zaterdag 23 november 2013

An end to clutter hot spots


Written by Courtney Carver - 3 Comments
Categories: clutter
There are certain areas in homes and lives that seem to magically attract clutter. One day you have a beautifully clean, empty kitchen table and the next day it is covered in mail, school papers, dry cleaning receipts and other odds and ends.

While owning less certainly helps the clutter hot spot battle, it’s nice to have a strategy for each area.

Phone
If you have a phone with apps, I can almost guarantee that you have too many. Do you really need a compass on your phone? Do a monthly app sweep and put a hold on buying new apps. Before adding a new one to your phone ask yourself this question. “will this tool help me live a better life or will it be an added distraction?”

Also notice if you are using your apps to engage or just to check things that don’t matter in the moment. For instance, if you check email or Facebook on your phone and then respond later from your computer, why bother checking in advance. That mindless, seemingly harmless check-in adds mental clutter.

Computer
Digital clutter is the worst because it’s silent and you can easily hide it in folders. You can ignore it indefinitely until you are looking for something or until that one special day when you lose it all. If you’ve been through a big crash, you know that as soon as it happens, everyone asks you this question, “didn’t you have a back up?”

Save less and use Dropbox to easily back things up from your computer or phone on a regular basis. It’s free, easy and intuitive.

Counter and Table Tops
These beautiful surfaces never stay empty for long. Keys, mail, and everything in your hands when you walk through the door ends up in a cluttered pile. The initial pile isn’t the biggest issue. The issue is the law of attraction. Clutter attracts clutter. Once the pile starts, there is no stopping it.

Instead of facing a mountain of clutter at the end of the month, take two simple steps:

1.Declare a clutter-free zone. Keep one counter or table top completely clear of clutter. Use that space to motivate other clutter-free areas.
2.Put things away, right away. That small pile is a 2-4 minute project. Go there before it takes over.
Closets
Your clothes and other clutter may be behind closed doors, but you see it everyday when you get dressed. Take action and pack a suitcase as if you were going on a seven-day trip. The destination: YOUR LIFE. Set aside enough clothing to get through exactly seven days of your life.

With your seven days of clothing set aside, box up everything else and hide the boxes in another room. Challenge yourself to see how long you can dress with your seven days worth of clothing. Thirty days will be long enough to prove that you can successfully dress with less.

Hidden Storage
Garages, attics and paid storage units are a perfect place for ultimate clutter denial. Stop paying to store your stuff. Clearing the clutter that you don’t see every day will be nothing less than liberating! All of that stuff that you have hidden away weighs you down and holds you back even though you can’t see it. Let it go, and make room for the good stuff.

Junk Drawers
Dump the contents of your junk drawer into a bag or box. Label it and hide it for 30 days. If you don’t miss it, dump it. No peeking to try to remember what you might have forgotten. Instead of organizing your junk drawer year after year, get rid of it.

Clutter invades your space, steals your time and money and clouds your mind. Move beyond clutter and let your life unfold without the distraction of knick knacks, odds and ends, bits and pieces and stuff that has little meaning and no purpose.

My friend Leo Babauta and I taught a four-week course about how to live a Clutterfree life. Today it’s available for you to enjoy at your own pace over the course of 16 weeks.

How a self-study course works
Sign up and you’ll receive an email each week for 4 weeks with access to new material including articles, guest contributions, audio interviews, video lessons and recorded video webinars. At the end of the 4 weeks, you’ll have access to all material for 3 more months. You’ll have 16 weeks to engage in the course and can pace lessons to fit your lifestyle. You can ask questions, and share your challenges and successes in the Clutterfree Forum.

Learn how to free yourself of clutter. Clear your mind, home and calendar of the unessential and start living the life you crave. Be healthier and enjoy wonderful relationships. Jump gently into simplicity or take your decluttering up a notch.

4 week clutterfree course
In these four weeks, you’ll enjoy a self paced course to uncover your clutter and get rid of it for good including:

•Weekly modules that include articles, instructive PDFs, video & audio presentations and interviews and homework assignments
•Audio interviews with experts
•Weekly recorded video webinars
•Access to the Clutterfree Forum for questions and discussion
In the course, we’ll focus on four areas:

1.Clutter-free Emotion: Examining why we hold onto stuff, how to let go, how to figure out what’s important in your life, dealing with the emotions of shopping and gifts and keeping up with the Joneses.
2.Clutter-free Action: How to get started decluttering, how to tackle your closets, kitchen, workspace and more; how to deal with kids’ stuff; how to give your stuff away; and more.
3.Staying Clutter-Free: How to enjoy the space and not feel compelled to fill it up; Recognizing enough; Maintaining your clutter-free status; Gift giving and receiving; and an important question: If you had less and wanted less, could you work less and make less?
4.Clutter-Free Time: Obligations; To-Do Lists; Focus; UnProcrastination; and Morning Routines
As a course member, you’ll also receive the Clutterfree Digital Package.
The Clutterfree Digital Package includes:

1.The Clutterfree book with 23 chapters in digital format including pdf, epub and mobi versions so you can read on your computer, iPad, iPhone or Kindle.
2.Audio interviews with clutter free experts Tammy Strobel & Joshua Becker
3.Video from Leo Babauta

http://bemorewithless.com/endclutter/

Geen opmerkingen :

Een reactie posten