These
are selected snippets from:
Organizing our homes for 2006 is a primary goal for a nation of
hoarders and gatherers
BY JODI MAILANDER FARRELL
Click
here to read it on Herald.com
It's
clutter-busting time
Organizing our homes
for 2006 is a primary goal for a nation of hoarders and gatherers
Look
around you. Clutter,
clutter everywhere. We are a nation consumed with the joy of acquiring
stuff -- and the agony of getting rid of it.
Tossing out junk is now the focus of
at least five home improvement TV shows -- including Clean Sweep
(TLC), Clean House (Style Network) and Mission: Organization (HGTV)
-- and dozens of self-help books. There are online message boards,
magazines, blogs, 12-step programs, support groups, professional
organizers and container stores to help us get our lives in order.
''It's all about postponed decisions,''
says Marsha Sims, owner of Sort-It-Out professional organizing service,
which is based in Miami Lakes, but organizes homes from the Keys
to Vero Beach. ``Everybody is swamped all the time and they have
to make a decision: Do I spend time with the kids or make dinner
or sort mail? If your priority is not sorting mail, it's on the
back burner, which can turn into weeks or months.
'We're all so overwhelmed. Barbara Hemphill [a nationally
known organizing expert] was the one who first pinned it down to
delayed decision making. We put something down and think, `I'll
put it here for now.' '' Then the time to put it away never comes.
Sims says the majority of her clients
are professional women, small business owners, entrepreneurs and
successful career types -- in other words, people who seemingly
have it all together. ''You get to a point where you can't do it
all and there are some things you don't want to do,'' Sims says.
``That's my real clientele -- people who could do it, but really
don't want to.''
SOME TIPS
Some purging tips from people who are tops in the clear-out business
• Have a strategy. Be efficient
and grab things in categories. Snatch up everything that goes in
the bathroom, for instance -- brush, lotion, hair spray, bobby pins
-- and make one trip to put them in their place. ''One of the things
people do wrong is that they'll pick up eight items and then walk
around the house to drop them off,'' Sims says. ``They're in perpetual
motion and they never finish the job.''
• Start small. Don't try to organize
your home in a day. Focus at first on a closet or room that frustrates
(or embarrasses) you most.
• Work on surfaces first. A place
naturally looks more organized when things aren't piled on counters,
desks, dressers and floors. Mentally divide the surface in half
or quarters and clean it off little by little. Once it's cleaned
off, nothing can go back on it. Dust it.
• Sort it out. Put things in categories,
such as things you love or use, things you could give away or sell
and things that can be trashed.
• Look for hidden spaces. Try
to find new storage spaces. It could be your grandmother's chest
or under a bed. Williams, from the Container Store says over-the-door
hanging organizers are popular for storing everything from shoes
to pantry items. Divide large shelves into smaller spaces so things
can easily be seen.
• Pare down. If you have more
than one of an item, be honest. How many do you really need? If
you have an exorbitant number of pens or rubber bands, ask yourself
how many are enough. Keep what you can use.
• Make it a daily task. Spend
15 minutes a day on decluttering (15 minutes a day adds up to seven
hours a month). Write it in your daily planner and honor the appointment
as you would any other, advises Donna Smallin, author of Organizing
Plain & Simple.
• Multitask. Use TV time to sort out
a drawer. During commercials, dump the drawer and sort the
contents into four categories: throw away, give away or sell, put
somewhere else and put back in the drawer. When you're finished,
put back what goes in that drawer and get another drawer. At the
end of the evening, throw away the trash, put give-away items and
things to sell in a box for distribution and put away what belongs
elsewhere.
Turn kids into organizers. Arrange
toys at kid level so children can put their own things away easily.
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