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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

 

Anita, just pick one room to begin with.  Keep the door closed to that room until you have finished.  Then go to another room.  If one room is too much for you, then start in a corner of the room.  Work you way around to the four corners and then do the middle.

Every year I have a yard sale of all the accumulated clutter...what does't sell goes straight into the car and over to charity - the money goes towards vacation!  It is a win-win-win situation!!  As for those who don't know where to start - just pick a room, it is as simple as that...but pick an easy one so you don't get frustrated and quit before you really began :)

I totaly agree wiith  As a senior I have a very difficult time throwing away things.  

I  want to leave my children with this huge chore of deciding what to keep.  I went through that with my Mother.  It was devastating. being happy in a smaller place will save much more money than selling the stuff on eBay would make.Sometime the kids uncle Babboey comes to vist & coloect more juck,but that is life & everyone has a good time

For me the real question is Who Owns Who? I have all this Stuff that I take care of. It weighs me down on the way home, forces me to work to pay the credit card bill, clean it, and then, at the end, walk it out to the curb. If I get good use out of it, the trade's worth it, but if not, why bother?

Wow just reading the hints has made it easier for me to part with thing.  decluttering my things is on my New Years list of things to do, which is still posted to my fridge.  I like the comment "if you didn't wear it this winter, why wear it next winter."  I can't belive how many empty hangers I have now.  The next step is to find the time to take it to the good will.  I found phone books from 3 years ago.  It's about time I followed through with this.  I also have the problem with buying storage tubs for things I might keep.

If you can't use it, lose it!!

I have tried to sell my stuff on Ebay and because the freight is so expensive....you can't give even very nice stuff away......not even very expensive stuff...so I still have the clutter and am out more money for fees just to list it.....not in a tax bracket to give stuff away and claim it as a donation.....so before you get yourself signed up to sell on Ebay have a friend that's already hooked up sell something for you....our first sale was fantastic....it all went downhill from there....course it could be just me....Fran

I believe gospelly (is that really a word??) that less is better. Now all I have to do is convince my wife! I've been trying for 30 years, but the piles of "stuff" keep accumulating. Is she really going to wear those five sizes smaller clothes again? Those 10 year old shoes? Do we need the matched single sheet set for our only double or larger beds? We had our floors refinished some years ago and found about half the cost refinishing in things we had and sold in a yard sale! And we also recycled, or trashed about three pick up loads of other "essentials". The old rule of use it in a year or be rid of it is my mantra.

I have spent the past two months de-cluttering.  Some things went to the Goodwill and some to a consignment store.  I have made over $500 so far from consigning things I didn't need!!!  I plan to save that money for a much needed vacation.

Who ever said that having more (stuff) equals happiness?  I think all of the previous responses have shown otherwise.  Our family sold our home 1 1/2 years ago.  We sold or got rid of so much stuff and moved into a much smaller rental house.  Then, 7 months later we moved 1400 plus miles away and got rid of even more stuff.  We actually put items out on the street and when we turned around the items had disappeared.  Still, I watched my husband and sons pack a huge truck full of furniture, appliances and personal things.  He slaved away for hours packing the truck.  Now that we are settled in another rental house and will probably move again in the next year - we are deciding right now exactly what we will get rid of before we ever move again.  I'm believing that we have finally learned our lesson!

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