-
Website
http://carrieanddanielle.com -
Original page
http://carrieanddanielle.com/what-kind-of-clutter-is-in-your-life/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Linda Borland-Fitzgerald
252 comments · 1 points
-
Rick_Juliusson
64 comments · 1 points
-
Lori_from_Texas
53 comments · 1 points
-
MoJo
204 comments · 1 points
-
alligator_kate
133 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
Since I've moved three times in the past two years, my physical clutter is minimal. The things I've kept have special value. I also don't buy very often, and when I do it is for investment, not whimsy. Like Carrie, my mental clutter is more difficult to shift. As I work from home there's always a distraction, and if I can't overcome it I leave and work at a cafe or the library or similar.
My clutter is 85% physical (stuff) and the other 15% is body clutter (fat) - so stuff and fat are what weighs me down. I have been on a quest for years to get rid of the stuff (& the fat!) and I have done a real good job several times. I have less than I did a few years ago, but this slow and steady process is mind numbing. I have spent the past two days tossing freely of stuff and have made a rather large dent (see the timeliness of this question!) & have also renewed my commitment to shedding the fat, too and that is going quite well. Also, I just found the "Unclutterer" site yesterday when I was "Stumbling." How fun!
Feel welcome to check it out :)
There is also a clutter of a few people that need to be cleared from my life/psyche too. The exes (all of them), to make room for new friendships, etc.
That and mail.
Admitting this to the world is step 1 in many in my quest for being neat and organized!
Now I am working on the mental clutter--- money I owe, notes I need to write, etc. I am working on digging myself out, and not getting behind the 8 ball in that sort of clutter again. Thank you notes get written right away!
I also have some body clutter ( excess weight) but have sucessfully shed 31 pounds of it, now to get rid of the rest... This causes head clutter... there is a vicious cycle going on here, but I see it and can take care of it...
I'm working on ONE clutter mess at a time, the body clutter is the most important to me, so that is priority #1, priority #2 is the mental and expressing my true opionion ( this is DIRECTLY connected to the body clutter - but the body clutter effects my physical and mental health).... Physical clutter, well, maybe it's just me, I do like a minimal amount of stuff... To me if it's not been used in 1 year, isn't beautiful or useful or isn't a family piece ( I LOVE heirloom pieces and most of my large furniture pieces are older - one day I'll tell you the story of each piece)...
My sister, also an avid reader and I establshed our own "Coast to Coast Book Club" (I am in California, she is New York). We ship books, creative book reviews and fun little treats back and forth across the USA. She sent me Bookmarks in my last batch from her trip to Ireland. Even though we talk all the time and have email there is something spcial about a box arriving in the mail.
2. Boyfriend clutter - all the things we have in our small house with no place to store them - and he is REALLY a packrat.
3. Head clutter - work is chaotic right now, both in terms of client needs and administrative squabbles/battles/wars.
I try to keep my clutter to a minimum but it some how creeps back in.
Mental clutter, and a ton of it.
There are probably a 1 or 2 people in my life, where I'm not totally sure why there are still around or what enjoyment we share together, unfortunate I know.
I am famous for junk drawers! No matter how little the object, if I don't feel like dealing with it then, I don't.
Magazines tend to add up as well.
All of those "great finds" at thrift shops that clog up your closet, you might wear them once and never again, then at the end of the year you donate it back to the store you bought it from. Classic.
Communicative clutter is probably what I possess the most of. Not saying what you really feel when you really feel it. Where does that go??? You keep it and it adds up, hence your shrink!
xo
D
Ummmmmmmmmm, that may just be laziness. There isn't an attachment to those, I just rarely delete emails. For work it's difference, but..........those emails. I don't know.
Thank you for the fabulous idea! Now if only I could teach it to Duane the pooch...but it's perfect for hubby and me.
Tam
My clutter is LIFE clutter--have just accumulated a lifetime of quality clutter, a lot of it related to ramping up for a project, then going on to ramping up for another project, but not following through on any. Why?--fear of risk, fear of criticism, fear of failure? Yet,I am now hankering to create some space in my life. Have taken early retirement (let's say a sabbatical) to see if having more time for fun,and making space will help.
2. Head clutter. LOVED the metaphor about "renters in your head."
My husband and I moved in June, and we weeded out lots of stuff. We know we're going to move again in a year, so our motto for the year is "10% less." I plan to keep a box in my closet into which I toss things all year long. At the end of the year, I'll take it to goodwill. I just completed my Style Statement, and I think it will really help me reduce the clutter. Thanks, C&D!
It's all hidden away. My home seems very streamlined and simplified but behind every door is a freakin' nightmare!
My standard kid gifts: a card (made by my kid) with a note: "Our treat is to take you to lunch and a movie...with popcorn!" I'm also into subscriptions to National Geographic for Little Kids. And books. I don't care if the kid isn't jazzed to get it (they will be once bedtime rolls around.) The right book can really add to a a little person's life.
I bought a great book and am still reading. Check it out!!! It's perfect for shedding the clutter in the mind first, then tackling the rest of the stuff.
http://www.amazon.com/When-Organizing-Isnt-Enou...
Perhaps when the boys turn 18 and move out...otherwise, we'll be in our own reality show and it won't be pretty!
Blessings,
Stacy
I do have husband clutter - ancient clothes that look dorky and will never, EVER be in style again; and eight million tools because it does not cost much more to buy a WHOLE NEW SET of screwdrivers from Canadian Tire than it does to replace ONE! If it were me, I would rather replace the one and declutter all the extras. If nothing else, the missing one probably is not missing, but merely lost amongst 7,999,998 other tools.