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Marie Kondo

  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    Tidying in the end is just a physical act. The work involved can be broadly divided into two kinds: deciding whether or not to dispose of something and deciding where to put it. If you can do these two things, you can achieve perfection
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    Let’s imagine a cluttered room. It does not get messy all by itself. You, the person who lives in it, makes the mess. There is a saying that “a messy room equals a messy mind.” I look at it this way. When a room becomes cluttered, the cause is more than just physical.
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    Visible mess helps distract us from the true source of the disorder.
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    The act of cluttering is really an instinctive reflex that draws our attention away from the heart of an issue.
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    We need to exercise self-control and resist storing our belongings until we have finished identifying what we really want and need to keep.
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    This is why tidying must start with discarding
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    instead of deciding that today you’ll tidy a particular room, set goals like “clothes today, books tomorrow.”
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    When we disperse storage of a particular item throughout the house and tidy one place at a time, we can never grasp the overall volume and therefore can never finish
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    To escape this negative spiral, tidy by category, not by place.
  • Alejandra Eliceriohas quoted10 months ago
    Effective tidying involves only two essential actions: discarding and deciding where to store things. Of the two, discarding must come first.
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