3 Hotspots to Declutter Now

The new year is a time when a lot of us feel the ‘urge to purge’ and take control of our homes.  We know that by letting go of the tangible clutter in our physical space we gain clarity and energy to tackle our busy lives. Yet, if you try to tackle your whole house at once, it’s easy to get overwhelmed and not do anything at all.  With the best of intentions, we can end up with several ½ done decluttering projects, leaving us feeling defeated and discouraged. 

Instead of giving up, try focusing on just one or two “hotspots” in your home; small areas you can get done in one hour or less that will give you a big return on your investment. The calm and energy released will provide the energy and motivation to tackle other areas. 

Front Entry

Our front entrance sends us off into the world every single day and greets us when we come home.  In less than an hour, you can make this critical hotspot an oasis of calm and order.  Declutter this hotspot by removing all of the excess bags, shoes, backpacks, coats and totes that have accumulated over time and leave only those that you (and the people you live with) use every single day. Alternates can be stored elsewhere in nearby closets or in each person’s bedroom.  Then add something beautiful–a nice ceramic bowl or vase, an artsy container or some fragrant candles on a small table and voila...a warm and welcoming entrance that greets you and sends you into the world with a hug every single day.  

Plastic Containers 

We spend every day in our kitchens–cooking, prepping meals and cleaning up.  Even if your entire kitchen is in need of a serious organizing overhaul, there is one small area you can tackle in no time that provides a profound sense of victory. Declutter your plastic (or glass) containers and lids.  Somehow, we start with a nice tidy set of graduating sizes and lids.  Then over time, like single socks mysteriously gone missing, we end up with a gazillion containers and a bajillion tops, but none fit each other.  Declutter by sorting by size, locate matching lids, and call bankruptcy on the rest, by recycling any lid and any container that cannot find it’s mate.  You may end up with only a half dozen or so containers–which may suffice.  If you need more, buy all the same size so it’s easier to keep track of.

Comfort Corner

When your house feels cluttered and disorganized, it can be very hard to sit down and relax.  Because wherever you go, there is something to clean up or move out of the way before you can quiet your mind to decompress. Even in the midst of lots of chaos, it is possible to create a little comfort corner –one spot that you can go to recharge whenever you need to.   Pick a location in your house with the most appealing light and sound qualities—it could be a chair in your living room, a breakfast nook, a window seat or a corner of the guest room. Declutter the area completely by removing everything except what you use to relax; a candle, a good book, or a speaker and headphones to play relaxing music. Keep objects to a minimum to make it inviting and easy to maintain. No matter what the day, work or life has thrown at you, you will have a place to rest, relax and recharge. 

There’s a saying that small hinges can swing big doors. These three very small decluttering projects have a remarkable way of delivering a powerful sense of calm, control, and progress to your big goal of taking control of your space (and peace of mind)  in 2023. 

The Advantages of Paper vs Digital Planning

Each new year provides us with a fresh start and renewed resolve to get organized, be productive and stay on track with our goals. We know we need calendars and to-do lists to keep ourselves on time and on task.  But in our increasingly fast-paced, tech-saturated world, it can be hard to decide between digital options and old-school paper.

The goal, of course, is to find a system that works for you.  How do we define whether a planning system “works”?  You use it to capture all of your meetings and to-do’s, nothing falls through the cracks, and you refer to it consistently to guide how you spend every day. 

Research shows that paper planning has many advantages, and appeals to people of all ages.  Many people whose schedules are in the cloud for sharing with colleagues still find it beneficial to supplement their online calendar with a paper based planning and notetaking system.

What are some of the advantages of paper vs digital planning?  Here a just a few of the (science-backed) ways: 

  • Paper planning helps you remember. The very act of physically writing pen (or pencil) to paper often emblazons the task on your memory, making it easier to recall (even if you never look at the list again.) Multiple studies, including this 2021 Japanese study published in Neuroscience News, have found that recall is stronger when we write longhand. When we type into a tablet or laptop, learning is impaired due to shallower processing.  

  • Paper planning helps you focus. Going onto a device to use a Calendar or Task App means entering a carnival of temptations every time. You inevitably end up lost in email, social media or other distractions- the opposite of getting things done. By contrast, writing on paper forces a necessary screen break which allows us to access the deeper parts of the brain involved in strategy and decision making.

  • Paper planning helps you prioritize. How we fill our days is how we fill our lives. Yet, once tasks become dots on a screen, they seem to feel “cheap” and disposable like every other word we can type and delete on a computer. Handwriting your to-do’s requires a commitment. Re-writing incomplete to-dos over and over forces you to consider the true value of a task and what's getting in your way.

  • Paper planning helps you fulfill your goals.  In three different experiments involving over 1,079 people, Columbia Business School (2022) research found that individuals who used paper calendars developed higher quality plans and fulfilled them at a higher success rate.  In fact, paper calendar users completed 53% of their plans vs. digital users who completed 33% of their plans. The conclusion was that paper planning enables the user to see the big picture and create more detailed and cohesive plans that took into account how scheduled events will interact with or impact each other so you can plan ahead.

  • Paper planning provides a visual record of what you got done—fueling your sense of accomplishment. It also helps you to account for where your time has gone, evaluate your workload, and gain insights on what changes you can make to delegate or approach tasks more efficiently moving forward.

Paper planning is surely not for everyone.  But if you are gravitating toward paper for note-taking and planning, perhaps you now have a better understanding of why.  As human experience and studies continue to reveal, there is still a place for paper planning in our digital world.  A paper planner does not replace all the amazing things technology can do for us. But discovering (or rediscovering) a paper planner’s unique and irreplaceable functions can be a tool to help you focus and prioritize.

Getting Your Home Holiday Ready 

Getting Your Home Holiday Ready 

The holidays are coming and after a couple of years of isolation, many of us are gathering again. You might be both excited and anxious about the thought of hosting a holiday event. Excited because it’s fun and life affirming to entertain. Anxious because your house might not feel holiday ready to you. The last thing we want is to be overwhelmed or stressed about having guests. We want ease, joy and to be able to open our doors and be with our friends and loved ones without worrying.

Time Management — As Easy As Organizing Your Closet 

Time is tricky, and managing it to your benefit can be one of the most challenging obstacles to overcome, especially in the workplace. I want to offer an analogy, something that may inspire the way you manage your time and push you in the direction of becoming a time management expert, that is, by thinking of time in the same way you think of space, that space being — your closet.

Finding A Balance 

In my journey to get organized, I discovered how to organize space before time; time was something I couldn’t manage to save my life! The to-do lists I wrote at the beginning of the day rarely got completed even though I had spent every waking minute with my head in my work. So, where did that time go? It seemed to evaporate into thin air, and I felt like I hadn’t accomplished anything!

This is because of our perception, the way we perceive time is essentially the opposite of how we perceive space. Let’s look at both time and space while bringing the two together to understand better how we can push ourselves and our employees to efficiently utilize their time to find balance and become productivity experts! 

Space

Our perception of space is tangible, something we can visualize, measure, and sort. For example, the items in our closets are vast; they range from shoes and clothes to accessories, yet that space is limited, so we must be aware that what we store in our closets must be prioritized and organized systemically. It's simple: choose what’s essential and make room for it, so why can’t we do that with time?

Time

Time feels relative. It is this ethereal idea, this untouchable thing that cannot be measured or sorted. For instance, the time you spend dancing to your favorite music or knee-deep in your passions might fly by in comparison to that hour spent in the dentist chair that seems to drag. The time you feel you have to complete tasks during the day might be carried by the amount of sleep you got the night before. We associate this conception of time with something that cannot be altered, and that's the thing; it doesn’t have to be; once you realize you can adjust yourself and your tasks to fit your limited time, time becomes tangible.

So, what does this have to do with time management?

When you begin to think of the organization of space and time simultaneously, you can see they are not so different. Organizing time is precisely like organizing space.

Think cluttered closet equals cluttered schedule. The closet contains a limited amount of space; if it is crammed with more things than are meant to fit, we find ourselves losing track of where things are or how much of one thing we may have. Just as your day is simply a limited amount of time, if you don’t understand how to organize that time and use it in a way that benefits your work, it will be impossible to keep track of where your time is going. 

Let’s Organize! 

You can organize your time the same way you manage your space by grouping similar items and categorizing them based on priority. Like outfits in a closet, but instead, you’ll group meetings, functions, projects, deadlines, etc. Keep in mind that, time just like space, is limited, so don’t fill your schedule with menial tasks; make sure you’re prioritizing high-value tasks. You wouldn’t fill your closet with only exercise clothes and leave yourself without anything to wear to work, would you? The same goes for scheduling! Once everything is consistent and sorted accordingly, you will be able to see your day planned out plainly — making both you and your employees more productive!

It is much easier to view your time when it is blocked off in segments rather than just sitting down for 8 hours with no guideline; batching your time and focus in the workplace will do amazing things for your companies quality and efficiency. 

Organizing our day also allows us to take a step back and use our schedules to analyze our daily/weekly routines. Do we need more meetings or an extra hour to focus on projects or portfolios? By having it written out, you can better gauge where you need to make adjustments, and you’ll find your workload doesn’t seem so daunting! Plus, you're not lifting your head to see the clock strike five with no real idea of what you accomplished that day. 

Remember

Time is tangible, not infinite; it is a limited container — you can only fit so much. You are the organization expert, so plan and adjust accordingly and figure out what is worth that limited closet space — only the highest value tasks are worth time, so don’t waste any! 

The New 9-5 | Tips on Adapting Your Work Environment from an Organizational Expert 

The New 9-5 | Tips on Adapting Your Work Environment from an Organizational Expert 

There have been a lot of discussions lately about the future of the work environment. There seems to be a disconnect between what employers want, and what their employees need. Many employers want things to remain as they were. However, many employees are now looking for a schedule that offers more flexibility. One that allows them more time to work at home, after its proven success over the past couple of years.

3 Ways to Exercise When You Don’t Have Time

3 Ways to Exercise When You Don’t Have Time

Whether the COVID-19 pandemic threw a wrench in your well-oiled exercise routine or you lacked a routine to begin with, one thing is certain: with gyms closed and more work and family demands on your plate than ever before, fitting exercise into your daily schedule has become yet another impossible chore. You know it’s important but even when you have the time, the idea of continuing to stare into your laptop screen for a 30-minute exercise class after a long day of working from home is… less than appealing. The good news is: home work-out videos and online exercise classes aren’t your only options for staying fit.

How to Actually Fall Asleep

How to Actually Fall Asleep

So you finally made it to bed. You’ve done your bedtime routine and you’ve turned off all the lights. You’re exhausted, fully prepared for sleep, but your mind just won’t stop racing — overwhelmed with thoughts, feelings, and to-dos. The longer it takes you to fall asleep, the more anxious and stressed out you become which, in turn, makes it even harder for you to drift off to sleep. Once your head hits the pillow, how do you actually relax into a peaceful slumber so that you receive the full benefit of a restful night? Here are a few ways to clear your head and surrender yourself to the pleasures of sleep…

Renovate Your Bedtime Routine

Renovate Your Bedtime Routine

Sleep is a fundamental component of our lives. It allows us to reset, recharge, and refuel, so that we can make the most of our days. Unfortunately, with so much weighing on our minds, the last few months have thrown many of us off our sleep game. Because sleep is such a critical aspect of our mental and physical health, now is just as good a time as any to get serious about the quantity and quality of our restful hours. And the best place to start is by renovating your bedtime routine.

Facing Conflicting Priorities? Ask Yourself These 3 Questions...

Facing Conflicting Priorities? Ask Yourself These 3 Questions...

You’re staring down the barrel of a seemingly endless to-do list. You know it’s time to get started, but where? Do you start with the smallest task or the largest task? The task you like most or the one you like least? The important one for yourself, or the urgent one for someone else? When it comes to prioritizing our to-dos, most of us tend to approach the situation with some degree of subjectivity. But this line of thinking often leaves us totally paralyzed — hovering over our to-do lists for who knows how long, trying to decide where to get started. The key, therefore, is to become as objective as possible when choosing which tasks to prioritize. That’s where the 3 Qs (The Three Questions) come in…