ejchase
7-21-12, 11:30pm
Hi All,
As some of you on this board know, I have pretty serious clutter issues. Recently, I found the 12-step group that exists to help people deal with this issue. The first meeting was only somewhat helpful, but I found the literature really great, so I thought I'd share a couple of gems here:
From the "Tools of Recovery:"
"Earmarking: We provide a place for our possessions and return them there. We create a home for anything before bringing it in. When we add a new item, we release an old one. For accessibility, beauty, and peace of mind, we keep some empty space."
"Streamlining: We honor what we own by setting limits on our possessions. We keep only those items we use and for which we have space. We realize the more we acquire, the less we enjoy what we already have."
Those two quotes really spoke to me. There's a lot more that's good, but I love the way they talk about "releasing" items that are not needed and "honoring" what we do have by not mindlessly acquiring more.
Elizabeth
As some of you on this board know, I have pretty serious clutter issues. Recently, I found the 12-step group that exists to help people deal with this issue. The first meeting was only somewhat helpful, but I found the literature really great, so I thought I'd share a couple of gems here:
From the "Tools of Recovery:"
"Earmarking: We provide a place for our possessions and return them there. We create a home for anything before bringing it in. When we add a new item, we release an old one. For accessibility, beauty, and peace of mind, we keep some empty space."
"Streamlining: We honor what we own by setting limits on our possessions. We keep only those items we use and for which we have space. We realize the more we acquire, the less we enjoy what we already have."
Those two quotes really spoke to me. There's a lot more that's good, but I love the way they talk about "releasing" items that are not needed and "honoring" what we do have by not mindlessly acquiring more.
Elizabeth