Cover Art: 🥕🥕
Title: 🥕
Review: 🥕
🐰 This was a complete cover and title buy. Would not recommend this one.
I cannot even with this book. I'm 100% positive that this book could be rewritten to fit into less than 100 pages. The information is so repetitive my mind was beginning to feel bogged down. A lot of these suggestions only work if you are already married. So don't pick up this book if you are single without kids.
What I've learned (actually these things I've already been doing because they seem like common sense):
Get a black trash bag: for trash! Black so you don't feel regret
Get a container for each category: example bookshelf, keep only books that can fit and others donated
If something new comes into your house, something old must come out
Have a donation area
Keep what you need and toss everything else.
First Page Nibble:
🐰 Decluttering is stuff you don't need leaving your house. And that's really all it is. If five things leave or five hundred things leave, you've succeeded.
Decluttering isn't Stuff Shifting. It it's rearranging or buying a new shelving unit or sorting into slots or drawers or baskets. Decluttering isn't organizing.
Quotes:
🐰 I define clutter as anything I can't keep under control. If a space in my home consistently gets out of control, I have too much stuff in that space. I have clutter. pg.4
🐰 Decluttering Regret (the realization that I need something after I declutter it) isn't fun, I've survived every time. pg.5
🐰 Living now means giving now preferential treatment over the future or even the past. pg.9
🐰 Fill the container with your favorite scarves first
Once the container is full, you know how many scarves you can keep pg.14
🐰 A bookshelf will only fit a certain number of books pg.18
🐰 ...them with my favorite books first, and then, once they were full, I got rid the books that didn't fit. pg.18
🐰 You don't need a bigger house pg.19
🐰 Once I decluttered, my house was bigger...I gained usable square footage pg.19
🐰 Cleaning and decluttering are not the same thing pg.37
🐰 ...procrasticlutter are clean laundry piled on the couch and clean dishes in the dish drainer or the dishwasher. If the dishes are clean and usable, the task feels finished pg.38
🐰 There's a difference between something being useful and actually using something. pg.51
🐰 ...once I use things, I use them up, and then the pain of decluttering isn't so harsh pg.51
🐰 Use it or lose it pg.52
🐰 The only supplies you need to start decluttering are a black trash bag (black, so people living in your house won't be able to see what's inside and suddenly remember why they totally need it), a donatable Donate Box (the box itself has to leave the house along with the stuff inside), and your feet (in most cases, attached to the ends of your legs). pg.55
🐰 Take a photo, set a timer for five minutes, and start working; then take another photo when the timer goes off. pg.57
🐰 My advice is to go through the steps, focusing first on all visible clutter in the room, working on floors and surfaces and open shelves. pg.66
🐰 First, consolidate. Put socks together, undies together, and T-shirts, shorts, and sweaters together. If you have drawers to designate to each category of clothing, do that. pg.113
🐰 Ripped things. Stained things. Faded-beyond-usability things. pg.115
🐰 Once all our clothes were clean it was not physically possible to put them all away in the drawers and closets. Once all our clothes were clean consistently, we chose to wear certain things again and again and again. pg.119
🐰 Decision fatigue is a real thing pg.164
🐰 Use a black trash bag to prevent second-guessing pg.165
🐰 The size of the shelf decides how many books your child keeps...let your child fill the container, even though Go, Dog, Go! may win out over Runaway Bunny...Mama names the container, and the person who reads these books gets to choose which books go in the container pg.166
🐰 One-In-One-Out-Rule. "You can totally keeping that one!Just take one off the shelf that you don't like as much!"..."if you needed this, where would you look for it first?"..."If you needed this, would you remember you already had it?" pg.167
🐰 Stuffed animals are emotionally laden possessions that are mostly for show in our house. pg.169
🐰 Rotating toys...Storing Stuffed animals...The key is to establish a container pg.171
🐰 Do your best to not let stuff get in the way of your relationship with this person. Don't get personal. Focus on my nonemotional steps to working through an overwhelming mess. pg.173
🐰 "Do you see anything that's supposed to go somewhere else?" And then I took it there. pg.174
🐰 "Is there anything in here you already know you want to donate?" pg.175
🐰 Ask, "If you needed this _____ (hairbrush, spatula, bottle of paint), where would you look for it first?" pg.176
🐰 Consolidate...Put like things together...Purge down to the limits of the container pg.178
🐰 The goal is less. Any decluttering project that ends with less than you had when you started is a success pg.179
🐰 do this room by room pg.195
🐰 Would I pay to move this? ...Your moving day is your deadline pg.196
🐰 Where would you look for it first?...Is there a place for it? are you willing to get rid of something else so it will have a space in your container? pg.199
🐰 If something comes into your home, it needs to replace something else pg.200
🐰 Get rid of easy stuff. Purge things you don't like pg.204
🐰 I thought one day I would ___but now I've realized I never will pg.207
🐰 If office suits were mixed in with yoga pants and college sweat-shirts, I would have no idea how much space is being given to office suits pg.212
🐰 Throw away trash. Get rid of stuff you hate. Clear visible spaces of stuff that has an established, nonemotional place elsewhere in the home pg.212
🐰 ...decluttering is a constant task and will be a constant task for the rest of your life pg.214
🐰 When you purchase a new jacket, get rid of an old one pg.215
🐰 establish a donation spot...
Format: Paperback
Date Read: May 31, 2018🐇