BOOK SUMMARY 261
The Life-Changing
Magic of Tidying Up
·
Summary written by: Carol-Ann
Hamilton
"When you put your house in order, you
put your affairs and your past in order, too."
- The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, page
4
Immediately, we experience the truth of Marie Kondo’s
claims embedded with her small in size (but large in unconventional wisdom)
volume entitled The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art
of Decluttering and Organizing.
She aptly asks: Despite constant efforts to declutter
your home, do papers still “accumulate like snowdrifts and clothes pile up like
a tangled mess of noodles”? How many of us can answer an unequivocal yes? I
can! That’s because we’ve never really been taught to tidy in the fashion of
her customized KonMari Method (a combination of her names).
The Golden Egg
You’ve Never Been Taught to Tidy
"People cannot change their habits without first
changing their way of thinking."- The Life-Changing Art of Tidying Up,
page 15
Isn’t it so? Most methods advocate a room-by-room or
little-by-little approach. Contrary to traditional advice, if we tidy a little
each day we’ll be at it forever. The reason we never seem to finish is that
we’re not tidying in a short timeframe in one fell swoop. Instead, when we
properly simplify and organize once, we’re done for good.
Success is 90% dependent on our mindset. If this aspect
is not addressed, rebound is inevitable no matter how much is discarded or how
cleverly things are organized. It turns out 90% of people are a combination of
“can’t throw it away” and “can’t put it back types”; the other 10% of the population
can discard but can’t put things away.
Gem #1
Finish Discarding First
"Keep only those things that speak to your heart.
Then take the plunge and discard all the rest."- The Life-Changing Magic
of Tidying Up, page 42
Kondi therefore asserts: Do not even think of putting
your things away until you’ve finished the process of discarding. In fact, if
you start to think midway through, “I wonder if (the object) will fit in this
drawer,” you will grind your progress to an immediate halt.
To get us thinking, here are several suggestions:
·
Visualize your destination. Spend some time
imagining what it would feel like to live in a clutter-free space.
·
Your only criterion will ultimately be
whether the item sparks joy. If yes, keep it. If not, discard it.
·
Focusing solely on throwing things away can
only bring unhappiness. We should be choosing what we want to keep, not what we
want to get rid of.
Many people have particular trouble discarding things
they could still use (functional value), that contain helpful information and
those with sentimental ties (emotional value). That’s why it’s advisable to
start by discarding objects that are easier to make decisions about.
Gem #2
Sort by Category, Not Location
"In essence, tidying ought to be the act of
restoring balance among people, their possessions and the house they live
in."- The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, page 190
Another issue is that of dispersing storage of a
particular item throughout the house (e.g., books, clothes). Don’t think “I’ll
tidy the bedroom first and then move on to the living room.” This approach is
fatal. When we tackle one place at a time, we can never fully grasp the total
volume of similar items scattered throughout.
To demonstrate the steps involved, let’s turn to the
example of clothing
Search every room of your abode.
Bring every piece of clothing you find to the same spot.
Spread out each article on the floor.
Pick up one piece of clothing at a time and see if it
sparks joy. Again, those and only those are the ones to keep.
If you have too many clothes, you can make sub-categories
such as tops, bottoms, socks, shoes, and more; examine your clothes one
category at a time.
By the way, starting with mementos spells certain
failure. Things that bring back memories, such as photos, are not the place for
beginners to start. The best sequence is this: clothes first, then books,
papers, miscellaneous items, and lastly mementos.
To truly cherish the things that are important to you,
you must first discard those that have outlived their purpose. To get rid of
what you no longer need is neither wasteful nor shameful.
I can personally support the efficacy and uniqueness of
Kondo’s approaches. Having pretty much tried every method out there, the
mindset behind her revolutionary approaches finally did it for me. A
self-described pack rat, I wondered if I’d ever overcome my reluctance to let
go of my “stuff”.
It’s no wonder this Tokyo “phenomenon” has a three-month
client waiting list. The drastic changes in self-perception transform behaviors
plus lifestyles. As a result, I’ve eliminated about 30 years of clutter. I feel
energized, fulfilled and liberated by getting out from “under” what often felt
like mountains of décor, etc. I can breathe! You will, too.
P.S. This highly-useful volume by itself sparks so much
joy that it shall occupy a prominent place in subsequent homes!
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