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De-clutter and save money

Posted Mar 21 2008, 03:24 PM by Donna Freedman
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A little cleaning can save dollars along with your sanity. That's what Smart Spending message board reader "Lynn D" says, anyway.

In a thread called "Making home a haven," the grad student notes that her formerly crowded condo made her feel "stressed and boxed in," which led to her wanting to go out, which led to her spending money.

At first, she tried to combat the tendency by spending more money -- on storage bins, hooks, an entertainment center and other things allegedly designed to help. Finally, Lynn D figured out the real problem: "I needed to get rid of (junk)!"

Now she finds herself staying at home more, whether it's to do her nails or watch a movie on a couch no longer littered with papers and books. Lynn D admits to another savings, too: She no longer has to buy things she already owns but couldn't find in all the clutter.

Couch potato wannabe
My own sofa is also covered with school-related detritus. Notebooks, textbooks, folders, flashcards, and piles and piles of paper are stacked in slidy piles. I've got probably a ream's worth of printouts of required reading with titles like "Sexual difference as a nomadic political project" and "The disability rights critique of prenatal genetic testing." Some of them might be useful for future classes. Some of them have a future only as scrap paper.

I want to sell some of the books, like "The Joys of Motherhood" and "Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World." I probably want to keep the three Spanish textbooks. The flashcards I'm definitely going to keep, lest I forget that "the pluscuamperfecto de subjuntivo expresses action completed prior to the point in the past that is indicated by the main verb."

I should probably recycle most of my own writings: tests, short commentaries, weekly response papers. But first I want to reread them, to remind myself that I not only wrote pieces like "Llévame al partido: el béisbol en Cuba" and "A womb with a view: Artificial procreation and male control," but got decent grades for doing it. Seeing a "96" or "100" on a paper makes me feel that all those late nights weren't in vain.

But until I get a handle on what to do with this stuff, I can't sit on my couch. That didn't matter as much during the quarter, when I was too busy to lounge. But it's spring break, and it would be nice to kick back at least once on the sofa with a library book.

Crowded house
Partner blogger Trent Hamm at The Simple Dollar writes that "once you reach a certain level of luxury in your life, anything beyond that level is merely diminishing returns." In the essay, he admits that it's better to buy one game instead of several for his Nintendo Wii, because he'll really use it and really enjoy it. But lots of people believe that nothing succeeds like excess.

"They would rather have more stuff that, per item, they have less time to enjoy than less stuff that, per item, they have more time to enjoy," Trent writes.

He went on to note that "clutter" can also mean "anything simply wasted in your life," from time spent in unproductive or unsatisfying ways to time spent numbly in front of the television watching stuff that doesn't really interest you.

Sound familiar?

Whatcha gonna do with all that junk?
How to de-clutter? We could start by figuring out the difference between needs and wants. Then we could go on to figure out how much of what we already have is both needed and wanted.

Whatever doesn't make the cut could be sold on eBay or craigslist, if you need the money to pay off consumer debt incurred by buying too much stuff. If you don't need the money, try Freecycle or donate it to local rummage sales or thrift shops.

I'm not suggesting you get rid of things that have personal significance to you. For example, I'll never part with a garish vase that my daughter gave me when she was 8 or 9 years old, or with the slumped-glass bowl my friend Linda brought me from Australia.

But while "The Joys of Motherhood" was a good read, the class for which I bought it is over and my bookcases are already crowded. I don't love it enough to keep it. Somebody else might.

As I noted in a previous essay, "Living 'poor' and loving it," there's real joy in knowing that you have everything you need and some of what you want. Having fewer things actually makes you that much more grateful for the things that matter. It also means you can sit on your own couch.

Comments

 

I have too many books. Believe me, those who have seen the nine floor to ceiling bookshelves packed with books would heartily agree with me. But I hate trying to sell books (doesn't really work), or take them to used bookstores, where half the time they get tossed in the trash. Freecycle isn't quite targeted to books, though I've gotten rid of a ton of other clutter that way. Paperbackswap.com is perfect, though--I've sent out many books to people who actually want them (including some of my old textbooks ... you people are very strange). It's perfect!

I agree. Its also diffucult when others hold you to a standard, that your suppose to have it all and want it all when that isn't in your nature. I find it hard to be true to myself and keep up with the Jones. So we collect all this crap. We work all these hours to pay for the crap, and we end up in a house full of clutter and things we don't need or enjoy.

Freecycle is a PITA. It turns giving stuff away for free into a chore.

I'm a serious collector of vintage cookbooks, Christmas and holiday cookbooks/books in general.  Then I find recipes on the internet that I think I'll make- I found some printed off from 1998! And guess what?  Yep, I hadn't/haven't made the food!  I've begun de-cluttering a month ago, because I couldn't go from living room-to bedroom-to kitchen-to dining room...without having to step over, walk around, etc, piles upon piles of printed recipes, that I had no room for on my 3 big bookcases, so I "had" to put these papers on the floor!  No more! I'm tired of living this way, I'm also embarassed to have people over, due to the mess of papers.  I also want to paint and put new flooring down-and I can't do that with papers all over the place!

I have 5 kids in a small house and clutter is everywhere.  Things don't have 'a place'.  All of your advice made my day.  I start tonight!  It's all going!  Anything that doesn't have a place.

I am overwhelmed with my clutter. we are retired after we sold our business so many things had to be moved back to the house. I had stored so much at the business that now even though I have given lots of things away I still have things that need to be sold. I can see how it would be better to get rid of your Clutter when you are healthy enough to lift and move it out don't wait until you are not healthy enough to do it .

I'm not giving up I do plan to make my home clutter free. so I can be less stressed and do some of the things I enjoy to do so much.

It's such a big project, to declutter your "castle", that you feel tired and overwhelmed just thinking about it!  But if you do it one kitchen drawer at a time you can have an impact.  Also, calm yourselves with the realization that you will never be finished because we are in a life CYCLE. It took me many years to learn to pat myself on the back instead of trying to be 'FINISHED'.  

I have been watching "Clean House" on the Style channel.  Every time I watch it, it just makes me want to go through my house and find stuff for the Goodwill and throw stuff out.  And I actually do it too.  Sometimes people on the show will say something like, "Oh, I can't part with this.  Aunt Lucy gave me this!"  Upon which one of the Clean House people will say, "Does Aunt Lucy live here?  No?  Then get rid of it!"  I have come to realize I'm pretty much a minimalist and I find clutter very depressing.

Hello All,

Go to FlyLady.Net. She has been talking about this bit for years on End!

And she has some great things .....to tell and show you how to junk it!

Be well all. And junk the clutter.

I have finally come to the same conclusion.  I need to get rid of alot of my stuff so that I actually have room to enjoy the things that I really enjoy.  I have been a pack rat for years and always put things away so that if I needed it, it was there.  But, the problem is "I can't find what I am looking for when I decided that I needed it".  Just recently I have started cleaning out things I don't need, but found that it is very difficult to decided if I need it or not.  So, I just close my eyes and drop it in the box that is bound for the goodwill.  I am beginning to feel a lot more organized!!  

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