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A heartfelt welcome to visitors wishing to follow my Little Guy Teardrop Trailer Travels. For your convenience, you can follow my trips chronologically by clicking The Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina. ~~ More trailer info. ~~ The overall contents of this blog are a mix of health & nutrition, and comments about my activities. Enjoy!!
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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Clutter & Chaos

It's a conspiracy [big grin]!! I had saved an old Reader's Digest for two articles: Michael J. Fox' struggle with Parkinson's (my mother died from Parkinson's), and information about allergies (I suffered from an allergy last Fall). Much more prominent on the cover "Clutter Free, Stress Free, 21 Ways You Can Take Control." It's lengthy (and you had more than your share of "lengthy," on 6/08/09, with the AARP article, "Conquering Clutter") so I'll only list a few points.

Excerpts from:
How I got out from under this mess.
by Shea Dean, Reader's Digest, May 2002, pp. 90-97.

The Clutter-Stress Syndrome

Mountains of junk mail and overstuffed closets aren't just eyesores; they can also increase anxiety. "Clutter makes it impossible to get anything done on time," says Barry Izsak, founder of Arranging It All in Austin, Texas. "As a result, we miss deadlines, forget appointments, and annoy our friends and work associates--all of which cause stress that makes it even harder to get organized. It's a vicious cycle."

Messes, however, often serve a subconscious purpose: "They hide problems in our lives we don't want to confront," says Sheila McCurdy, owner of Clutter Stop in Upland, California. Recognizing this root cause is the first step to staying organized.

1. You're avoiding something.
Bills and statements, for example, may be piling up because you don't want to confront money woes, says Ramona Creel, founder of Onlineorganizing.com. "People think, 'If I get organized, I'm going to find out my finances are in horrible shape.' Then they're going to have to change their spending habits." Similarly, a client of Creel's who was selling her house kept it so unsightly Realtors refused to show it. "My client didn't really want to move, and the mess was her way of staying put."

2. You fear failure.
"I've had clients say, 'If only I were organized, I'd go back to college or finish a book proposal'" says Stephanie Denton, owner of Denton & Company, and organizer firm in Cincinnati. But the mess lets them put off taking a shot at their dream. "If they failed, they'd have no one to blame but themselves. Blaming a mess is easier."

3. You've changed--and aren't prepared for it.
"Possessions let us hold on to a part of ourselves we aren't ready to give up,"
says McCurdy of Clutter Stop. Clothing is often the culprit: Keeping "skinny" clothes you hope you'll squeeze into again shows you're unhappy with the extra pounds you've put on. And holding on to "fat" clothes is a sign you're sick of your workout regimen or diet. But old apparel can subtly undermine your identity. "The sight of your 'skinny clothes' will quietly convince you you're fat," McCurdy explains. "The sight of 'fat clothes' after you've lost weight may beckon you to relapse into your old eating habits."

4. You want to retreat.
Can't throw a dinner party because your house is a pigsty? Deep down, you may want to withdraw from friends and family--even from people in your own home. "Women will deliberately not do housework if they're having problems with their husbands," says Sandra Felton, founder of Messies Anonymous, which hosts an online chat group, Mates-of-Messies, with 127 members mired in clutter-related marital strife. "The home is often where women have power, so this is a way to express their hostility," says Felton. But such passive-aggressive tactics rarely solve problems. Instead, they fuel the fire--Felton has seen disorganization lead to divorce.

5. You're holding on to someone.
While it's natural to save mementos of a loved one who's recently died or moved out, keeping too much can keep you from moving forward, whether that's finding new friends or a new career path. "When you have too many 'memory joggers,' you become distracted and overwhelmed," says Denton. "One client whose kids had gone to college kept every outfit they'd ever put on," says Creel. "What these people don't realize is, their memories aren't in these objects, it's in them."




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