she can sell high-priced clutter.

Of course, capitalizing on your fame by coming up with a related product line is an American tradition. Just think of how much money people like Martha Stewart, Ree Drummond and Paula Deen have made by turning their fame into additional fortune.

But here’s the thing: they weren’t decluttering gurus. They became popular for other talents, and parlayed those talents into stuff they can sell to their fans for a big payback. But when your whole shtick is getting rid of stuff, how do you justify selling stuff back to your fans, and high-priced stuff at that?

You can’t. There is no justification. Ms. Kondo is going against everything she has promoted in her books and Netflix show. I suspect she will regret this move.