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Downsizing Is Much Easier If You Organize

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Nov 01, 2018 | 0 Comments

Baby boomers often face the difficult task of cutting expenses and selling the family home. However, life can be simpler and happier, if you follow these steps.

As the family ages and is often reduced down to two, the idea of cutting back on expenses and number of rooms can be daunting. However, it doesn't have to be, according to U.S. News & World Report in “7 Tricks for Downsizing Your Clutter.”

Get moving. Sometimes you need a concrete reason to begin, not just the sense of impending doom that will happen if you don't. Maybe you have an adult child moving back into the house and they need a room, or you're putting the house on the market and getting ready to go south. You need a good reason to get going. If you don't have one, make one up—like getting the job done before the year is over or you go on a long-awaited vacation.

Stop buying new stuff you don't need. At this point in your life, maybe you've moved past the superficial need to buy and are more concerned with what you are doing with your life, not what you own. Getting rid of clutter means tossing things that don't have a lot of meaning but keeping the things that do. You might enjoy a painting from a memorable trip, more than a houseful of trinkets.

Start planning. If you love to make lists, here's your opportunity. Come up with an order of how you want to tackle this big task, breaking it out into separate pieces. Who will share these tasks with you? Do they work better with a firm deadline? You should also create a strategy: will you donate certain items and what organization will be the recipient? Do your kids need to make a trip home and move their stuff into their own homes? Delegate and set deadlines for everyone, not just yourself.

Pivot the concept. You're not getting rid of everything, you're selecting out what matters. If an item brings you joy just to look at it, keep it. However, get rid of everything else. If you think someone else wants an item, ask them. Your goal is to curate your “stuff.” You should love what you have, but only have what you love.

Be decisive and accept that it may take time. You may not yet be ready to get rid of certain things. You may need to go through this process in stages, especially if you've recently suffered a loss. After going through everything in the house once, you may start to become comfortable with the idea of letting go. Take a break between purges. What seemed important one month ago, may not seem important now.

Rent a storage space. If you really, truly, cannot part with a lot of stuff and you're moving, put your stuff in a storage space. Go back in a month, after you've had to pay for that space, and take another look. You may find it doesn't matter quite as much.

Relax and enjoy your new decluttered life. The focus of decluttering is to stop carrying the past around with you. Consider yourself as having a fresh start, with little or no baggage. Then go out and live your best life.

ReferenceU.S. News & World Report (July 13, 2018) “7 Tricks for Downsizing Your Clutter”

About the Author

Nina Whitehurst

Attorney at Law Nina has been practicing law for over 30 years in the areas of estate planning, real estate and business law She is currently licensed in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon and Tennessee. Her Martindale-Hubbell attorney rating is the highest achievable: 5 stars in peer...

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