Types Of Clutter And How To Deal With Them Made Simple - Even Your Kids Can Do It

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According to a thoughtful recent TED Ideas post from the speaker and professional organizer Kerry Thomas.


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Unsurprisingly given her profession, her physical spaces have always been immaculate, but as she recalls in this moving piece, after recovering from major surgery she still felt overwhelmed by clutter.


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Why Does Clutter Matter


Clutter has been shown to increase our stress levels and reduce our focus and concentration.


Although there are many scientific studies to back this up, many of us would agree that a messy, cluttered environment correlates to a messy, cluttered mind.


I work better when my desk is clear, clean, tidy, and set up to help me work in the most efficient way possible.



I like my kitchen to be the same. Easy to clean with an abundance of workspace and tidy cabinets and drawers so I can find the ingredients and cooking utensils I need.


A cluttered home is often tidier, calmer, more organized, and easier to keep clean and tidy. A cluttered life has other related benefits and gives us more time, space, and freedom for living our life instead of chasing here and there just to keep up with it.


So, if a cluttered home and life are making you stressed out, over-tired and in search of something else, take a look at these different types of clutter to see if any resonate with you.

Types of clutter and how to deal with them


1. Physical clutter


From too many plates and glasses to too many clothes in your wardrobe, too many toys in your child’s bedroom to too many extra sets of towels and bed linen.


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Too many duplicates, too many misplaced pairs, too many things that you don’t need, want, use, or particularly appreciate.

Ways to Tackle Your Physical Clutter


Room by Room

Once you have established your reason for cluttering your space, you can begin by tackling each room one at a time. You can start small and go through your hallway closet or a bigger project such as your bedroom. The beauty of cluttering is that it is your own space, so you get to decide what you want to start with.


Your Own Pace


Start by going at your own pace whether that is choosing to get rid of one item a day or ten items a day! You are in control of how much or how little you want to get rid of.



It all depends on how many of your belongings you intend to either keep, donate, or throw away. Make a “cluttering schedule” to help you organize your time and energy throughout the next few days or upcoming weeks.


Change Your Daily Habits


Habits are how you live your daily life and your surroundings get caught in the middle of it. The first step to take to help change your daily habits is having a place for all of your belongings. After you are done using something always put it back in the same place right after.


To Keep or Throw Away


A big part of cluttering is to decide whether you want to keep something, throw it away, or donate it.


You should have three piles or bags, so you can better organize your belongings. If your goal is to become a minimalist and live a more minimalist lifestyle then take a more aggressive approach when deciding what to throw away and what to keep.


2. Time clutter


This type of clutter is clutter in your schedule or filling up your days. It could be too many errands on your to-do list, too many activities in your diary, saying yes to too many invitations.


It could be not enough free time for yourself, unstructured free time for your kids.


3. Digital clutter


This type of clutter is clutter on your computer and on your phone. It could be too many emails in your inbox, junk popping into your spam folder, or newsletters that you signed up to which you no longer read.


It could be millions of fuzzy photos on your phone that make finding those favorite snapshot memories feel like trying to find a needle in a haystack.


4. Mental clutter


This type of clutter is clutter that takes up space in your mind. It could be negative thoughts, worries, stresses, and limiting beliefs. It could be too many things to remember or an overloaded brain that can’t focus and concentrate. It could be too many distractions or too many ideas that don’t have an outlet.


Ten Ways to Declutter Your Mind and Free Up Mental Space

  1. Declutter Your Physical Environment. Physical clutter leads to mental clutter. ...

  2. Write It Down. ...

  3. Keep a Journal. ...

  4. Let Go of the Past. ...

  5. Stop Multi-Tasking. ...

  6. Limit the Amount of Information Coming In. ...

  7. Be Decisive. ...

  8. Put Routine Decisions on Auto-Pilot.

 

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