The Best Tip for a Clutter-Free Life

Own Less.

Okay, easier said than done but owning less is truly the ultimate answer to living a clutter-free life.

The need for storage containers, baskets, and organizing items will just add to your clutter. Getting rid of items that you don’t need eliminates the need to organize them. De-cluttering can be a time consuming and frustrating process. Here are a few tips to help you get started:

  1. Start with one room
  2. Make a pile of everything you do not use, need, or want. This will be the hardest part. Be honest. Have you used this item in the past year? Would you take this item with you if you were moving to your dream house?
  3. Go through the room again. A second pass will often lead to another pile of items to get rid of.
  4. Throw away the trash and put the usable items you have gathered in your car and take them to the Goodwill or other donation location. Most Goodwill’s make house calls for furniture or other large items that are  hard to transport. Contact your local Goodwill to find out whether or  not pick-up service is available in your community.
  5. Stop bringing items in your home to help prevent clutter.
  6. De-clutter regularly

Organization containers can help contain visual clutter but before placing an item in the containers consider if you really need it and how often you will use the item.

Minimalism in Steps

by: Leo Babauta

You can become a minimalist overnight, by not only changing your mindset but renouncing all possessions.

Of course, that’s not a realistic approach for most of us. We have families, jobs, lives, and unless we’re willing to give up those lives, our approach won’t be so drastic.

Slow change is best for most people.

And so I recommend you do it in steps, as I’ve done. Here’s what these steps might look like:

1. Stop buying unnecessary things. This step was important for me as I was trying to get out of a mountain of debt (achieved, btw). Only buy the necessities, and always ask yourself: is this truly necessary? Stop the bleeding first.

2. Get rid of the obvious things. Stuff that’s getting in your way, that you rarely ever use. You can often fill up a few boxes immediately, put them in your car, and donate them to a thrift shop or to friends and family the next day.

3. Get rid of more obvious things. Now that you’ve cleared up some of the clutter, you can take a look around and start seeing other things you rarely use. Box these up as well.

4. Clear the clutter on your floors. If your floors are barely visible because you have clothes and boxes and different items all over the place, start clearing your floors.

5. Clear other flat surfaces. Shelves, table tops, counter tops. They don’t have to be completely clear, but should only have a few essential objects.

6. Start going into closets and drawers. One place at a time, start clearing out clutter.

7. Cut back another third. At this point, you should have simplified drastically, but you can revisit what you still own and see things you don’t really use that often.

8. Start letting go, emotionally. For emotional reasons, there will be things that you “just can’t part” with — clothes or shoes or books or mementoes or gifts, childhood items. This is difficult, but given time, you’ll learn that such attachments aren’t necessary.

9. Get rid of another third. At this point, you’re pretty minimalist, but you can cut back more.

10. Et cetera. The process will never end, until you actually give up everything. I’m not there yet.

These steps are just a rough outline of what I went through, but it’s a look into a process that might help.

Check out Leo’s site: mnmlist.com

iPhone a Tool Towards Minimalism?

When is a phone not just a phone? When it is an Apple iPhone.

Honestly, I love gadgets and always have, but the iPhone is something special. I believe it can be a tool towards minimalism. How? By using various apps and features of the iPhone to replace other things.

First off, it is of course a phone. This is something I would carry with me anyway. I also read email, send text messages, and surf the internet. All of these things are common uses of almost all smart phones. However, I am able to do even more with the iPhone.

The iPhone has a GPS which allows you to navigate to different places while in the car. The same GPS features allowed me to use it as a replacement for my Garmin 305. It is an incredible tracking tool for running. The app I use is called RunKeeper. It does everything that my Garmin used to do.

I also use it as a food diary and fitness tracker. I plan to discuss this topic in more depth in another post, but this alone has made a huge difference in my overall health and fitness.

In addition, I have replaced my iPod, PSP, alarm clock, and wallet with the iPhone. How did I replace my wallet? I use the case-mate ID and credit card case.

When approached with a minimalist mindset, the iPhone can replace:
• iPod
• Garmin sports watch
• cell phone
• GPS
• PDA
• food/fitness journal
• alarm clock
• wallet (using case)
• camera
• portable game system

Overall, it is one of the most versatile products available easily doing the job of 10 different things! Since I got my iPhone my pockets have become so much less cluttered. Now if I can only figure out a way to open doors with it…

Rethinking Necessities

by Leo from mnmlist.com

One of the basics of minimalism is that you eliminate as many non-necessities as you can, to make room for what’s important.

If you don’t need a ton of clothing, you get rid of much of it. If you don’t need that new gadget, you don’t buy it. Within reason, of course.

You learn to be content with what you already have, with the necessities, with doing things you love rather than having things.

But it’s funny, because often things we assume are necessities are not necessarily so. The problem is that we categorize things as necessities because we’re used to them, and we can’t see how to live without them. And it’s difficult to make big changes.

Some examples:

A car. Cars are seen as necessities, but amazingly, people lived without them for quite awhile before the 20th century. Even today, some people manage to go carless. And it’s not impossible — especially if you live in a place with a decent public transportation system. And there are car sharing options now in many cities, so you can use a car when you need it, for much less than actually owning a car. It’s possible to bike and walk most places, and take public transit and shared cars everywhere else.

Meat. Many people believe they can’t live without steaks and burgers. And I was one of them. These days, I’m not only vegetarian, but mostly vegan. And it’s not that hard to change, if you do it slowly. It’s also healthier and better for the environment — meat and dairy animals are tremendously harmful to the environment and a huge waste of our natural resources.

Lots of clothes. While I don’t advocate going naked (though some do it) nor do I recommend just owning one outfit, it is possible to own less clothing than most people have. We don’t need to constantly buy clothes to stay fashionable — we can buy quality, timeless clothing, with colors and patterns chosen so that all our clothes go with each other.

A big house. Have less stuff, you need less house.

These are just a few examples — think about all the things you consider necessities. Are they really? What’s really needed, beyond food, shelter, basic clothing, and loved ones?

The Art of Being Minimalist eBook

Download your free copy today for 24 hours.

The Art of Being Minimalist tells the story of how Everett Bogue was able to leave his job successfully during a recession and set out on his own. It explores how living a minimalist life can help you achieve your own ideas of success. It explains how being minimalist can help you live a life that revolves around activities that you enjoy.

Download your copy now!

© Copyright 2010 SeekingSimplicity.com. All Rights Reserved.