I'm a messy person.
I start the day looking for my glasses, my phone, my keys. In
addition to the inconvenience of always losing items, I shudder when
I think of how much time I've lost looking for things when I could be
doing something more productive, or even fun. And I know, I know, if
I returned objects to their 'special places' I wouldn't lose them.
But I did not, maybe could not, follow that simple solution.
However, browsing the internet one day I thought maybe I'd found an
answer to why I didn't clean up my life. My key tapping fingers
discovered the highly praised and best selling book, “The
Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering
and Organizing,” by Marie Kondo.
As a researcher type
person, I was skeptical of all the hype and looked at as many
excerpts and reviews on line that I could find. They convinced me I
should at least read the book and soon. But I was a thousand miles
and a few weeks from home so I did something I'd never done before.
I was so eager to change my life or at least declutter it, I didn't
want to wait until I got back to get a hard copy of it. Curiosity
won over my preference for holding an actual book in my hands as I
read. I downloaded the Kindle app to my cell phone and bought the
e-book version. Wow, I thought, I've already started changing my
life.

I could understand
why those who read it were enthused. Of course, every self help book
comes with an enthusiastic audience. The few negative reviews were
from readers who didn't like the idea of thanking your possessions
and the place where you lived. Being concrete realists they knew
these objects had no feelings and could not respond to anything their
owner said. However, even if you don't believe that, think of the
effect on yourself when you give thanks. In fact, that is the
premise of Simple Abundance by Gretchen Rubin. Being grateful
changes you and your feelings about what is in your life. I decided
Marie Kondo was a special person, and I should listen to her.
Her examples and
her philosophy seemed reasonable to me, and certainly worth trying
out. I thought of some beautiful serving bowls and platters that I
never used because they were too hard to get out. Maybe because my
kitchen cupboards were cluttered with thrift store, ugly thick bowls.
I felt they were good enough for every day, while my 'good' stuff
was stored away. I had as a goal, not to change my life, although
that might be nice, but to just be able to find and use my 'joyful'
objects.
I could hardly wait
to get home and to start on my clothes—the category she stresses
should be first. However, I already had caveats for her method. I
didn't see myself throwing all my clothes (from three closets—regular
clothes, dressy clothes, and outer wear—and dresser drawers) in a
pile on the floor and going through them one at a time. I thought I
would have to fudge on that one. And books. I have books throughout
my house, in every room. Was I really going to have to pile them up
before I could go through them?
I decided the best
way to determine if her method worked for me was to record what I
did, and to describe if I deviated from her method, and what happened
next. Would my use of her method really be life changing?
Driving home cross
country, I pictured silently greeting my home when I walked into it
and telling it how grateful I am for its service to me and how joyful
I am to live in it. Let's see how that works out.
Next Tuesday I'll
report on my attack plan for dealing with the Kondo Method.