Cut the
Clutter!
by:
Jennifer Gove
Is clutter bogging you down? Is it
living on your shelves collecting dust and in your closet stealing
valuable space, has it wandered down the hall to the kids room and taken
over? It’s time to cut the clutter.
What is clutter?
It is some thing you have had for
more then six months and have used one time or less.
It is too many items crammed into a small space.
It is mail that is unsorted lying about in piles.
It is all projects lying about unfinished.
It is any thing you no longer have use for.
Where does the clutter go?
You should sort clutter into three
categories.
Trash – Paper, broken items or any
thing in bad condition.
Sell – Brand name clothing items
or any thing in almost new condition such as toys.
Donate – Clothing in good
condition, toys or any usable item in good condition.
What will I need?
Grab two big boxes and a good
sized trash bag. Label one box sell unless you do not plan on selling if
not label it donation as well as the other box. Otherwise you should have
two boxes, one sell and the other donations.
Getting into the clutter.
Once you have decided it is time
to get rid of all that clutter it is just a matter of getting started.
Choose a room determine the
clutter hot spots. For example the top of the refrigerator is often a
clutter attracting spot. Remove each item and ask your self is this trash?
What value or use is this to me? Do I have more then one of these? Sort
items into Trash sell or donate. If you decide to keep it designate it a
permanent home. Move to each room fine the hot stops for clutter and
repeat the process.
Clutter hot spots
Children’s rooms (closets, toy
boxes, dressers selves the floor) – broken or out grown toys, worn or out
grown clothing, papers from school
Kitchen (counter tops, table,
drawers, cupboards, under the sink) – Papers, mail, over abundance of
useless appliances, empty product bottles or products that do not work
Bed rooms (closets, dressers,
shelves) – Clothing, paperbacks, knickknack
Living or family room (shelves,
Entertainment center, drawers) - Books, paper work, mail, toys,
knickknacks, magazines, newspapers
Bathroom (Shelves, medicine
cabinet, under the sink) Old make up, used products, empty products, old
magazines, newspapers
Coat room - make sure all outer
wear has working zippers and fastens; toss worn shoes or unworn shoes.
This is not clutter what do I do
with it!
Baskets are great for organizing
many small related items together in one spot.
Totes are a woman’s best friend
store away half your children’s toys and reticulate then every month or
so. Put out of season clothing away or blankets.
Shelves give books magazines and
knickknacks a place to live.
Laundry baskets make great toy
storage for stuffed animals and other big toys. They are also great to
leave in a central location for family members to toss things in until
they get to putting them away.
The golden rules of clutter
If you do not use it lose it.
Build a wardrobe, once you do when you buy new replace the old.
Every thing has a place if it doesn’t toss it.
Every thing must have a use if it doesn’t toss it.
Less is almost always more!
Less is easier to clean and care for!
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