Judy L's UFO Challenge

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Decluttering with the KonMari Method

I have spent a good amount of my life acquiring things.  But now I spend a good amount of my life de-cluttering things.  I find myself attached to the silliest of things.  I would get attached to my kids toys for example.  I at some point managed to let go of things.  I had to find a good steward of my things that I could entrust with these treasures.  It helped.  I told the recipients to never tell me when they let go of these items.

When my husband passed away I still had to find a good steward for my things.  But I was willing to let a lot more go because I knew that someone could make good use of his things NOW not later.  I let go of piles and piles of clothes and shoes to name a few.

Many of you  have heard of FlyLady. She has you work on your daily routine which includes dishes and quick swish of the toilet for example.  Then she has you work on a room a week going around the room in a methodical way sorting and getting rid of things for a specified amount of time.  She made sure you left time at the end of your session to properly take care of your sorted piles.  You repeated week after week until theoretically you were done.  I needed her when I first started getting rid of things.  I think she appealed to the depressed and overwhelmed.  She encouraged you to just do something, anything, but keep trying.  I was pretty good about following along with her weekly email reminders.  She was getting you to clean a bit as well.

When I had my house fire I had a big wipe the slate clean moment.  I moved back into my house and everything was freshly cleaned, painted and put back together again.  I had a garage full of boxes and 2 storage units filled with boxes and stuff.  My house had what I wanted in the rooms at the time.  I went to the task of getting all the things in the garage sorted and given away or put away.  I then had the daunting task of bringing everything from storage and putting it in my garage.  Actually it was all hauled out onto the driveway and was sorted into categories.  Some of the things I knew I wanted to keep or to spend more time sorting through were placed in the attic for storage.  Then there were the things that I could sort through relatively quickly and get rid of.  I still had too much.  This was in May of 2012.  This is when I started disposing of my husbands things in earnest..

I began bringing in boxes to be sorted from the garage.  I would put the boxes where I thought I wanted the contents ultimately stored.  It didn't take long to clutter things up again.  I did my best and tried to keep things grouped together.

The following year my mother passed away.  My Dad insisted that I take whatever I wanted of hers before I left town after the funeral.  I took what I could and gave away what I did not want.  I reasoned with Dad and he agreed to let me set aside the larger items to be picked up when I could return.  What I did bring back from those trips just added to the clutter.  More clothes, furniture, fabric and sewing paraphernalia.  The water was rising in an already over my head depth.  I continued to try to sort and give away.  The strong emotional attachment was there again.  Even worse than before.  But I continued to pick away at the clutter.

About 7 months after Mom passed I got a call from Dad that he was sick and had fallen at home.  I ultimately had to go to him to help sort his medical situation out and make some decisions about his future.  Long story short we packed up his house, sold it and he moved in with me along with all his stuff.  By the end of May he passed away.  Now I had all his stuff to deal with.  More furniture, clothes and stuff in general.  Not to mention all the paper and the estate to settle.  Again,  the picking and choosing of what to give away continued.  More stuff to the attic, more giving away of large objects.  Still identifying those good stewards of my parents precious things.

I am not exactly sure how I came across the KonMari method.  She is so totally different than FlyLady.  She has five categories that she wants you to work on.  The first of which is clothes.  She wants you to gather all your clothes into once place regardless of the season they are for.  She wants you to be shocked by how much stuff you have.  She then wants you to touch each item and if it "sparks joy" you keep it, otherwise you dispose of the item.  She encourages you to thank it for serving its purpose in your life.  She also encourages you to quickly move through this activity and stick with it until you have gone through all your clothes.

I have neither the energy nor time to gather ALL my clothing into one place and do a massive sort.  Not yet at least.  But I did realize that I had two laundry baskets piled high with socks.  I would start there.  How did I get so many socks?  Well there were Mark's socks that fit me and I liked to wear.  There were the socks that my mother did not like for either her or Dad and she passed them to me.  Then when they both passed I inherited their socks.  Ray's socks were mixed in there and so were my son's.  My daughter had a few cast offs but for the most part she manages her own socks.

I went through the basket and started pairing up things.  I then selected the socks that belonged to each person.  I chose a number for each person and more or less stopped picking the ones I liked when I hit it.  I still had a huge basket full of good, wearable socks that are now paired and sitting in a tote awaiting donation this weekend.  There were very few that I threw away because they were stained or holey.

The difference this time is that I was choosing what to keep rather than what to get rid of.  If I went with the philosophy of only keeping the good and tossing the bad then I was stuck in the cycle of still hanging on to too much.  For some reason choosing what to keep gave me the right mindset to let go of the excess good.  I still have socks that are mismatched.  Over time I will realize what is not mated and never will be and will toss them or donate them to someones sock puppet project.  But I can see how this change will make a huge difference for me.

8 comments:

Linda said...

I know how hard it is to get rid of things. I inherited my sister's things (clothes and sewing room) and I have all of my stuff too. I already had too many things cuz I'm a keeper....It is hard to give away but I'm trying to do just that myself. My thinking now is why should I just let it hang in my closet when someone that needs it can make use of it. I'm trying hard to clear out too. I really want to organize as soon as I can. Good luck on what you are doing.

julieQ said...

I have lost a mom, and dad, a brother...so I am right there with you, Swooze! I will try this method. Good luck to us both!!

Krista said...

Good luck with your decluttering. I like flylady, but I don't have much clutter so she just keeps me on track with cleaning. When I separated from my ex, since I'm the one who moved, I only kept what I wanted - so I guess I did use the KonKari method then, without knowing it. I got rid of a ton of stuff. And since then, have managed to avoid clutter for the most part (let's not discuss the sewing room :) ).

Glen QuiltSwissy said...

How timely, I am currently reading Kon-Marie! In fact, I was telling Carrie about it this last weekend. I understand about combining the treasures of mom, dad, and the loss of things through no fault of your own.

I go between too much, and not enough.

Bonnie said...

What a powerful post . I am a keeper, an appreciator of things past, handed down, what I enjoy. But this one sentence impacted me tremendously. "The difference this time is that I was choosing what to keep rather than what to get rid of". It gives a whole new thought pattern on what is essential just things. I imbue them with memories and fond thoughts and especially I might want it some day. My closet is full of clothing that is older but perfectly functional but I don't have much need for satiny Christmas shirts. Or 5 pairs of black slacks two of which are just a tad small. You get the picture. I'm writing that quote down and hopefully will put it to use. Thanks for sharing. Time keeps marching on for us despite the fact we don't really realize how fast.

cityquilter grace said...

sounds like you have a good plan and have put it into action....i tend to cull as i go along but acquiring does get out of hand quickly and so without realizing it...keep up the good work swooze!

ShinyNewThing said...

That book got a lot of attention on some of the podcasts I listen to, about six months ago or so. I'm a terrible packrat about keeping things that 'might be useful' especially for hobbies. I'm getting better about non-hobby stuff and was positively ruthless with my clothes and shoes when we moved house. From what I hear of the Kon Marie method, it's not for me as I am too much of a planner (and a scaredy cat about what might come in future that I won't be prepared for) but the 'does it spark joy?' question does seem to be a good one. That helped me get rid of a lot of old quilting projects at the market sale last christmas, at giveaway prices, because I wanted to give them away to people who really wanted them. I'd had some of them for 20 years and just didn't want to store them any more. Good luck with your decluttering.

Cher said...

great post ...I too have gone through bouts of using flylady and also Kon Marie as well. A friend had the motto, Less Is More...and we always invoked that mindset too.

Spring and Fall are my favorite time to purge and get rid of stuff.
You have done a wonderful post of how stuff can become overwhelming and found your own way to reclaim your space for yourself.

Why keep anything if it does not inspire joy? thanks so much for sharing