Joys of minimalism
Updated: 2014-12-03 07:11
By Associated Press(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Instead of deciding what to discard, she says, the focus should be on what to keep: which few things spark sufficient joy or are truly necessary.
How to contend with family members unready to join in the celebratory purge?
If possible, carry the bags out of the house yourself. "There's no need to let your family know the details of what you throw out or donate," she writes, although she advises against secretly disposing of other people's things. "You can leave communal spaces to the end. The first step is to confront your own stuff."
After joyfully relegating mountains of unneeded or unloved belongings to the trash or charity, she then turns to organizing what's left.
The key, she says, is storing things mostly in drawers, arranged so that everything can be seen at a glance and nothing is stacked, a practice decidedly unkind to items at the bottom.
So T-shirts and socks (the ones you've kept because they make you happy) are rolled - no painfully balled-up socks with moaning elastic here - and beautifully arranged like sushi in a bento box.
Closets are meticulously arranged to fit everything from electric fans (at the bottom) and spare blankets (on top) to carefully arranged clear drawers of beloved belongings and a shelf or two with a few joy-sparking books.
Papers and documents - there won't be many since few are truly necessary and they generally hold so little joy - are likewise filed and not stacked.
Kondo says she has been obsessed with "tidying" since she was 5, opting to arrange shoes and pencils in school when other kids played in the playground. She began communing with her belongings in high school and, after years of work at a Shinto shrine, realized her calling as a professional consultant on attaining the joy of minimalism.
"The inside of a house or apartment after decluttering has much in common with a Shinto shrine ... a place where there are no unnecessary things, and our thoughts become clear. It is the place where we appreciate all the things that support us," she says. "It is where we review and rethink about ourselves."
- Last artistic flourish in neighborhood to be demolished
- Parents 'see' through the eyes of their child
- Carpenter carves armored vehicle from wood
- Reclusive old men in the Qinling Mountains
- Greetings from Tibet
- A buck to the Year of the Goat
- China-US Internet Forum in DC
- Shanghai native creates mini car by hand
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Using the present to preserve the past |
Balloon goes up after idea for an ad fails |
China's faltering steps on family foster care |
PLA targets corruption |
Taiwan chief administrator resigns after defeat in elections |
Winners of expat blogging contest |
Today's Top News
US startup a good fit for China electronics player
93% of Chinese govt websites have security loopholes: report
2014 likely to be warmest year
Blending of cultures benefits world
Mutual governance of cyberspace called for
Founders of HK protest lead dozens to surrender
Firstmove by rail giants puts merger on track
China has glitter for dealer of diamonds
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |