Clutter is
the stuff in your life that you no
longer use and love, or does not
comfortably
fit in your home. It does not
contribute to your life’s current
productivity or meaning.
It may have had value once, but not now.
Just like
you need a home; your stuff needs a
home, too. Easy access and knowing
where
things are reduces daily frustration.
Constant frustration easily escalates to
anxiety or
anger, or another perfectly natural
response, depression or lack of
motivation.
If you remove the blockages - the
clutter - you can’t help but feel
better.
You can
not always control life, but you can
control your clutter. Clutter
clearing interventions
take effort. Learning new habits
to prevent future clutter takes
perseverance and patience.
It’s all doable - maybe not alone, but
all doable. Getting clutter clear has a
power affect on
your entire life. You literally make
space, making the room – in your
environment and
mind – for the life you do want to lead.
We all have clutter. It's just a
matter of degree - and clarity. You
can have clutter all around
you or neatly packed away, taking up
valuable space, leaving little room for
what you currently
use or love. A mess is not
necessarily clutter because it may all
be stuff that you use or
love - now. It’s just not put away. A
collection becomes clutter when it
is so densely packed on shelves that it
is hard to find an object or see and
enjoy the collection. Clutter becomes
hoarding when an environment becomes
physically unsafe because of all the
stuff in it.
People frequently say, “I used to be organized”. Often clutter is simply the result of the space not properly being set up for the unique activities and brain of the person(s) living in it. It’s necessary to find the right fit between you and your environment if you want to be at your best – not just surviving, but thriving. It's amazing how much easier it is to stay organized when the clutter is out of your home.
Clutter is a natural by-product of changing life circumstances: births, deaths, marriages, divorces, multiple moves, and inheritances. Each transition requires certain things that others do not; each requires discrimination, the courage to choose what to keep and what to let go to make space more fluid for yourself and your things in your current life. Clearing clutter is not about being perfectly organized; it's about adapting to the demands - and joys - of life transitions so you can live with greater comfort and control.
Social and
economic trends fuel our clutter
craziness. One rarely acknowledged
trend is the
most significant: twenty-five years ago
middle-class women began to work outside
of the home. Without the free labor of
women who have the time to care for the
home, coupled with greater prosperity to
accumulate, clutter became an epidemic
in our wealthy, guilty, time-strapped
society full of people yearning for
meaning. The answer is not to put women
back in the home
full time. The answer is to learn new
ways of being and living in the
realities of today’s world. If you
think you have clutter, you are not
alone.
Most of us
have clutter, and in most cases, there
is nothing innately wrong with us.
We all
suffer with varying degrees of
distraction in this fast-paced culture
of technology, advertising,
and multi-tasking. It’s your clutter,
but not all your fault. Each of us has
to respect our unique needs, brain, and
environment, and deal with our stuff.
When you don't, you feel bad. Learning
how to let
go to make room for what you truly want
is within your reach.
One way to
feel better is to become clutter clear.
Instead of finding fault in yourself or
others,
begin to pick up your clutter. One hour,
one box, one drawer, one pile, or one
closet at a time.
It will change your life. It’s
your choice to stay stuck or get free.
It’s OK to
have a lot of stuff. Just make sure
that it isn’t blocking the flow of your
home and
frustrating you. Today, starting small,
begin to toss, recycle, donate, sell,
shred or fold.
You will get tired sometimes, but you’ll
also gain momentum and motivation.
Figure out
what’s really important to you and do
some more tomorrow. Ask for help if need
be. Pace
yourself, don’t push, and aim for making
room for what you do love and use – now.

