“If you want a golden rule that will fit everything, this is it:
Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.”
William Morris

Of course, to each his or her own style and taste level, but since it's doubtful I'm saving bits and bobbins for fantastical art creations, I'm fighting a crescendoing urge to yank a box of lawn bags off the shelf while wheeling down the paper goods aisle.
Maybe it has to do with the warming Florida weather but more likely it's the fact that there's nowhere to hide my eyes anymore. There are at least three TV shows devoted to hoarding, a dozen declutter articles screaming from the mags at the checkout counter, and therapists on The View, Oprah, and Regis and Kelly analyzing the 'why' of all the stuff I'm being told not to ignore. Apparently, my stuff is not good for me.
Drawer diving and cabinet cleansing have always fallen into the Things I Want To Do And Probably Won't Get To Any Time Soon category. Forced possession purges have arrived with a moving truck, hired to cart my life off to somewhere else. Those start with a promising few black bags exiting from the kitchen, followed by some shredded stuff from the office, and then the efforts peter out by the time the garage looms as the last bastion for stuff. In the end, like Dave Barry, I'm throwing spiderwebs and still-full cat dishes into the nearest standing box. I can't, in all good conscience, recommend this as an optimum method for clutter busting.
Most of the articles and experts tell us that the question of what you'd grab if your house were on fire is the baseline for determining an object's worth.
So picture this. It's been one of those days, and now the house is burning. Family, photos, pets, and purse are out of harm's way. What do you want to save?
Probably not the Crockpot with the missing lid, the inherited but never-used china, or the box of grad school papers and books from 1995. But what about the collection of cookbooks accumulated from all my favorite places even if I haven't opened any of them in at least five years, or the fur jacket I bought at Bonwit Teller when I used to travel to New York for weeks at a time in winter? I know I live in Florida, but I loved that coat. I felt chic and smart in that coat.
How much space do perfume bottles take up anyway, and I need a second vegetable peeler in case someone comes to cook potato au gratin with me. No one ever has enough towels, do they?
I ask myself the 'useful/beautiful' question all the time. This seems to be a simple and rational criteria to keep stuff under control. I don't start the mail when I don't have time to finish the mail. When I add something, I toss something. I know the benefit of having a key hook and a purse table by the door.
What I can't figure out is why my desk is full of unopened mail, my backseat is cluttered with items to be returned, and why my cell phone is missing at least 1/2 the time. I'm beginning to more fully appreciate the meaning of the road to hell being paved with my good intentions.
If I take up the banner and start a campaign to clear out around here I'm going to have to lay down a few rules according to the "experts" ...
1. My house is not a museum. I'm not obligated to keep granny's dishes just because she used them. She gave them to me because she didn't want them anymore. Things aren't sacred simply because they belonged to a relative.
2. My garage is not a storage unit. Kids-listen up! Pick it up, or toss it out, but either way - my car will be back in the garage by next Sunday.
3. There will be a One Box Rule for baby clothes and other currently useless mementos we can't bear to part with (yet). No specifics on the size of the box, other than the owner has to be able to lift and carry it into the attic all by themselves.
4. Containerize, containerize. No cardboard boxes allowed.
5. All the towels will be 'good' towels until they're not; then they will be rags, marked RAG with a laundry marker and put into the rag bin, not back onto a closet shelf.
6. The kitchen is for food prep, it's not a Williams-Sonoma outlet. The amount of equipment stored there needs to be in proportion to the amount of cooking actually going on there.
~~~~~~~~~~~
I know being organized, or clutterfree, isn't about getting rid of everything; it's more about making room for other good things to come into our lives, new things. Nature abhors a vacuum.
Um, vacuum? I think that thing is missing a belt or something.


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Comments
♥R
Ack ! Gabby Abby :)
rated with hugs
oh, and #4 is just an excuse to go buy plastic bins with lids at Container Store. i know *that* dodge, girl.
You have to keep the cookbooks. You just have too:) I can't get rid of the baby clothes, or the handed down sentimental things:( Maybe I can get lucky and pawn them off on one of my children;)
You have a point here, this summer while Dad is home, my son moves back home and after the daughter is married off. I think its time to "declutter" the shed, moms house and dads house and shed. Hope you don't mind, when they complain, I'll tell them I got the idea from you...hahahahaha JK
I loved "things aren't sacred because they belonged to a relative."
So true.
...a post that hit too close to home.
Thanks.
R
Isn't Hoarders motivating? Almost to a dangerous degree. I could end up sitting on the bare floor that show scares me so much. God forbid anyone end up with one of them as a neighbor!
`R
Love this piece, Abby.~r
**Nodding** Yeah, that reminds me, I need to find my vacuum, I think it might be under that pile of junk in the living room!!
:D
Rated!
Buffy, my mom did us a huge favor by asking for a 2 ton dumpster for Mother's day last year. We got together at her house and filled it up...to over the brim. She's happy and we don't have to dread the day she moves. Good Mommy!
Robin, you know I'm going to hold you to that!
Thanks, Gary!
OB, I think it's always in flux, which is the reason we all keep chasing the dream of that 'right' balance.
Linda, the good news is my DRAFTS list is now down by one
Pat K, just get yourself one big assed box, you're allowed a few mementos, now let's define 'memento'...
Femme, ssshhhhh. I don't want them to see me coming at that store.
Little K and aim, thanks!
Tinkerbell (tnkrbl), I can see you are already decluttering
I'm with Jane Smithie on this one. It's not the thing itself, but the value we attach to it, which is often based on a memory. If it all disappeared tomorrow (remember that bad day when the house was burning?), the memories would still be with us.
'Can You Really Get Rid of Your Sentimental Stuff' is a whole 'nother post!
Steve K, my mother has a trunk - an old 'bridal' relic - where she has placed her sentimental stuff. That's her one box. She can't carry it by herself, but it's a nice piece of furniture and it holds all her treasures. Perfect!
And when it comes to the kids stuff, they have happened on a few things and shrieked "What are you keeping THIS for?" A number of the things that really mattered to me have been framed or displayed in some way, and have an honored place in our home. Important things aren't shrouded in tissue, in a box, in the back of a closet somewhere. That goes for photos of The Ancients (our forbearers), my great grand's watch (it's in a glass dome), and the baby dress used by 4 generations - it's in a memory box surrounded by the photos of the 4 babies wearing it at the time. There's also a silver cup and rattle in that display box (you can buy them at Target).
In my office there are two water colors framed in 11x14 glass. They look like 'modern art', and I get to enjoy them every day. They were done by my 4 year old who sat by my side and 'painted' with me back in the day when I took art classes. See what I'm going with this? Enjoy! or toss.
Here's a new show idea for you...
"Over-tossing - Are You Addicted?" Is your home empty, is the bed resting on the floor? Does your place look like a flophouse that you are just passing through? You may be afflicted by Over-Tossing. Tune in when our experts share how you can overcome the irresistible urge to throw away everything in sight. Next, on the Matt and Linn Show"
Ms Heron, you'd be rolling in unopened mail and cat hair fuzzed pillows here, so - welcome, anytime. I'm also leery of noisy appliances that require my full attention while using them. One little slip, and before you know it, you're off to the ER. No, no. Too dangerous.
Yes Paula, or should I say 'Grasshoppa', you have a long way to go. It's not an easy path. ;)) Now I just have to see if I'm on it!
Joanie, what a FABulous post today. You and your camera are obviously good friends now. Don't toss it.
SCJ, you take my bed, I'll take the garage. (although if I'm successful this week, the garage may be more organized)
Mini and Max returning the love.
Passing on objects you LIKE... I think that's how I ended up with granny's dishes. Hmmm. I have a new young SIL who might not know the secret to 'passing on' yet, and an idea is hatching. How about a note from her new big-sister-in-law accompanying a box on the back steps, passing on granny's well-loved dishes? She'll never see it coming!
Ok, gotta run!
Loved this piece. And the truth: the central vac is kaput, and my stand-up really does have a broken belt. Halleluia! (I keep telling my husband I'll make the call... right). ;)
Just wish my Husband and Daughter could have the same idea - we all need to part with the past, to make room for now, and of course, the future, but who will make use of all this stuff - where does it need to go, not into Mother Earth.
One mans rubbish is another mans treasure (mans - womans too)
So what with this stuff, can we do?
Great post - Thanks - Now, have to go and sort out those drawers.
http://open.salon.com/blog/500words/2010/09/12/household_inventory