Unexpected benefits of uncluttering: An interview with editor Erin Doland

Sue Brenner, PCC, PMP, and author of The Naked Desk, sat down with Unclutterer editor Erin Doland to learn about her path to simple living, and decided to let you in on the conversation that took place back in 2008.

Clearing out the excess clutter in your life has parallel benefits, sometimes unexpected. Just as each gotten-rid-of item is one less thing in your physical way, it is also one less thing to occupy your thoughts and emotions. You are freed up to focus on the subjects that matter to you without the weight of all that excess stuff getting in the way.

Erin, Editor-at-Large at Unclutterer says she wasn’t born with the orderly gene. (Me either. I didn’t begin to adopt that habit until well into my 20s.) But when the weight of “too much stuff” got too great, Erin was forced to learn how to lighten her load and create order — now she experiences a more enriching life as a result. Here’s her story:

When Erin was in her 20s, she could pack everything she owned except her mattress into her 2-door hatchback. But when the dreaded call from her mom came telling her, “All of your stuff in my house has to go,” Erin suddenly found herself with boxes filled with childhood memorabilia and college life, along with a desire to hang on to it all.

Not ready to let any of it go, she packed it all with her when she moved to Washington, D.C. Later, when she and her husband moved in together, they blended their lives and their things into an even smaller urban apartment. Every room spilled over with so much stuff they had no room to move.

Concerned, Erin’s husband sat her down. “I can’t even take one step,” he said. “We can’t live our lives together this way.”

Looking at all their stuff, Erin couldn’t imagine how they could organize it, and she couldn’t even think about letting any of it go. Just the thought of dealing with any of it stressed her out, but she agreed with her husband that living this way wasn’t an option.

Out of desperation, Erin had become interested in getting organized to set her married life off on the right foot. But with no built-in, natural propensity for organization or lightening her load, Erin had no idea where to begin.

“I could organize an argument for a paper and that was the extent of it,” she pondered, “but I didn’t know how to apply that idea to my home.”

So, Erin decided to do some research and find out. “That’s where my daily inspiration for Unclutterer comes from,” she explained. “I had to learn and I pass on what I learned to others. After Unclutterer, came my books, Unclutter Your Life in One Week (2010) and Never Too Busy to Cure Clutter (2016).”

Erin’s first step was to begin to assess what everything was that was cluttering up her home. As she’s written about in previous posts, Erin had kept every note from high school and middle school. Like a mouse collecting morsels, she had kept every trinket that came her way, such as various key chains and t-shirts she had been given at fraternity parties. So much stuff that she had no use for but had packed away at the time because the things seemed worth saving.

“Who knows what I thought I was going to do with all that stuff,” she said. Since it was tough to completely let go of all those memories, she decided to photograph a lot of the stuff — a great strategy for hanging onto the sentiment the thing represented without having to store the thing itself. Erin also realized that she was more likely to go through a photo album on a trip down memory lane than she was to ever go through boxes of stuff.

As Erin’s process continued, she came up with some rules to help her purge things: “If I couldn’t even remember where it came from, it was gone.”

Erin realized that letting stuff go wasn’t just lightening her physical load, but she was also beginning to feel lighter; she realized letting go of the past was allowing her to better move forward with her life. She hadn’t realized how much all that stuff was weighing her down as if she was dragging it all around like a ball and chain around her ankle. She explained: “All that stuff represented my past. I’m now focused on the present and the future with my husband.”

Yes, it was a lot of work — it took Erin about six months to fully unclutter her new dwelling — but as the days progressed into weeks and then months, Erin got better and better at purging all that stuff and began to feel more and more invigorated the closer she got to her goal.

“I have peace of mind now,” she said. “I don’t have that old dread when I leave the house that I will have to come home to that. All that weight is gone. Now my home is a place of relaxation and order; When I come home I get to rejuvenate. There’s a sense of calm.”

That is peace of mind. And confidence too, I’d add. A real sense of accomplishment that feeds all the other areas of your life.

So how has getting uncluttered influenced other areas of your life?

 

Editors note: Erin’s pursuit of simple living continues as she shares her adventures traveling across North American in an even smaller residence — a motor home! Find out more at her website Tumbleweed.Life and check out the amazing photos on her Instagram feed.

Post written by Sue Brenner

Our Favorite Urban Design Observations of 2018

This year we continued our popular Urban Design Observations series (which has become a bit harder for me to write now that I live on a farm). Here’s a selection of streetside-spotted oddities and improvised solutions from 2018:

Why SoHo Has 19th Century Glass Sidewalks and Stoops

Hacking Cold- and Wet-Weather UX Improvements Onto a Bicycle

Is This Screw-Up the Designer’s Fault or the Contractor’s Fault?

What Exactly are These Pieces of Street Furniture, and How Do They Help Firefighters?

Improvised Truncated Anti-Drunk, Anti-Homeless Front Door

Supermarket Poultry-Based Hilarity

What is This Thing For?

What’s Up With This Bike Lock?

Los Angeles Edition: High & Low in the Hollywood Hills

Los Angeles Edition: More from the Hollywood Hills

San Francisco Edition: Bizarre Public Trash Can

San Francisco Edition: Looking Down

San Francisco Edition: Street Furniture

Hou de Sousa designs fluorescent Prismatic installation for Washington DC

Prismatic by Hou de Sousa

Fluorescent cords attached to black rebar frames form this sculptural installation, which American firm Hou de Sousa has created for Washington DC. Read more

New Year’s Eve Fireworks from a Rooftop in Iceland

Siggeir Hafsteinsson est un créatif islandais qui a plusieurs casquettes : designer graphiste, photographe et éclaireur. Son portfolio est une impressionnante collection de paysages et de portraits qui se démarque par son penchant pour les chemins les moins fréquentés et l’attrait de l’inhabituel. Tandis que nous savons à quel point il est doué pour la capture des lieux les plus uniques d’Islande, sa série de feux d’artifice du réveillon du Nouvel An de l’année dernière révèle un aspect poignant et personnel de lui-même. C’est sa capacité à trouver de la magie dans les sujets les plus simples qui font de lui un talent impressionnant derrière l’objectif. Visitez son site Web et Instagram pour plus d’informations.













The Subdued Beauty of London’s Brutalist Architecture

Ali Sahba est un designer freelance de Hambourg dont l’amour pour le travail sur des projets colorés et amusants transparaît dans sa série photographique Brutal London. En conservant une esthétique minimaliste, Sahba met au jour les lignes sombres et la géométrie de l’architecture Brutaliste autour de Londres. Il présente chaque image dans des tons atténués, les comparant à des fonds de couleurs pastel. Se concentrant sur un angle ou un détail spécifique, il crée des atmosphères poétiques à partir de structures qui passeraient normalement inaperçues. Outre la photographie, Sahba travaille dans les domaines du mouvement 3D et du graphisme, de l’illustration 3D, de la scénographie et de la vidéographie. Visitez son site Web et Instagram pour plus d’informations.







Pure Lofoten: Nature at its Finest

En photographie, le photographe polonais Rafal Nebelski ne se limite pas à une catégorie : qu’il soit chargé de photographier des produits, de la nourriture ou de l’architecture, il les capture avec le soin et la créativité qui font de lui un photographe complet. Mais les paysages, la nature et les lieux non touchés par l’homme gardent une fascination sans fin, comme en témoigne sa série inspirante intitulée Pure Lofoten. Ici, il nous gâte avec une vue magnifique sur les montagnes enneigées de la Norvège, ses maisons colorées au bord de l’eau et les spectaculaires aurores boréales. Pure Lofoten a été présentée au Prix de la Photographie Paris. Découvrez plus de son travail incroyable sur son site personnel et Instagram.








Unexpected benefits of uncluttering: An interview with editor Erin Doland

Sue Brenner, PCC, PMP, and author of The Naked Desk, sat down with Unclutterer editor Erin Doland to learn about her path to simple living, and decided to let you in on the conversation that took place back in 2008.

Clearing out the excess clutter in your life has parallel benefits, sometimes unexpected. Just as each gotten-rid-of item is one less thing in your physical way, it is also one less thing to occupy your thoughts and emotions. You are freed up to focus on the subjects that matter to you without the weight of all that excess stuff getting in the way.

Erin, Editor-at-Large at Unclutterer says she wasn’t born with the orderly gene. (Me either. I didn’t begin to adopt that habit until well into my 20s.) But when the weight of “too much stuff” got too great, Erin was forced to learn how to lighten her load and create order — now she experiences a more enriching life as a result. Here’s her story:

When Erin was in her 20s, she could pack everything she owned except her mattress into her 2-door hatchback. But when the dreaded call from her mom came telling her, “All of your stuff in my house has to go,” Erin suddenly found herself with boxes filled with childhood memorabilia and college life, along with a desire to hang on to it all.

Not ready to let any of it go, she packed it all with her when she moved to Washington, D.C. Later, when she and her husband moved in together, they blended their lives and their things into an even smaller urban apartment. Every room spilled over with so much stuff they had no room to move.

Concerned, Erin’s husband sat her down. “I can’t even take one step,” he said. “We can’t live our lives together this way.”

Looking at all their stuff, Erin couldn’t imagine how they could organize it, and she couldn’t even think about letting any of it go. Just the thought of dealing with any of it stressed her out, but she agreed with her husband that living this way wasn’t an option.

Out of desperation, Erin had become interested in getting organized to set her married life off on the right foot. But with no built-in, natural propensity for organization or lightening her load, Erin had no idea where to begin.

“I could organize an argument for a paper and that was the extent of it,” she pondered, “but I didn’t know how to apply that idea to my home.”

So, Erin decided to do some research and find out. “That’s where my daily inspiration for Unclutterer comes from,” she explained. “I had to learn and I pass on what I learned to others. After Unclutterer, came my books, Unclutter Your Life in One Week (2010) and Never Too Busy to Cure Clutter (2016).”

Erin’s first step was to begin to assess what everything was that was cluttering up her home. As she’s written about in previous posts, Erin had kept every note from high school and middle school. Like a mouse collecting morsels, she had kept every trinket that came her way, such as various key chains and t-shirts she had been given at fraternity parties. So much stuff that she had no use for but had packed away at the time because the things seemed worth saving.

“Who knows what I thought I was going to do with all that stuff,” she said. Since it was tough to completely let go of all those memories, she decided to photograph a lot of the stuff — a great strategy for hanging onto the sentiment the thing represented without having to store the thing itself. Erin also realized that she was more likely to go through a photo album on a trip down memory lane than she was to ever go through boxes of stuff.

As Erin’s process continued, she came up with some rules to help her purge things: “If I couldn’t even remember where it came from, it was gone.”

Erin realized that letting stuff go wasn’t just lightening her physical load, but she was also beginning to feel lighter; she realized letting go of the past was allowing her to better move forward with her life. She hadn’t realized how much all that stuff was weighing her down as if she was dragging it all around like a ball and chain around her ankle. She explained: “All that stuff represented my past. I’m now focused on the present and the future with my husband.”

Yes, it was a lot of work — it took Erin about six months to fully unclutter her new dwelling — but as the days progressed into weeks and then months, Erin got better and better at purging all that stuff and began to feel more and more invigorated the closer she got to her goal.

“I have peace of mind now,” she said. “I don’t have that old dread when I leave the house that I will have to come home to that. All that weight is gone. Now my home is a place of relaxation and order; When I come home I get to rejuvenate. There’s a sense of calm.”

That is peace of mind. And confidence too, I’d add. A real sense of accomplishment that feeds all the other areas of your life.

So how has getting uncluttered influenced other areas of your life?

 

Editors note: Erin’s pursuit of simple living continues as she shares her adventures traveling across North American in an even smaller residence — a motor home! Find out more at her website Tumbleweed.Life and check out the amazing photos on her Instagram feed.

Post written by Sue Brenner

Our Favorite Urban Design Observations of 2018

This year we continued our popular Urban Design Observations series (which has become a bit harder for me to write now that I live on a farm). Here’s a selection of streetside-spotted oddities and improvised solutions from 2018:

Why SoHo Has 19th Century Glass Sidewalks and Stoops

Hacking Cold- and Wet-Weather UX Improvements Onto a Bicycle

Is This Screw-Up the Designer’s Fault or the Contractor’s Fault?

What Exactly are These Pieces of Street Furniture, and How Do They Help Firefighters?

Improvised Truncated Anti-Drunk, Anti-Homeless Front Door

Supermarket Poultry-Based Hilarity

What is This Thing For?

What’s Up With This Bike Lock?

Los Angeles Edition: High & Low in the Hollywood Hills

Los Angeles Edition: More from the Hollywood Hills

San Francisco Edition: Bizarre Public Trash Can

San Francisco Edition: Looking Down

San Francisco Edition: Street Furniture

Hou de Sousa designs fluorescent Prismatic installation for Washington DC

Prismatic by Hou de Sousa

Fluorescent cords attached to black rebar frames form this sculptural installation, which American firm Hou de Sousa has created for Washington DC. Read more

New Year’s Eve Fireworks from a Rooftop in Iceland

Siggeir Hafsteinsson est un créatif islandais qui a plusieurs casquettes : designer graphiste, photographe et éclaireur. Son portfolio est une impressionnante collection de paysages et de portraits qui se démarque par son penchant pour les chemins les moins fréquentés et l’attrait de l’inhabituel. Tandis que nous savons à quel point il est doué pour la capture des lieux les plus uniques d’Islande, sa série de feux d’artifice du réveillon du Nouvel An de l’année dernière révèle un aspect poignant et personnel de lui-même. C’est sa capacité à trouver de la magie dans les sujets les plus simples qui font de lui un talent impressionnant derrière l’objectif. Visitez son site Web et Instagram pour plus d’informations.