I was very interested in her folding because my drawers are not well organized. The question I have is how you can tell one shirt from another when folded up like that? I can see myself creating a mess trying to find the right shirt in the morning.![]()
To me, the article is silly. Yes, it explains why people get attached to stuff but poverty isn't an excuse for hoarding. I grew up very poor so I know I can survive on very little with very basic clothing and household items. Keeping old things just clutters up the space to the point no one can find anything or know what they have. And most of the sentimental items she talks about have been sitting untouched for decades. If they are so important, they should be part of her regular life, not shoved into the basement slowly decomposing into dust.
The fear that you may throw out things you might need one day is the reason 1-800-junk is such a successful business. Can't take it with you so kids or grandkids have to get large containers to clean out the house before selling it.
I LOVE Matt Bellasai. He is a RIOT.
Just thought this was hilarious. But honestly, I just asked my husband if we could start organizing again.
So, I can give one very specific reason my husband and I (him even more than me) are packrats/hoarders...We both had our parents come through our rooms without warning while we were out of the house and throw everything away that was 'in the way'. So when things that are very important to you (in my case even my school textbooks) are tossed out without any sorting at all, that scars the hell out of you and when you finally have control of your own space and stuff, you tend to keep stuff or accumulate stuff you maybe shouldnt. As I have gotten older I've been actually asking my parents to come throw all my shit away, and they have a few times. The problem though is that we just replace all that shit with new shit. And my husband REFUSES to let anyone throw any of his shit away, and his shit is ALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL OVER THE DAMN HOUSE. Literally every surface except my vanity desk in the bedroom has his gaming shit all over it.
I LOVE Matt Bellasai. He is a RIOT.
https://www.theatlantic.com/enterta...ie-kondo-and-the-privilege-of-clutter/475266/
To me, the article is silly. Yes, it explains why people get attached to stuff but poverty isn't an excuse for hoarding. I grew up very poor so I know I can survive on very little with very basic clothing and household items. Keeping old things just clutters up the space to the point no one can find anything or know what they have. And most of the sentimental items she talks about have been sitting untouched for decades. If they are so important, they should be part of her regular life, not shoved into the basement slowly decomposing into dust.
The fear that you may throw out things you might need one day is the reason 1-800-junk is such a successful business. Can't take it with you so kids or grandkids have to get large containers to clean out the house before selling it.
My in-laws were like this too. Depression era mentality. 5 years on and my husband is still working on cleaning out their house. They had crap shoved into crawl spaces and the attic, and you couldn't even move around in the garage. It doesn't help that he has to analyze every piece of paper and shred of garbage. He has the hoarding gene too.I'd agree with this too, my MIL is somewhat a hoarder mostly due to a poor, abusive childhood and financial strain all her life. Even now in retirement she has boxes & sheds of stuff which sadly she rarely uses or enjoys. It has become a huge burden upon her and her kids will likely have to deal with it all in the future (which we are dreading!). Recently she has spoken of selling the house to downsize but the demand of actually emptying it & the sheds is so off-putting...![]()
The only thing I can’t really bring myself to do, is donate costume jewelry. I have a ridiculous amount of costume jewelry that is high end, vintage, antique, etc. It doesn’t get the love it deserves But donating it just feels like a no no based on value. Trying to figure out how to sell it enmass is my next headache.
My husband and I are in the midst of doing this hard-core right now. I sat all of my kids down and made them watch a few episodes of Marie’s show on Netflix. Then they were all sent to their rooms to Konmarie the heck out of them. So far, we have taken five truckloads of stuff out of the house including some furniture.
I was already a nut about my closet (everything is rainbow color organized down to the hangers LOL) But purging it made it that much better. We are onto paper now which should be accomplished this weekend. In light of the fact that we are likely making a cross-country move shortly it makes sense for us to do this all the way. I will say, it has brought a lot of peace to the house and that the visual clutter is gone and I feel much better about walking into my kitchen and my family room, let alone my bedroom.
The only thing I can’t really bring myself to do, is donate costume jewelry. I have a ridiculous amount of costume jewelry that is high end, vintage, antique, etc. It doesn’t get the love it deserves But donating it just feels like a no no based on value. Trying to figure out how to sell it enmass is my next headache.
She says that if it makes you happy, keep it. Maybe sort out ones that you don't love 100% to sell or donate. Organize the rest in a way that makes it easier to wear. I have lots of nail polish, more than any regular person needs. I'm selective with adding new ones and do weed out ones that I can't see myself ever wearing again. But I do keep the polish that I love even if I only wear that color once a year.The only thing I can’t really bring myself to do, is donate costume jewelry. I have a ridiculous amount of costume jewelry that is high end, vintage, antique, etc. It doesn’t get the love it deserves But donating it just feels like a no no based on value. Trying to figure out how to sell it enmass is my next headache.
What I dread the most is papers. I have a stack a couple/few feet high in my closet. Whenever I don't know what to do with a paper, I just stick it on the pile and forget it. Sorting it out will be quite the walk down memory lane.![]()
Get some marshmallows for the bonfireI am DONE dealing with paper in our house. I'm purchasing a cheap backyard burn stove and just burning everything. (Some obvious keep stuff is in the filing cabinet and the rest I may flip through just to be sure...) Have to get through the next two weeks here at school but then it is happening!
Get some marshmallows for the bonfire![]()
I read the book and did a small scale 3 years ago when we moved. was forced to do that because I didn't want to pack useless stuff. I dislike throwing away useful things so I didn't go full-on Kondo. I made use-up piles of various categories and wrote lists of things I had because I was buying duplicates as things weren't organized.
I did save my pre-pregnancy clothes with the hope that I'll lose weight and I'm actively trying to do so. They are in a separate storage area so my closet now has only clothes I like and can fit into. BTW, Kondo says not to force people to declutter so I didn't. Couldn't get DH to go through his clothes so they are still in the same moving boxes which proves the point. Did the papers and shredded so much. Scanned important documents. Donated books to the library.
The book really changed how I view purchases. Supporting the economy is good but clutter drives me nuts so I had many conversations with the family regarding bringing "stuff" into the house. Birthday presents for the kids are now experiences rather than plastic toys, I also ask for consumable gifts and DH is cut off from buying kitchen gadgets.
I loved watching Neflix series and did a little bit more declutter in the basement. Gave away remaining baby stuff and clothes to someone who really needed it and was grateful for not spending money. Went through all the bigger kids clothing I was saving and donated what my younger won't be able to wear.