I have been trying to do this for some time, ever since we had to clean out 40 years of junk from my mother-in-law's house. I have failed since I had no guide and no one to be competitive with......it just wasn't working for me. After reading this book, I had a plan to "make it so" (borrowing a line from a great Starfleet Captain). I started when we got home from vacation. I proceeded to tackle the project while putting away the items from the trip. I have been working for 2 days now and I feel I have accomplished a bunch.
I have gotten rid of (either by donating, trashing, gifting to someone in need or recycling):
- Broken tape dispenser I was never going to fix
- Broken hole punch
- Out of date cd roms
- Magazines
- Quilts (tiny quilts we have worn out and I won't ever fix)
- Bath mats (no longer the colors we use)
- Gooey hair gel
- Partially used coloring books
- Toddler sized hats/gloves
- Unused scarves
- Picture frames
- Too young for our kid's games
- A swivel chair
- Yucky make-up
- Broken shells
- Seen better days Christmas decor
- Too small or worn clothes
- See better days toys
- Out of date coupons
- Ink cartridges
- Wire Hangers (this house follows Joan Crawford wire hanger policy)
- Gently used craft items
- Cleaned out drawers in the kitchen (I never had a junk drawer but I had junk in each drawer)
- Books
- Ink pens
- Paper pads
- Some of the 10 rulers I have collected (I kept 2)
- Address labels featuring my father-in-law's name (for the shred pile)
- Cross stitch fabric too small to use (why would I keep that???)
- Mostly burned candles
- Cardboard boxes that for some reason I feel I need
- Old papers no longer needed (meant for the shred bin)
- Broken suitcase that will NOT be good for anything no matter how much I think it will
- Craft projects attempted but the product is a failure
- Resumes from John's college days (why have I kept this?)
- Old chipped along the edges plates/bowls