Just 4 Easy Steps to Clear Clutter at Home
(That Anyone Can Do)
By: Karen
Fritscher-Porter
Most of us don't want our homes to
be a cluttered mess. We don't consciously say 'I like living
in the midst of clutter, and it makes me happy'. And we
certainly don't enjoy spending an extra 15 minutes searching
for our sunglasses and keys, that matching sock or the
misplaced pile of bills that's going to be late if we don't
pay them today. Where is the fun in any of that?
But while you may not plan to be disorganized or plan to have a
home full of clutter, you certainly need a plan to organize
your home and banish clutter from it. Here's that plan...
STEP 1: MAKE A LIST
List-making, especially to-do lists, can be a waste of time.
But not this list. This list kicks off your home organization
plan. It's a list of problems that need solutions. Don't list
items or places you want to organize in your home or how you'd
like your bedroom closet to resemble that million dollar
mansion home decor photo in the most recent consumer magazine.
Instead, list SPECIFIC problem dilemmas in your home that
result from disorganization.
EXAMPLE: Don't list organize bedroom chest drawers. Write
missing sock pair matches. Write...paying bills late monthly
and getting late fees. Late for work three days a week because
can't find keys. Tripping on piles of dirty laundry.
Remember, if it's not an organizational problem, it doesn't
need fixing and shouldn't be on this home organization
list.
STEP 2: CHECK IT TWICE Go back through your
list and prioritize the items in it. You can break items into
three categories: "most important", "needs to be done sometime"
and "least important". Then take your "most important" category
and number items in numerical order with number one being your
highest priority organizational matter. Each number gets used
once. So if you have 10 items in the "most important" category,
you'll use numbers one through 10 each once. Later you can do
the same for the categories of "needs to be done sometime" and
"least important".
STEP 3: SCHEDULE IT Write priority item
number one in your planner or on your calendar. Schedule it for
a 15 to 30 minute increment. If you prefer to spend a longer
period of time on it (or it will take longer to complete
regardless of how long you "want" to spend doing it), schedule
a longer period. Or schedule these shorter 15-30 minute
increments but over several days during the week. Most of all,
keep the organizational problem/task on the schedule as home
organization priority number one until it gets done, even if it
takes you a week to finally complete this organization task.
Your goal is to finish it BEFORE you move onto home
organization priority item number two.
By scheduling time to do this task (and visibly writing it in
your planner), you're really making it a concrete appointment.
If you know you'll need more accountability than making an
appointment with yourself in your private planner, tell a
friend. Then have them bug you periodically. Whether you're
trying to lose weight, prepare to run a marathon or organize
toiletries in your bathroom, telling a buddy---one who will
hold you accountable to your goal---is the way to go.
STEP 4: START
If you do not yet have any ideas of how to solve this
organizational dilemma, the first place to start is with
research. Go on the internet and put your organizational
dilemma search terms into your web browser.
EXAMPLE: "organize pots and pans", "lid storage ideas", "bill
organization", and so forth. Try phrasing your organizational
project different ways to get different results (and using
different search engines like MSN.com and Ask.com; don't just
"Google" everything.). Also set and use a kitchen timer. If you
allotted 15-30 minutes per day to this task, don't spend three
hours perusing the Web. The Web can be very distracting. What
you don't find in 15-30 minutes on the Web, you probably won't
find in three hours.
Other research material that can give you ideas for organizing
your home hot spots includes home organization books (buy
online or borrow from library), television shows about
home/personal organization and magazine articles you copy or
tear out and save with articles or photos useful to your home
organizing project.
Also, don't overlook home organization stores. "Buy the wheel"
if it's affordable. There is no reason to spend five hours
re-creating a $7.99 home organization product that you see in a
store that could help solve your organizational dilemma just
because you can do so. That's called arts and crafts. It's a
hobby. A hobby is what you'll have time for AFTER you finish
getting your house in order. Spend $7.99 for that
organizational helper that will last you 15 years (and probably
save you 15 hours of search time). That's an expense of .53
cent a year (the price of a pack of gum).
Once your research provides you with a home organization
solution for your specific task, start implementing the
organizational solution. Test your organization solution for
several weeks to a month. Then if it's still not a solution,
change it until you find a home organization solution that
works for you.
Article by:
Karen Fritscher-Porter publishes
http://www.easyhomeorganizing.com/ where
you can read hundreds of free tips with home organization
solutions, shop for home organization products and subscribe
to two free home organization newsletters.
Article source: www.ladypens.com
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