"This year," Carly resolved, "I'm going to de-clutter this
house. Go through the place,top to bottom. Rid myself of
all the junk! "
This was going to be a monumental task. She'd been a
pack rat for as long as she could remember. From the rock
collection in her grade school desk to her many present day
collections all these years later. She had a problem getting
rid of STUFF.
But now, she was going to lighten her load, start pitching.
She'd start with the hall linen closet.
Except for the two middle drawers, this cupboard held
everything but linens.
Take the bottom drawer for instance: for the last umpteen
years, it had held children's frame tray puzzles. Some of them
had been purchased brand new, while others were picked up
at rummage sales.
She had never known when a little kiddo would show up,
needing something to do.
While most of the puzzles were in decent shape, the fact
remained that, since her youngest grandchild was now eleven
years old, their useful life in her house was over.
Closing her eyes, she picked up all the puzzles, placing them
into a donation box headed for a local charity.
Then, up to the top of the cupboard. That thing held every-
thing from boxed games to candles. From saved greeting cards
to high school memory books and pictures in frames. Many more
items to go to donations.
Others began to fill up a garbage bag.
Was that really a troll doll?
This cleaning thing was beginning to gain some serious steam,
taking on a life of its own. A little bit more cleaning and she'd
actually have room for the linens now relegated to the two drawers.
There. That was better.
On to the home office. This place was a virtual repository
of all things paper. Receipts, unfinished and dual manuscripts,
saved addresses, extra phone books.
Throw away unneeded papers, recycle the phone books, file
the rest. Clear the bulletin board.
Then there were dry pens and markers ,renegade paper clips,
unneeded computer programs, connection cords.
Connection cords? Better rethink that one. Throw in haste,
Be sorry ever afterward.
The garbage bag was filling up. Time for a new one.
Also time for a cup of coffee. This cleaning thing took some
serious energy.
As she sipped the steaming elixir, she imagined what the
house would look like once she was done: wide open spaces.
Bare surfaces on tables,
Not the house she'd known in a long time, maybe ever.
On to the living room. Unread books, gone! Long ago
fashionable knick-knacks, some of which she hadn't dusted
or even noticed in a very long time, ready for the donation
box.
But wait. Could she really get rid of that angel from Aunt
Ethel? She even remembered when she'd received it. It was
after her surgery all those years ago. A symbol of comfort
that still evoked a strong feeling of support and warmth.
The angel went back on the shelf.
Picture albums and boxes of loose pictures caught her eye.
They were projects for a snow stormy day.
On to the magazine rack. Back issues of Reader's Digest, Better
Homes and Gardens, as well as a sundry of other magazines
seemed to multiply before her eyes.
Before she deposited them into the recycling bin, she had
to give them one last look. Might have missed a good article
or two.
Same story with unused CDs and movies.
She couldn't believe how liberating this was beginning to
feel. Or how tiring. She was beginning to run out of energy.
That was enough for today. Great changes don't come
overnight.
The next day's target was the dining room.
Did she really need two sets of china? She would always keep
her wedding china. But the other set was one that had been
offered, a piece at a time, by the local grocery store.
She'd just had to have it when it was offered.
But the reality was, it had rarely seen its way out of the cupboard.
And, with the quality of disposable dinnerware nowadays,
who used fancy dishes enough for them to take up valuable real
estate in her china hutch?
A quick internet check for what the set and other fancy dishes
were worth prompted a few good pictures and an offer for sale on
a resale website.
Finding a sturdy box and some bubble wrap found from a recent
arrival, she carefully packed each piece for its exit from her home.
The next day found her cleaning out the kitchen, ridding it of
every unused pot, pan and utensil. Yet another set of dishes
would find a new home.
Loose recipes were corralled to fit into a large loose leaf notebook. Other unused recipe books were slated for charity.
Old spices and mismatched Tupperware:gone.
She went through the pantry, wiping down each shelf, ridding
it of older cans and boxes.
Climbing down from the higher shelves, she found her arms
ached and her back throbbed. Time to quit for the day.
Later that week, she went through the bedrooms. Closets were
purged of unused clothes.( what had she been thinking with some
of these styles?)
What had she once heard? Turn your hangers backwards. If
the garment on that hanger doesn't get moved in six months, get
rid of it.
Then, there were out of style jewelry, as well as drawers to sort through.
the next week, the basement got tackled. It had become a
special kind of catch-all purgatory for those things not used, but
not yet deemed disposable: flower pots, fruit jars, ice cream pails,
paints and painting equipment all had to be dealt with.
Coming back to the main floor, she mused: while certainly not
finished, she had made incredible progress in a short time.
"What could she do?", she wondered, "to stay in this new,better
organized life style?"
It was then she happened on her new mantra:"when in doubt,
throw it out."
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