Office Supplies
I just left a backpack full of office supplies in my department's supply closet.
A ream of legal paper, a box of maroon presentation folders, and quite a lot of magic tape.
In 1997, I went on an office-supply rampage when my company won a contract with the US Department of Education. (Enough said? I think so.)
Except to add: my closet is that much emptier, and I am that much happier.
(*) If there's anybody local who needs legal paper, a box of maroon presentation folders, or rolls of magic tape I might be able to hook you up.
A ream of legal paper, a box of maroon presentation folders, and quite a lot of magic tape.
In 1997, I went on an office-supply rampage when my company won a contract with the US Department of Education. (Enough said? I think so.)
Except to add: my closet is that much emptier, and I am that much happier.
(*) If there's anybody local who needs legal paper, a box of maroon presentation folders, or rolls of magic tape I might be able to hook you up.
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There's a very high chance I have more supplies to go, which I will determine later this week. (Off the top of my head: binders, pendaflex hanging folders, a ream or so of blank purple and pink paper...)
So I'll make a post of it on my locals filter; and we can figure out what's the best means for you to get 'em then? :)
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That image is so much better than reality that I'm not even going to ruin it for you. :)
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I can also imagine your clients having the exact same response as mine, and they'd probably be right that their house is not as bad as /some/ other houses, but the essential differences are that I notice the process(es) that led to the stashed stuff, so I can break out of the spiral of clutter collecting more clutter, and also I have the emotional and physical wherewithal to deal with it rather than staying in denial; I'm ready to deal with it.
In addition to having someone I trust telling me "that's too cluttered for your own good" I had to already have come up with very clear counter-arguments against the reasons why I was saving this stuff: excessive frugality or "you never know if you'll need it" or excessive sentimentality...
(The counter-reasons I've identified: it's not worth that much to me; I could get more if I did need it but I haven't in over a decade; I can scan the few things in this batch that do have sentimental value and toss the originals). Reading a bunch of anti-clutter books over the years, and following
But the funny bit is that when I look at someone else's cluttered closet, I might go, "Wow that's cluttered. I'd never keep that many of Z..." and not realize it's exactly as cluttered as mine is. (Or, was; as I'm dealing with it this week!)
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Dealing with what lead to the stashing is really the key. If you don't figure that out then you won't be able to keep it from happening again. I have a really cool tool for thinking through some of that I could email you if you'd like.
Also, I'd recommend the book Buried in Treasures by Dr. Gail Steketee. I do some work with her here in Boston and think it is helpful for folks regardless of where they fall on the clutter/hoarding spectrum. Feel free to call if I can be of use..and yay for unclutterer!
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That sounds like it might be of use? Sure, send it along!
I think my base problem is sentimentalism about stuff, combined with a filing system that has failed to give me the right places to put some of that stuff. ...however, I think I'm on the right track now, thanks to