Free content for your website, newsletters or ezines. Free articles for reprint | Lbry.com
corner Set as Homepage   |   Add to Favourites corner
 
Search for
Need more search features? Go to Advanced Search
 
 
Article Categories
Advertising
Direct Mail, PPC, Word of Mouth
Advice
Affiliate Programs
MLM
Arts
Auto & Trucks
Auto Leasing, Diesel vs. Gasoline Vehicles
Awards
Beauty, Personal Care & Grooming
Business & Finance
Finance, Management, Marketing, Sales
Careers
Communications
Computers & Internet
CD Duplication, Computers FAQs
Copywriting
EBooks
ECommerce
Education
Email
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Child Care
Food & Drink
Cooking & Recipes
Free
Furniture
Office Chairs
Gadgets & Gizmos
Games
Gardening
Gifts
Government
Health
Hair Loss, Headaches, Healthy Eating, Natural Cures
History
Hobbies
Boat Acquisition
Home Business
Home Improvement
Humour
Internet
Blogs, CGI, CSS, DHTML, HTML, Javascript, RSS
Kids and Teens
Law
Marriage
Men's Issues
Metaphysical
Motivational
Music & Movies
Newsletters
Online Business
Organization & Time Management
Parenting
Personal Security & Wellness
Credit Repair, Life Insurance
Pets & Animals
Cats, Dogs
Politics & Government
Press Releases
Psychology
Publishing
Real Estate
Home Mortgage
Recreation & Sports
Fitness, Mountain Biking, Tennis
Reference
Relationships
Religion & Faith
Scams
Science
Weather
Search Engines
Link Popularity, SE Optimization, SE Positioning, SE Tactics, Sitemaps
Self Help
Sexuality
Shopping
Signs & Astrology
Society
Work Life
Technology
Bluetooth, Podcasting
Travel & Adventure
Beach Vacations, Ski Vacations
True Life Stories
Websites
Domain Names, Site Promotion, Web Development, Web Hosting
Weight Loss
Women's Issues
Writing
 
 »  Home  »  Family  »  How Do You Win at Home Organization? Think Small!
How Do You Win at Home Organization? Think Small!
By Laurie Hayes | Published  11/28/2005 | Family | Unrated
How Do You Win at Home Organization? Think Small!
Laurie Hayes
Laurie Hayes, founder of Where the Heart Is Life Coaching, is a Life Strategy Coach and author of several articles and an e-book designed to promote excitement and inspire action in others to pursue the best life has to offer. To secure a copy of her free e-book, "10 Guidelines for Attraction," visit http://www.wheretheheartis-lifecoaching.com

 

View all articles by Laurie Hayes
Many people have written to me about their personal goals and one I see quite often is “Get organized,” specifically, “Get the house in order.” When I ask what obstacles are in their way, the most common response is “procrastination.”

By the time it gets to the point of showing up on a goals list, household organization has been neglected so much that the results have culminated into a mountain so big even the bravest of us want to run in the opposite direction!

Procrastination is often the by-product of fear. We may perceive something to be so big or unattainable that we become overwhelmed and immobile.

Getting organized doesn’t mean you have to take on that mountain in one grand leap. Just start plugging along at your own speed with small steps and look only a few feet ahead at a time.

Maybe you’ve let things slide a little more than you wanted and you’d rather have a dump truck and backhoe come in and haul everything away, but it doesn’t have to be that extreme.

The best way to get going is START SMALL. Little 15-30 minute jobs are a great way to start, and they might be all you need to get your organizational energy in motion.

A few examples of little jobs might be:

1) Clean out your medicine cabinet. Unless you’re a pharmaceutical distributor, your medicine cabinet should not take up a large portion of your home. It provides a small area to focus your time and attention on. Go through your containers and throw out all expired medications.

2) If you don’t want to miss your favorite TV show, why not sort through all of your expired catalogues and magazines while you’re watching? Dig them out, put them on the coffee table and sort them into two piles: expired and current. When your show is over or during commercial break, take your expired catalogues out to your recycling box and put your current ones back where they belong.

3) If the catalogues were sorted during the first half of your show, haul out your purse or wallet and start cleaning it out for the second half. You would be amazed at the out-dated business cards, receipts, expired credit cards and old phone numbers you have no need for anymore.

4) Pick a cupboard/cabinet in your kitchen or garage that is overflowing and focus on it only. Don’t worry about the other ten. Pick the one you feel you can tackle now, roll up your sleeves and get in there.

5) Tell the kids they have been selected for a very important mission. There is a family in town who have little or no money and their children have absolutely no toys of their own to play with. Ask your children if they would be willing to gather toys they no longer have an interest in to give to those less fortunate. They have half an hour to make their selections and place them in a designated area so you can review their choices. This done, you can box everything up and donate it to a local charity or family(ies) in need.

By taking on small tasks and enlisting the help of others, the job of organizing your home is not as daunting, and you set the wheels in motion for the other jobs that lie ahead.

It is absolutely amazing how putting things in order in your home has a related effect on other areas of your life.

When someone is “stuck” and can’t move forward on a personal or professional level, experts advise them to clean out the garage or tidy up their office. Organizing and putting your physical surroundings in order creates a “cleaning” or “clearing” of your cluttered mind.

The correlation between your physical and mental state is powerful.

Getting the house organized isn’t exciting for most people, but to create some form of reward after a task is done can be a great motivator.

For example, I have two favorite television shows, one Sunday night and one Wednesday night. When I assign an uninspiring task for myself, I create a condition. If I don’t have that task completed by the deadline I’ve given myself, I don’t allow myself to watch my show.

This may seem a little harsh and childlike, but we are motivated by reward. Everything we do has a pay-off and if you know what your pay-off is and if you abide by your own conditions, you will be more apt to complete your tasks.

When I sit down and watch my favorite programs, I am as happy as can be. The feeling could be likened to an eight-year old being handed a triple-decker strawberry swirl ice cream cone with sprinkles on top.

Remember, the state of your surroundings has a direct connection to the state of your being. If you are feeling undecided or scattered with no clear direction, take a look at your physical environment.

Get organized. Take small steps and create rewards for yourself for accomplishing each task. Enlist the help of others. By staying in action and observing the positive changes you are creating, you will elevate your energy, increase your creative forces and clear your mind for greater things.

Note: Republishing this article is permitted in the following conditions:
 
author by-lines are kept intact and unchanged. Hyperlinks and/or URLs provided by authors must remain active.
 
 
a link to the Lbry.com site is required in the use of articles either as print or an active url on the articles web page as below:
[ Article from Lbry.com ]
How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Tell us why you rated this way (optional):

Send to Author Post on Site

 
Comments


Article Options
Most popular articles

»

Dementia: Will I Get It?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Health | Rating:
In the article Dementia: Just What Is It, we have learned about a frightening term, Dementia, and just what it is or, rather, how it manifests itself in the human condition. I gave 5 examples from my personal knowledge, including myself.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Triumphing Over Tantrums

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Family | Rating:
Patty Hone
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Checked Into Nirvana. Where Is Joy?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Metaphysical | Rating:
Eckhart Tolle lived upto his twenty ninth year in a state of almost continual anxiety interspersed with periods of suicidal depression. Then he woke up one night with a feeling of absolute dread. The silence of the night, the vague outlines of the furniture in the dark room, the distant noise of a passing train - everything felt so alien, so hostile, and so utterly meaningless that it created in him a deep loathing of the world. "I cannot live with myself any longer." This was the thought that kept repeating itself in his mind. Suddenly he became aware that if he could not live with himself, there had to be two - he and the "self" he could not live with. He was stunned by the realization. He became enveloped by powerful feelings.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Celebrex Law Suits Looking Like a Strong Case

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Law | Rating:
There is no data as yet that indicates how many former patients of Pfizer's anti-inflammatory and painkilling drug are filing Celebrex law suits, but given the magnitude of the company's perceived crime it is likely that there will be very many. And even a quick perusal of the alleged behaviour of the company regarding this drug seems to point to Celebrex law suits being something of a fait accompli.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    
No popular articles found.
 
Become an Author
 
Are you a writer and you want your work published?
 
 
Do you have a website and need free publicity?
 
 
Sign up for free as a Lbry.com author and have your articles published in no time!
Click here to become an author
 
Advertising
 
 
 
 
Lbry.com Sponsors