Monday, January 30, 2012

Decluttering: Life Revelations Available Here

In ordered homes, decluttering is a process that gets repeated over and over in some way or another. You may do it on a regular schedule, as the need arises, or when desperate times call for desperate measures, but all of us practice some form of decluttering often enough, if only by taking the weekly trash to the curb. Usually, decluttering is simply a matter of throwing out used batteries and stained clothing and giving away the throw pillows that are more shabby than chic and figuring out a better way to arrange the linen closet. It is routine, must-do, and mundane most of the time, but sometimes we start decluttering and have an epiphany.

The epiphany can be small – we save every twist tie that enters our home and now we have 843 twist ties and there is no need for that many so I think we can take a hiatus on saving twist ties for the rest of our lives – or it can be big. The big ones often involve the realization that we have left one phase of our lives behind and entered another. I am having a big epiphany like that this month, and it was revealed when I started to declutter our project room.



Our youngest child is in the second half of eleventh grade. When he graduates at the end of next school year we will have completed 21 years of homeschooling, if I got the math right. Twenty-one years is a significant chunk of my lifetime so far, long enough to get lost in, long enough to almost forget it won’t last forever. Now, don’t pull out the tissues yet. It is bittersweet, but I hope there is enough sweet to offset the bitter. In many ways I have to fight hastening the arrival of the retired homeschool mom phase – the pleasure of seeing our boy launched and the possibilities my freer schedule will offer are enticements to get there and enter with delight.



Even though we haven’t quite stopped homeschooling, we are already in transition. Our household is comprised of five adult-sized persons with grownup interests and grownup needs for workspace, storage, and materials. When I started decluttering in our project room, I realized a lot of it was still set up for people under five feet tall. After indulging in a little weepy nostalgia for the days when the crayons and simple chapter books needed to be front and center, I got tough with myself and started experimenting with how to organize the room for adult needs while reserving some space for the young visitors who are here sometimes. This is where we store the majority of our books, where we keep many of our craft and photo supplies, and where we have our Great Big Desk. We also keep a worktable in here that doubles as a second study spot. When The Husband works from home, he usually works in this room. When I am studying for a class, I am usually found in here. Even though we still wrap presents, scrapbook, and do other crafts in here, it is most often used as a study now, and I worked hard to make changes to reflect that current reality.



First, I went through all of the items in the room and removed everything that didn’t belong there or that we no longer want to keep at all. We had a large collection of board games. I knew many of them hadn’t been played with in years, so I pulled them from the shelves and arranged neat stacks on a table. I invited each family member to go through them and pull out all of the games they wanted to keep. I reassured them that it didn’t matter to me if they all stayed, but perhaps there were a few nobody really wanted anymore. To my surprise, about half of the games were able to go to the thrift shop with everyone’s blessing. I moved the ones that passed the stay/go test from their former front-and-center place to a tucked-away shelf, still accessible but no longer the first thing we see as we enter the room.



I really used my muscles during all of the refiguring of the storage. We shelve our books in a few loose categories, and it took some doing to change locations without having to split categories in odd ways. After adjusting many shelf heights and dealing with cascading stacks of books and breaking a nail, I finally had everything in place. It was only then I realized I had put the parenting books on a low shelf at about six-year-old height, including the ones about sex education. Not cool.



There is more about this room, but that will do for now. We are already benefitting from the changes I made. Tempting as it can be to hold onto the past, a space decluttered and organized to reflect the current needs of the family always pays big dividends in ease-of-use, greater productivity, and a peaceful acceptance of what is. Those epiphanies are a gift to be embraced.

More has been done since this was taken, but it's getting there!

Have you ever had an epiphany about your space? Share it with us.

6 comments:

  1. Karen DiestelkampJan 31, 2012 10:18 AM

    Lori, I so enjoyed reading this. A year ago I decluttered and repurposed our school room. I had mixed emotions while doing it, but I knew it needed to be done as our children are all nearly grown, too. Everyone in the family enjoys the end result. The room still houses my desk and file cabinet and the bookshelves of quality reading material, but it also has an Ikea sofa bed and can serve as a second guest room and houses the enduring toys and activity items that our youngest guests seek out. It brings me pleasure to walk into this room now!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Karen. I'm glad we are both able to enjoy our workrooms/offices/retired school rooms. :)

      Delete
  2. Wow, amazing to think you are almost done homeschooling! =-0 We have a photo from when we first came to Gettysburg, and I am holding a baby ... hard to believe now that that baby was Samuel!

    We had a big epiphany when we moved last summer - having a kid is now not only a huge part of our lives (which we already knew), but a huge part of our possessions. And since we hope to have more, we have saved baby clothes, crib, infant toys, etc ... it all adds up! We were amazed by how many of the boxes we packed were children's items, even after we got rid of a lot of stuff. It was a moment of "oh, yes, we are parents now" realization all over again, if that makes sense, haha! And I realized there were a lot of things I had that I would simply never get around too ... tons of fabrics, etc., that I just simply don't have time for any more. The space was much better filled by itty bitty baby clothes than the sewing supplies I used to love so much. :)

    Thanks for this inspiring post. Your project room looks wonderful, and all your grown-up sized people are even more wonderful. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There's no doubt, April: kids weigh you down in more ways than one! Good for you for recognizing what works and what doesn't in your life as it is now. There'll be more opportunities for fabric and the rest.

      Delete
  3. "Have you ever had an epiphany about your space? Share it with us."

    Lori decluttering = me not being able to find anything for a year.

    Signed, her DH

    ReplyDelete

The best thing about this blog is YOUR comment. Thank you for sharing!

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...