BY ANGELA HAUPT
NONE OF THE TIDYING clichés ever really clicked with KC Davis, a therapist in Houston and mom to two young kids. “I’ve always been a messy person,” she says. “I’ve never been able to ‘clean as I go.’” Davis knew there were plenty of people just like her: those who wanted a serene space but lacked the time and energy to get started. After finding bite-size strategies that worked for her, Davis wrote How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing.
A messy house can feel overwhelming to tackle, and progress may seem incremental at first. But there’s good reason to work on building a healthier relationship with your home. Research suggests that clutter increases levels of the stress hormone cortisol, and that cleanliness is associated with better self-rated health. Other studies have found that being surrounded by lots of excess stuff contributes to procrastination, diminishes focus, and leads to decreased life satisfaction.
We asked Davis and other experts to share their favorite strategies to kickstart a realistic decluttering routine.
1. Tackle one category at a time One day, Davis looked at her messy room and realized that every item could be sorted into one of five categories: trash, dishes, laundry, items that have a place (like books that belong on the shelf), and odds and ends that don’t. She started cleaning up by category (and then found a home for her random objects). “I would get a trash bag and pick up all my trash, and then I’d get my laundry basket and pick up all my laundry,” she says. “It provided a really simple road map for my brain.”
2. Edit your wardrobe automatically Every New Year’s Eve, Matt Paxton, author of Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff, turns all the hangers in his closet around so they’re hanging backward on the rod. “When you wear the item, you turn the hanger the other way,” he says. The hanger trick gives Paxton visual proof of what he actually wore that year and which clothes languished in the closet. “You can’t argue with it,” he says. Anything he didn’t wear, he donates.
3. Scan your stuff Sentimental items—like photos and kids’ art—can be emotionally difficult to toss. First, get rid of the negatives, duplicates, generic landscape shots, and pictures of people you don’t know or like, Paxton advises. Then, digitize the rest by scanning them with your computer or phone (using an app like Google PhotoScan). You can even preserve memories through a combination of images, audio, video, and text. The app Artifcts lets Paxton digitize his seven kids’ artwork this way. Every week, he takes a photo of their latest creation, then records them talking about it. Each kid chooses one piece of art to keep per year, and the rest live on in digital form.
4. Make donating part of your routine Giving things away feels most meaningful when you pick a cause you support. Some ideas: Dress for Success provides used professional attire to low-income women; One Warm Coat gives free coats to people in need; and Soles4Souls distributes footwear to people with limited resources. If you’re donating to a local thrift store, keep a box in the trunk of your car. Otherwise, the pile might never leave your house. Then, once a week, drop it off. Doing so “has become a normal Saturday for me,” Paxton says.
5. Gamify the purge Enlist the kids with the “20-things game,” says Deborah Gilman, a psychologist in Pittsburgh. Set a timer for 20 minutes and challenge each family member to fi nd 20 items to donate, sell, or throw away. “I tell people to do this a couple times a year, like when the seasons are changing,” she says. Make it a race to see who collects their items first; the prize could be choosing what movie to watch together.
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