Posts Tagged ‘downsize’

Let Go without Letting Go: 10 Questions You May Not Have Asked Yet

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

“We cannot measure abundance by what we accumulate. Abundance is an experience of the heart, a wind that blows through us like a flute.  Our treasures are in the eye, the ear, and in the heart, that feels the wonder of things. ”

Wayne Muller, Legacy of the Heart.

Let go without letting go.  “No regrets” decisions.

Phrases I use often enough but how do we do this?

Shout outBelow, I share with you the first five of my top 10 questions  — ones you may not have thought of before today.


My Letting Go questions:

#1  What is it you want more time for?

What is important in this chapter of your life.

If I had less stuff to deal with, I’d have more time for ____________________.

I want to be a better role model for ___________.

I want time for me, to _________________.

#2  What does “organized enough” mean to you? Look like to you? Feel like?

Go to the area you’re thinking about working on and ask this question, then sit with it for 5 minutes. Close your eyes if that helps.

Go one level deeper. “I want to find things more easily SO THAT I can …” What does organized enough mean to you? It’s not so that your home can look like someone else’s, or how it “should” be. What do you want?

#3 If I walked into your home or home office today, what would I know about you by looking around?

Or any stranger, new friend, new relative, or new colleague. Is this an accurate picture of who you are?

What needs to leave the premises, so we to accurately describe who you are (today)?

#4  As you walk around, what things do not have a home yet? Do they need a home? Or are they taking up precious space?

What other things are hiding in the homes you want to give these important things? Which group could you reduce, or let go of? Reduce, not eliminate. A favorite phrase.

#5 Choose a donation location before you begin, not at the end of your project.

As you decide you’ll be working on clearing out your clothes closet for example, decide who might enjoy the clothes you’ll give away? A friend who has always admired your clothing? A family transition home? People re-entering the workforce?

Deciding on a donation place first makes it easier to let go — because you can conjure up a picture of how much they’ll enjoy what you’re giving away. Or, go to the donation place. Meet the group you’re donating to.

Letting go is about knowing your favorites, your priorities in life, your treasures …..and keeping them.

It’s about moving on, keeping the best of the past and bringing it with you into your next chapter.  Hopefully some of these questions will help you with that.

Old Me or New Me?

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

blossoming “Blossoms”

You’ve been divorced or perhaps widowed for awhile now — whatever awhile is to you. You’re living in the same home you’ve lived in for all those years but it’s starting to feel different. Something subtle or stark is out of kilter for you.

The difference is that your mindset is changing. You’re ready for creating the next chapter in life. You’ve realized it is time to move on. It’s now your time to create a next chapter. You’re spreading your wings bit by bit, blossoming a little at a time. How can you organize your home to reflect the new or changed “you”? Or your new chapter?

Key questions to ask yourself before you change anything:

#1  As you think about moving forward and creating your next chapter, reflect on what’s important to bring forward with you? Which memories. Which experiences.

Are they represented in your heart or in objects? Does an object trigger a memory? How many are needed to trigger the memory though (as in a collection).

Can you think of someone in your family or extended family who might enjoy some of the collection? Do you need a photograph of you with the collection to remind yourself or not?

#2  Are there special items you don’t really want to keep but you do want kept in your family? You could designate items for certain people and give them as gifts at a birthday, Valentine’s Day, or even at a family reunion. Is anyone setting up house, like a recent graduate, an upcoming wedding ? Is there a gift here? The object AND the memories. The tales, stories, family history.

#3  As you look at each room, ask yourself: what do I want this room to be now? What can I do with the room? Rooms get cluttered easily if they don’t have a purpose for being. Or they have too many purposes! So how can you repurpose this room? And maybe this room needs not only the reorganization but treat yourself to new paint, hiring a decorator, a new closet system, too!

#4  What was the essence of the person you loved and lost. The essence is what you want to keep near you somehow. But it doesn’t mean, as you move forward to your next chapter and on your own, that ALL of his/her things need to make the journey. You’re making a new chapter, so bring the best forward. Create a memory box — just a simple box, however large you see fit, and keep the best memories. On your closet shelf, if the box were kept there, you’d see those memories every day, which may be comforting for awhile still. So what’s the essence of the person and how you can bring that forward with you into your next chapter, and reflected in your home’s organization.

#5  Last question. This will be a sentimental and sometimes difficult time. You may want to work alone so you can privately work through your reorganization. Or the opposite may be true. You may need a friend, counselor or an organizer alongside. Someone to help you walk the path, help you make decisions about which you’ll have no regrets,  and to talk through some of the memories as you say goodbye to objects.  Trust your instincts about whether you need your community around you at this point.

The Tales and the Evidence

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

“ I have learned that what the next generation will value most is not what we owned but the evidence of who we were and the tales of how we loved.” Ellen Goodman, The Boston Globe and Pulitzer prize winning journalist. And a columnist I never missed reading as I was growing up.

I start every class about downsizing with this quote.

“…who we were and the tales of how we loved.”  Doesn’t sound like it’s much about keeping the wok we want to use someday or the French books from college, does it?

But it IS the story telling tradition. Back again and in vogue!

This quote and its meaning are never more poignant, never more clear to us than when someone we love has recently died. It’s so clear that it’s not about our stuff and our toys, but the essence of the person, the tales of how the life was lived, what he/she brought to each one of us, and what we learned. There are always people in my classes who have quite recently experienced the death of someone they loved dearly. The classmates are a wise voice to hear for us all.

Emotionally, downsizing is difficult, but in different ways for each person. At first, the hardest part always seems to be: Where do I start? I have a whole house to go through. We’ve lived here, raised children here, worked and played here, for 30, 40 or more years.

Where do I start?  The understandable feeling of overwhelm is almost contagious, it’s so palpable.

Once we get past that and get started, the hardest part is living up to the quote from Ellen Goodman.

Downsizing is difficult because we’re reviewing our lives. Every object is judged and a decision is made about whether to …  for example, keep all or some of the Hummel collectionHummel embroidery.

We’d taken years to collect our statues. Each Hummel has its own story, so how can we decide? This one was the anniversary edition because we’ve been in the club 20 years. This one was from my favorite aunt, who enjoyed singing, just like the Hummel she gave me. And so on.

If you don’t enjoy collecting them as much as you used to, and if you’d like to pass along the “evidence,” how about taking a photo of the collection, or of you with the collection? You’ll have the visual for your memory. You’ll tell the stories about each statue. You could write down the stories or audio tape yourself. Or what if you went through your collection with the person you’d like to give the statues to. All of these lovely ways to pass along family stories the next generation will retell for you.

What a beautiful way to tell the “tales” of who you’ve been. Tell the stories as you gently pack each statue for its new home. Maybe you’ll keep one or two or a smaller group of favorites, reducing, but not eliminating. Reduce, don’t eliminate — watch words. No regrets decisions is what I espouse and teach.

Right after I give my classes the quote about “evidence” and “tales of how we loved,” we talk about moving forward. I use the phrase “rightsizing” for our next chapter in life.

Sure, of course, it’s necessary that that we tell the tales (and even grieve sometimes) about what we’re gifting to other people, about what we are genuinely giving up of our past.

But go at your own pace, not someone else’s. Take your time. Drop the word “should” from your thinking and language. Whose “should” is it anyway? Not yours, I’ll bet (from experience!)

But once we’ve done that, we need to look at our current life. Where are we headed? Why are we downsizing? What are we looking forward to? What’s coming up? What do we value?

It’s a new chapter, and just like in that book you just finished reading, the end of one chapter is a sad thing sometimes.

But then… remember how you feel with anticipation of starting a new chapter? Or a new book ? And all the excitement that goes with it?

Life is like a book, with many chapters. Live life in chapters.

Getting Inspired for Downsizing & Simplifying–Whether You’re Moving or Not

Monday, November 9th, 2009

You’ve been in your home for decades now. Children are grown. You may be divorced or widowed, now on your own. You look around and the house is big. There are rooms you don’t use (except for the room we all call the “I-don’t-know-what-to-do-with-this-so-I’ll-put-it-in-here-for-now-room.”) You’d like to create a home office in one of those rooms to support your new business idea or volunteer work. You’d like to make your home  your own. Or you’ve just been through your parents’ home and you don’t want your children to have to go through like yours the way you just had to.

The whole houseLots of reasons for simplifying and downsizing, whether you move or not. Most of my clients are not moving but are wanting to simplify life, so there’s more time for family, old hobbies you’re picking up again, and new hobbies or interests you’ve yet to discover.

Where to start. How to get some inspiration going. It’s the WHOLE house. Yikes.

We’re all different, so we’re all inspired differently. What follows is a list of ways to get started. All are from experiences with clients. This isn’t a complete list, but it certainly is a list for you to start with. Reflect on each idea and figure out if that’s the one, the place to start, for you.

There’s the team approach. You’re a social being, love to get together with people, outgoing. Invite someone you know to help get you started. And return the favor if she’s also downsizing.

Also on your ‘team’ could be organizations, because you’ll have to visit, meet and hold yourself to an appointment deadline. A deadline to someone else might be what you need. So before you start, call up a local consignment place or your favorite place you want to donate to. Find out what they need, hours of operation and set up an appointment a few weeks from now. That will give the social piece and will give you a “manufactured” deadline.

Which leads to another source of motivation and inspiration: donating. I promise that it will be easier to downsize your book collection, your fabrics or whatever it is you need to go through if you know ahead of time where you’ll donate to. Why? Because rather than thinking about what you’re getting rid of, you’ll be thinking about who gets to enjoy the fabrics as much as you have. You’re looking forward. You’re also ensuring the fabrics get a new life, their own new chapter!

Manufactured deadlines: Credit for this phrase goes to the marketing department at The Huntington at Nashua, where I’ve been invited to speak about solving these downsizing dilemmas. A self-imposed deadline vs. a manufactured deadline: Self-imposed, to me, sounds easy to push off. It’s just “me.” A manufactured deadline is one to someone else. It’s not a move date, which is hard and fast. But it feels like a deadline.

Examples of manufactured deadlines follow. These can be used to give yourself a deadline to get through downsizing a particular room or collection.

*The consignment shop appointment, donation place, recycling station hours/days.

*Valentine’s Day: one woman sorted through her jewelry and on this day, each granddaughter received jewelry from grandmom.

*Guests arriving: The friend from the west coast who wants to visit for 2 weeks during the summer. Great deadline to get through whichever room she’ll stay in. Or the Thanksgiving guests: instead of merely cleaning the room, how about going through all your things in there?

*In my family, our deadline for getting our stuff out of mom and dad’s attic was that their town was going to start charging for trash (non-recyclables ) in July. Guess what our deadline was, and theirs as well?

*Family get togethers, reunions, birthday parties.

*Your own birthday!

In my next blog entry, we’ll talk about monthly themes for downsizing, rewards, and starting with your favorites.

550 Billion Printed Photos in the U.S.

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Ah, technology. It comes and it goes.

Life was easier when we had just the printed photographs to coMlle. Crickette after Spa Daynsider. But now we have digital photos as well.

And you’ve probably saved years worth of printed photos thinking you’ll make albums some day for yourself or each of your children as they married, someday when you’re retired.

So much has changed. What to do with all those photos ? Let’s start with some ideas for the printed ones. (more…)