A Declutter
Formula to Help You Throw Stuff Away Without Regret
In the average American home, there
are over 300,000 items. That’s true even though 1 in 10 Americans (and
rising) rent offsite storage and even though the size of the American
house has tripled in the past 50 years.2 Do some
math too: the average American home ownership tenure is about 9-10 years,
meaning people are accruing 30,000+ items each year to reach the 300,000 total
above.
What is all this stuff, though? It can take many
forms: loose change we’ve been hoarding, kids’ old toys, outfits that don’t fit
or went out of style, screws and nails, stationery, or items that we have an
emotional attachment to, like an old a concert program or record player.
People tend to keep more things because they believe that some
day in the future, these things will be useful or gain value. This is right to
an extent. These items, especially ones with emotional memories, are not
trash, but whether or not these things are useful for their owners is a
question.
It’s not easy to kickstart decluttering and deal with all the
300,000+ items, most people run into these three problems when they are trying
to determine usefulness of an item:
- Exaggerating
or over-emphasizing its need in the future.
- Underestimating
the cost and space it takes up.
- Ignoring
the storage cost.
But here’s a way out.
The Declutter
Formula
The best
acronym to move past this is using the framework RFASR:
- Recency — “When was
the last time I used this?”
- Frequency — “How often
do I use this?”
- Acquisition Cost
— “How difficult/expensive is it to get this?”
- Storage Cost
— “How much space and maintenance cost is it tied to?”
- Retrieve Cost
— “What costs are associated with retrieving it or it becoming
outdated?”
As you ask yourself these questions, plug in this equation:
R (Low) + F (Low) + AC (Low) +SC (High) + RC (High) = Not Worth
It
For example, a typical declutter scenario for many families is
clothes, which often flows like this:
- Recency:
“I last wore this over two years ago.”
- Frequency:
“Even back then, I didn’t wear it a lot.”
- Acquisition
Cost: “I could order something similar online in the next five minutes.”
- Storage
Cost: “This and similar items are taking up 3/4 of my closet.”
- Retrieve
Cost: “It’s so two years ago, too…”
In such a situation, you get rid of the clothing. It’s not going
to add value or usefulness in the future.
If there’s an emotional attachment (e.g. a gift from someone you
care about) try to remember this: when it was presented as a gift, it already
achieved its primary goal. Two or more years later, it’s just clothing taking
up space. That doesn’t change the connection to the gift or the person who
gifted it.
While the declutter formula can help you get rid of the stuff
you have already collected and help you decide whether you should collect or
buy things, there’s always a dilemma when you want something
more than you need it.
To combat it, consider waiting a week to make the purchase. In the
week, think about that equation and think about the relative degree of want and
need. If you decide to purchase the new item, get rid of one item at your
house. One in and one out is a
relatively simple rule here.
The Hidden Perk
of Decluttering
The real value
of the declutter formula is more than saving money and space. It
is also saving you mental energy.
There’s a massive amount of mental energy involved in organizing
and cleaning old clothes and items, or even preparing yourself to do it.
There’s also a large amount of mental energy involved in ignoring what you need
to do, which is a common tactic of those with clutter. Think about this: if I
hand you a white piece of paper with a large black dot and say “Don’t think
about the dot,” you will have to try hard not to think of that black dot.
That’s plenty of energy spent on trying not to think of the
dot.
It’s the same with getting your house in shape. You know all
that clutter is there. You know you need to declutter. But you keep finding
ways to ignore or procrastinate on it, and that’s actually reducing your
attention and priority away from where it should be.
The best way to re-focus on what matters to you and reduce
distractions is by repeatedly applying the formula, you’ll have a house full of
(a) things you like and (b) things that are valuable to you. That’s a huge win
in the decluttering game.
Leon Ho
http://www.lifehack.org/611115/a-declutter-formula-to-help-you-throw-stuff-away-without-regret?ref=mail&mtype=newsletter_tier_2&mid=20170717&uid=687414&hash=707e797f7e757e6d794c856d747b7b3a6f7b79&utm_source=newsletter_tier_2&utm_medium=email&action=click
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