![]() ![]() Declutter one room (including any closets, desks, cabinets, etc.) before starting on the next one.You probably won’t even remember what there was in the box. When the date comes, and you still didn’t need to open it to get anything, donate the box WITHOUT OPENING IT. “I might need this someday…”), put them in a box, seal it and date it for 1 year in the future. Take all your items that you unsure about getting rid of (e.g. Clothing rule: If you haven’t worn an item in 6 months, sell or donate it.If you have lots of storage, you’ll fill it with stuff. Make your storage space smaller and more minimal.First you cheat, by throwing out two pieces of paper, but soon you will have to move to big stuff. The rule: whenever you bring in an item, you have to throw away two other items. If the kitchen is tidy, tidy up the next room – it’s only 3 minutes but it keeps you on top of everything (helps if you have an Englishman’s obsession with Tea as well!) Whenever you’re boiling the kettle for tea, tidy up the kitchen.Repeat, but do more the 2nd time around – ie. Start at the corner by the door and move your way around the room, doing the superficial stuff first – surfaces, empy the bin etc.Check off the days when you declutter, and you’ll feel a great sense of accomplishment. Create a Joe’s Goals chart with decluttering on it - either daily, or 3 times a week.Donate stuff you’re decluttering, so you don’t feel bad about wasting it.You can bail and bail, but it won’t do anything for the leak. Think of bailing out a boat with a hole in it. This way, when you do get to decluttering the existing stuff, you’ve already stopped making it worse. Even if that’s ALL you do and don’t start decluttering immediately, if you can only establish one habit at a time, establish the no-more-stuff habit first. Whether you’ve begun decluttering the living space, or you’ve just completed it, stop bringing in new stuff NOW. Don’t allow things into the house in the first place.It’s amazing how much you can get through if you just do it in small increments like this. They’re reworded here slightly, and a couple have been modified indiscriminately by me. Recently I asked you guys for your best decluttering tips … and I pulled some of the best of those (there are many more good ones I wasn’t able to use). ![]() These tips aren’t mine - they’re from you guys, the readers, repackaged into a useful little post. So, with that in mind, I present to you 15 fabulous tip for decluttering. Of course, simplifying a process like that isn’t terribly useful to many people who struggle with clutter. As with anything, getting rid of clutter can be made incredibly simple: just go through your stuff, one section, closet, drawer, or shelf at a time, and get rid of everything that isn’t absolutely essential, that you don’t love and use often. ![]()
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