We all have an inner Marie Kondo hiding somewhere deep under the piles of laundry and overstacked dishes. As the plates from my takeaway dinner still patiently wait in the sink, I realize we all need some inspiration.
And where’s a better place to look for it than to see some real-life examples from people who have their organizational skills up and running like a nuclear power plant?
Get ready to browse through the soothing images of perfectly ordered pantries and shelves, through meticulous layouts and wonderfully neat rooms, and wardrobes, and storage boxes... and indulge in the calming effect of absolute order. These people do indeed make it look like transforming cluttered homes into spaces of serenity and inspiration is like a walk in the park, and I am up for it.
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There are two types of people—the ones that do everything they can to delay cleaning up their home up to the very end until they see a tumbleweed of dust heading from one corner to the opposite corner of the room, and another type of people who were born (or passionately learnt) loving organizing their space, and there’s just so much we can all learn from the latter.
So in order to find out how to take your first steps into the organized world and lifestyle that sparks joy, and leave all the chaos behind, Bored Panda reached out to Alice Bauer, a Konmari™ premium consultant who works in Switzerland and Austria.
“The best motivation to start is to envision yourself with your ideal lifestyle,” Alice stated. You may want to ask yourself: “How do you want to live? Picture this as precisely as possible with every detail. What kind of atmosphere should your home have? What do you want to see first when you wake up in the morning? What is your morning routine? What do you do for fun? Do you love to cook and like to cook for your friends in the future? How must your home be to support you best on a daily basis?”
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This self-reflection is the beginning of radical tidying up, which is a lifestyle change, according to Alice. “Create a vision board and add adjectives to amplify how your ideal lifestyle should feel. Warm, light, open, or welcoming, cozy. I love to work with vision boards together with my clients so that they can come back to their vision whenever they feel like it.”
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But Alice warns that tidying is a demanding process where you constantly make decisions about what to keep. “There are good days and you feel absolutely great, your self-esteem is high and you go smoothly with the flow; on the other hand, there are difficult days when you cannot motivate yourself properly and your goal is far away,” she explained.
“Then the magic of the vision board comes to play and reminds you exactly why you’re tidying. You want to change your life—somehow,” she added.
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Alice’s trick is to try and tidy up by category instead of location. “The majority of my clients all used to tidy by location, which in my opinion is nonsense. Instead, tidy by category so that you can get an overview of how many pairs of scissors you actually own. You cannot get how many you have if they are scattered all over the house.”
Moreover, when tidying up, you have to stay patient. First, you decide what to discard, and only after, you work with the items you’re left with. “After completing the sorting of all categories, you think about storing what you are left with. Not earlier. That will teach you how to be patient and patience is exactly what you need to finish the process.”
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If you’re on a lower budget, Alice recommends selling things you don’t want anymore on eBay, Etsy, or whatever is available in your location. “But pay attention. You will never sell everything you have planned to sell. I would suggest that you pick out a number of items to seriously sell. Reselling is time-consuming and needs effort. Good pictures need to be taken, a text has to be written, posting, answering inquiries. Think about this aspect carefully.”
“Until an item is sold, it is still lying in your house probably for weeks or months until you cannot see it anymore and just donate it,” Alice said and added that essentially, “someday never comes. Trust me, I know.”
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Bored Panda also talked to Amanda Scanlan, a certified platinum KonMari® consultant based in Brisbane, Australia. If you’re wanting to tidy up and organize things but are lacking motivation, Amanda said that a great place to start is to figure out your why. Ask yourself: “Why do you want to tidy up? Will it make your life easier and happier? This invites you to imagine how you truly wish to live your life. You may like to consider what an ideal day or week looks like for you—What are you doing? How do you feel? Who is with you? What is the quality of that relationship and connection?”
“Connecting with this vision and really feeling into what it is like to live in your tidy home is not only important to find the motivation to start, but will also be a motivator to help you complete your tidying up thoroughly so you can put your reclaimed money, time and energy into living that life,” she explained.
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Aside from this, Amanda suggests thinking of joining a Facebook group, tidy challenge, or engaging a Consultant or buddying up with a friend to share your goals. Sometimes a little push from the others is all we need.
Amanda also said that tidying your home does not need to be an expensive undertaking, “it’s not about Instagram-worthy storage solutions.” Instead, “Tidying up can simply be a process to understand better what energizes and sparks joy in you, and then finding a home for all the items you have chosen to keep in your life.”
“This can be achieved through using items you already have—shoe boxes can be repurposed and used as drawer dividers for storing clothes or keeping like items together; phone or tablet boxes are great for keeping smaller items together like batteries or pens; large glass jars are great for storing food or dishwashing tablets.”
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According to the KonMari consultant, you may even find that you have storage items already that are no longer needed, “such as repurposing a letter organizer as a device charging station or magazine holder to store your papers that need actioning.”
However, if you do need to buy storage items, Amanda recommends holding off until you have finished discarding, since this way you are only finding solutions for the things you truly wish to keep in your life. “Another benefit of holding off is that working through your tidying journey starts to free up mental space; this can result in becoming more creative and resourceful with using what you already have to meet your needs,” she explained.
Crosspost From R/Konmari
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I just love the idea of a walk-in pantry. I'm a millennial in a city. I don't think I'll ever be that rich.
You'll also never have to dust that huge pantry, so look on the bright side!
Load More Replies...Surely this isn't a real pantry? waayyy too much junk food, and not enough actual food. Also, who buys at least ten different kinds of cereal?
Not much real food in there at all. I had a cousin whose kitchen cupboards looked like that. All prepared, packaged crap food. I do have some prepackaged Epicure in my kitchen, but mostly I have ingredients.
Load More Replies...when you have kids and growing teenagers, these can be not enough. These kids & teens - they inhale food, i tell ya.
How do you keep track of expiration dates without the manufacturer's packaging?
You can add a removable label or keep the package info (nutrition, expiration date, cooking directions) underneath the storage container for reference.
Load More Replies...I hate this. Why buy stuff then put into another container? It stays just as fresh in the original cont. I call these pantries “bored housewives, with extra money and nothing better to do. That’s about $500 worth of containers and for what? To look like the Jones’s!?! Just ridiculous.
Some people have disabilities that make this kind of organization necessary, for starters.
Load More Replies...ocd is WAYYYY more than “cleanliness” and “neatness” so please don’t use mental disorders, like depression too, to make a funny joke or remark
Load More Replies...Perhaps they live in a place that doesn't have a store nearby, so they shop in bulk.
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I've decided it's not pickles in the jar on the top shelf, second from the left. It's not potato skins. Any other guesses?
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This is actually really impractical. To put away clean clothes you need to empty each pocket every time so the item goes at the bottom of the pile. If you don’t do that then the clothes aren’t rotated and things are worn over and over again.
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It's great to be organised but some of it makes me sad. Surely some people have more stuff than they will ever consume/need? Some of it seems a shrine to consumerism.
Possibly, or the rest of the house may not have so much stuff. My pantry and workspace are important to me, so they are well equipped. The rest of the house doesn't look like that
Load More Replies...These are very esthetically pleasing, but I'm also a bit shocked by the amount of stuff some people have
The main motivation of these seems to be aesthetics and not practicality. Like, when I am studying, of course it helps to be organized. However, if I get carried away, I have to stop myself and think, "Am I learning, or am I decorating a notebook?"
I just know that if I ever replicated any of these within days it would go back to the ‘before’ picture. My room and home office space only has two moods: immaculate and chaos. There is no inbetween!
And actually using most of this “organization” creates the chaos with the impracticality of having to move several things just to get to one item.
Load More Replies...Darn, I hate you! ;_; I hate you and your neat organization Talent!!! ;_; May someone of you come and teach me these superpowers? I'm only able to spread Chaos. ~.~
Practicality. Making necessary items easy to get to/put away, and getting rid of/storing properly things you don’t use/don’t use often. Most of these ‘systems’ fall apart quite quickly because they are difficult to maneuver and maintain. But they do look good for the brief moments they are full and unused.
Load More Replies...this made me realize taht 1. I'm really more of a neat freak than I realize and 2. I'm not nearly as much of a neat freak as I thought.
My pantry was organized as cleanly as these until my next shopping trip when I had to much stuff for the containers.
Yep. If you don’t consider the constant changing of your needs these fall apart quite easily. Or having to adjust shopping to wait until there’s room. I get why people like to look at this stuff, but actually using it day to day, especially if more than one person is dealing with it, becomes a nightmare rather quickly.
Load More Replies...I can't help but think that some people just have too much money to spend... We keep hearing that we should change our way of life to avoid a disaster. Maybe we should start by not consumming so much. :/
Not too !uvj monry, just spending it a bit foolidhly.
Load More Replies...I've become a minimalist in my old age, so many of these make me cringe, thinking, "Too much stuff!" But it's their life, not mine, so...
It must be nice to have a pantry bigger than my entire kitchen! Where do people live with houses so big?
Frequently, in small towns and suburbs in the U.S. and Canada. Big countries. Perhaps Australia, as well. Weirdly, or not, these huge 'monster homes' are less expensive than small houses and wee condos in large cities. A lot of small towns and suburbs are 'bedrom communities' meaning people live there but commute to work in cities with businesses, offices, etc.
Load More Replies...TIL just how fine the line is between creatively efficient organization and insanely a**l obssession.
You are right and most of these are not at allll efficient!
Load More Replies...I need one of these people to come to my house and help me get it in order. Ever since I moved I've been overwhelmed and can't get the organization done.
Maybe start with bsby steps, like throwing out a few things a day that you know you don't need, or judt thinking about how you' d like to look. It'd a new environmrnt, so you would benefit from rethinking.
Load More Replies...Mostly irrelevant to me, and I suspect, a lot of people who don't have a lot of accumulated unused stuff. Or a pantry.
I'd love to do that with a pantry. But mine is small. And I can't afford a bunch of matchy containers. I have unmatchy ones, from op shop, but you try it with containers that are all different. You can't. Nice to have money.
I have started to use cardboard box's to organize, not "pretty" BUT not using more plastic. When I have time/money/ desire. I can cover the box's with wrapping paper.
Load More Replies...I was intrigued to see what the 3-ring binders were used for.....but it wasn't included.
I don’t understand why people are freaking out about how much stuff a stranger has in a picture. I currently have six generations worth of “stuff” that we are using for various projects. To anyone looking at it, it’s junk/too much stuff. To my husband it’s a truck he and our boys will rebuild, tools to make our kids/possible grandchildren/nieces and nephews things to play with. To my kids it’s a trailer for the boat they just built. An outdoor playroom for their cousins. A crazy convoluted pool heater we definitely don’t need and takes up too much space, but they were young teenagers putting their ingenuity to work. A little greenhouse for my plants. My frequently tidied and re-tidied shelves are a constant wave of items I’m making for other people. You have no idea what these people want to do with their stuff or why they have it. Calm down and make your space what you want and let them do the same.
These are all really great. I get a sense of calm looking at them. No wasted time looking for supplies. But remember, perfect is the enemy of done.
My sister dumped her box of coloured pencils (100) upside down. I spent half an hour reorganizing then just for her to dump them out again.
This post gives me anxiety. And I don't say that as an expression. I don't feel good. It's... not human. Humans are NOT organized. This is made by and for robots
They won’t be that organized for long. A week of having to juggle glass jars or containers takes the fun right out of the hours spent organizing. Or dropping one for it to break/spill all over because you had to move three to get to the one you want.
Load More Replies...Love these, however the price of the storage containers etc vary in a huge way indifferent countries. The big lidded ones down here 20dollars each, kitchen type ones are so pricey to take on a complete overhaul would cost hundreds. I recently watched some dollar tree youtube vids and spent the whole time yelling at the tv about how you can do things for 5.00 that wouldcost us 20 plus. We get a raw deal, I want pretty pantries too. Cubes for my ikea stands are 4 dollars each and hide away lots.
It's great to be organised but some of it makes me sad. Surely some people have more stuff than they will ever consume/need? Some of it seems a shrine to consumerism.
Possibly, or the rest of the house may not have so much stuff. My pantry and workspace are important to me, so they are well equipped. The rest of the house doesn't look like that
Load More Replies...These are very esthetically pleasing, but I'm also a bit shocked by the amount of stuff some people have
The main motivation of these seems to be aesthetics and not practicality. Like, when I am studying, of course it helps to be organized. However, if I get carried away, I have to stop myself and think, "Am I learning, or am I decorating a notebook?"
I just know that if I ever replicated any of these within days it would go back to the ‘before’ picture. My room and home office space only has two moods: immaculate and chaos. There is no inbetween!
And actually using most of this “organization” creates the chaos with the impracticality of having to move several things just to get to one item.
Load More Replies...Darn, I hate you! ;_; I hate you and your neat organization Talent!!! ;_; May someone of you come and teach me these superpowers? I'm only able to spread Chaos. ~.~
Practicality. Making necessary items easy to get to/put away, and getting rid of/storing properly things you don’t use/don’t use often. Most of these ‘systems’ fall apart quite quickly because they are difficult to maneuver and maintain. But they do look good for the brief moments they are full and unused.
Load More Replies...this made me realize taht 1. I'm really more of a neat freak than I realize and 2. I'm not nearly as much of a neat freak as I thought.
My pantry was organized as cleanly as these until my next shopping trip when I had to much stuff for the containers.
Yep. If you don’t consider the constant changing of your needs these fall apart quite easily. Or having to adjust shopping to wait until there’s room. I get why people like to look at this stuff, but actually using it day to day, especially if more than one person is dealing with it, becomes a nightmare rather quickly.
Load More Replies...I can't help but think that some people just have too much money to spend... We keep hearing that we should change our way of life to avoid a disaster. Maybe we should start by not consumming so much. :/
Not too !uvj monry, just spending it a bit foolidhly.
Load More Replies...I've become a minimalist in my old age, so many of these make me cringe, thinking, "Too much stuff!" But it's their life, not mine, so...
It must be nice to have a pantry bigger than my entire kitchen! Where do people live with houses so big?
Frequently, in small towns and suburbs in the U.S. and Canada. Big countries. Perhaps Australia, as well. Weirdly, or not, these huge 'monster homes' are less expensive than small houses and wee condos in large cities. A lot of small towns and suburbs are 'bedrom communities' meaning people live there but commute to work in cities with businesses, offices, etc.
Load More Replies...TIL just how fine the line is between creatively efficient organization and insanely a**l obssession.
You are right and most of these are not at allll efficient!
Load More Replies...I need one of these people to come to my house and help me get it in order. Ever since I moved I've been overwhelmed and can't get the organization done.
Maybe start with bsby steps, like throwing out a few things a day that you know you don't need, or judt thinking about how you' d like to look. It'd a new environmrnt, so you would benefit from rethinking.
Load More Replies...Mostly irrelevant to me, and I suspect, a lot of people who don't have a lot of accumulated unused stuff. Or a pantry.
I'd love to do that with a pantry. But mine is small. And I can't afford a bunch of matchy containers. I have unmatchy ones, from op shop, but you try it with containers that are all different. You can't. Nice to have money.
I have started to use cardboard box's to organize, not "pretty" BUT not using more plastic. When I have time/money/ desire. I can cover the box's with wrapping paper.
Load More Replies...I was intrigued to see what the 3-ring binders were used for.....but it wasn't included.
I don’t understand why people are freaking out about how much stuff a stranger has in a picture. I currently have six generations worth of “stuff” that we are using for various projects. To anyone looking at it, it’s junk/too much stuff. To my husband it’s a truck he and our boys will rebuild, tools to make our kids/possible grandchildren/nieces and nephews things to play with. To my kids it’s a trailer for the boat they just built. An outdoor playroom for their cousins. A crazy convoluted pool heater we definitely don’t need and takes up too much space, but they were young teenagers putting their ingenuity to work. A little greenhouse for my plants. My frequently tidied and re-tidied shelves are a constant wave of items I’m making for other people. You have no idea what these people want to do with their stuff or why they have it. Calm down and make your space what you want and let them do the same.
These are all really great. I get a sense of calm looking at them. No wasted time looking for supplies. But remember, perfect is the enemy of done.
My sister dumped her box of coloured pencils (100) upside down. I spent half an hour reorganizing then just for her to dump them out again.
This post gives me anxiety. And I don't say that as an expression. I don't feel good. It's... not human. Humans are NOT organized. This is made by and for robots
They won’t be that organized for long. A week of having to juggle glass jars or containers takes the fun right out of the hours spent organizing. Or dropping one for it to break/spill all over because you had to move three to get to the one you want.
Load More Replies...Love these, however the price of the storage containers etc vary in a huge way indifferent countries. The big lidded ones down here 20dollars each, kitchen type ones are so pricey to take on a complete overhaul would cost hundreds. I recently watched some dollar tree youtube vids and spent the whole time yelling at the tv about how you can do things for 5.00 that wouldcost us 20 plus. We get a raw deal, I want pretty pantries too. Cubes for my ikea stands are 4 dollars each and hide away lots.