Possessions that once brought us pleasure now feel like a burden. In fact, sorting through our belongings drains us of so much energy than we often dismiss the notions of downsizing and moving to more manageable, safer homes. And so we wait for the crisis which sadly, inevitably comes.
Think of downsizing from your home of decades as losing 100 pounds.
You didn’t gain the weight overnight, and you can’t lose it overnight,
either. Your belongings are like those pounds. It took years to
accumulate them, and sorting through them will take time. Just as each
pound, taken individually, doesn’t appear to make a difference, there
may not seem to be a lot of improvement from each sorting session. But
losing 100 pounds is accomplished by losing one pound one hundred
times, and with planning, patience and perseverance, you can get ready
to move and maximize your home’s marketability, one bag at a time.
Here are some proven tips and techniques that you can begin
implementing today, even if your move is years away. Remember that the
key to losing 100 pounds is not losing the 100th pound; it’s losing the
first one. The key to downsizing is not finishing the process; it’s
starting it.
- Stop warehousing your kids’ stuff. Do they visit
their things but not take them home? If so, put them in a box and place
it by the door so your kids can take the carton with them the next time
they visit. (If they don’t want their college textbooks and tennis
trophies, you don’t need to keep them either).
- Decide on what “go” means. It may sound silly,
but “this goes” can mean you are getting rid of it or taking it with
you. To avoid confusion, decide what “go” means and use it
consistently. Better yet, use removable color-coded dots to separate
what you are keeping and what you are getting rid of. You can find
these dots in the school-supply section of your local grocery or
drugstore.
- Be clear. If you plan on
temporarily storing things in trash bags, use clear bags for items
being stored and opaque bags for regular trash. We once stored all our
winter gloves and hats in a white kitchen trash bag, only to discover
we had accidentally thrown them out!
- Throw a downsizing party. Cover your
dining room table with items you no longer need and invite friends over
for coffee, with the caveat that they must take one thing away with
them. It’s fun, and since each person selects what she wants, everyone
leaves thinking that they found a “treasure.”
- Develop a kitchen tracker. A kitchen
tracker is simply a form that helps you track how often you use certain
items in your kitchen. List the items that you don’t use
frequently—like the ice bucket, Cuisinart, electric mixer, blender,
bundt pan, 30-cup coffee urn, heating tray, turkey roaster, dutch
oven...the list could go on, right? Keep the list on your refrigerator.
Whenever you use an item on the list, make a checkmark next to it. At
the end of six months, look at the items without checkmarks. You may be
surprised to find that you don’t use some of those items after all.
- Keep sorting sessions short. By that I
mean two hours at most, and start with the simplest room first.
Starting with the most complicated area means you may get discouraged,
throw up your hands and quit. Starting with a simple room helps build
the confidence to say, “I can do this.”
- Once you start working, don’t leave the room. It’s human nature to get distracted—especially from something we don’t want to do in the first place.
- And finally: DON’T PACK! Remember, you are
months or even years away from moving. If you can pack something away
knowing that you won’t need it until you move, you probably don’t need
it now.