And How You Can Deal With Them…
Are you a clutterbug? Do you live with one? Are you tired of it? While there are deep psychological reasons for people being clutterbugs, there are still practical ways to deal with the clutter. The question is: what type of clutterbug are you dealing with?
The Pack Rat
This clutterbug is the type to keep EVERYTHING. Stuffed in every available nook and cranny are the things they collect or keep because it’s useful.
How to deal with this:
Make a plan. Don’t just say “I’m going to tackle the living room today!” No. Break it down a) in a way that makes sense to you and b) is small enough you won’t get overwhelmed.
Go slow. Again the point here is to make sure that you can emotionally tackle this not just physically.
Consider the system of ‘Keep’, ‘Toss’, and ‘Donate.’
Keep - If you cannot part with it either because it’s useful or important.
Toss - It’s broken and you don’t know how to repair it or don’t have time to learn how.
Donate - You don’t want it or it’s not useful to you, but it could be useful to someone else.
The ‘Archivist’
Letters, magazines, newspapers, books, all forms of the printed or written word are valued by this clutterbug. Their home is full of stacks and shelves. It may be sorted, it might not.
How to deal with this:
Sort by type. Start by figuring out how much of each item you have. Sometimes, seeing just how much of something you have makes it easier to select out what to keep.
Cull out any duplicate items. Two of a book? A magazine? Set them aside either to recycle or donate.
Scan it! Letters, magazines, newspapers, recipes etc. There are several different scanning apps that can be used to save and store material items against degradation or loss. (This blogger favors Evernote personally.)
When it comes to books, if you’ve only read it once, put it aside to be donated. Why keep it if you don’t enjoy it?
Landing Zones
These are the people who collect clutter in specific places. Maybe it’s a table near the entry door. Or a chair in the bedroom. Or the dining room table. It doesn’t matter, these spots are catch-alls. This type of clutterbug will drop the contents of their pockets or purse here, mail, clothes they want to wear later, etc.
The best way to work with this is to:
Create ‘no fly zones’ or areas where things can’t be.
Block those areas with something. It could be a cute pillow, a tray or a vase, something that clearly says ‘this is not a place to drop things.’ It’s just meant to be a trigger to help you change how you view that space.
Include areas where it is ok to put things, but that you have to sort it out once a week.
The Abundance Clutter
This clutterbug isn’t what you might think. Their home is mostly clean. They don’t have obvious clutter. But if you go into the kitchen and open up their cabinets and pantry... That’s when the image changes. This clutterbug buys things on sale that they don’t need. They buy surplus ‘just in case something happens.’ Six or seven of one type of chips. Boxes upon boxes of Rice a Roni, which lets just say you should NOT eat this way for months upon months.
How to deal with this:
Make a meal plan. Go through what you have already and decide what you can use soon, what you will use within a month or can store for 6.
Go to the store next. Ask yourself, will I eat this within the next 3 months? 3 months is a healthy middle ground between ‘saving for the future’ or ‘just in case’ and ‘buying only what you need for this week.” Buy only what you will use within that time period.
Check yourself before you go to the counter. Make sure that you haven’t grabbed more than what you need.
Organizing Only When Things Are Messy
This is the type of clutterbug that leaves things slowly building up. One day at a time, until there isn’t any space left. Coffee cups, plates, mail, magazines, Everything!
And it stays that way until one day they realize how messy everything is and they burst into a cleaning frenzy.
Repeat ad nauseum.
For some people this works just fine! For others it becomes far too much. Or it could be the spouse, friends or family of this clutterbug.
How to deal with it:
Dedicate 10 minutes a day to clear. Just pick up anything that you can and put it away.
Dedicate time every week to sort through and put away other things that built up over the week, or to organize your home.
So we ask you again, are you the clutterbug? Or are you the one living with the clutterbug. Either way we hope that we’ve helped you to see a way forward that doesn’t involve huge time commitments or trying to turn your personality inside out.
What about you? What are some techniques that you’ve found that work for you in corralling the clutter? Let us know on Facebook. Remember, we’re not just here to help you keep your home clean, but to also make sure that it runs smoothly. If you’ve recently found that one or more of your appliances aren’t working properly, feel free to reach out. You can call and schedule an appointment or go to our website and schedule one there.