From Reader's Digest
13+ Secrets Personal Organizers Would Never Tell You for Free
Industry experts reveal the dirty details to help keep your home organized and clean.
By Michelle Crouch
When you’re organizing, you should sort everything into five piles: move to another room, donate, give to a specific person, throw away, and, finally, the “marinating” pile. Pack up the
marinating items, and label the box with a date that’s six months to a year later. If you never open the box before that date, you can safely discard those items.
Create rules about what you’re keeping and what you’re discarding. In your closet, for example, you can decide to give away any clothing that’s not between size x and size y, that’s stained,
or that needs to be repaired. With periodicals, you can decide not to keep anything that’s more than a year old.
Avoid lids on laundry baskets, bins, and other containers. They just make it harder to put things away. For other items, I’m a huge fan of clear sweater boxes. Not only do they hold sweaters
in your closet, but they’re perfect for holding beans, rice, and pasta in your pantry, Legos in your playroom, the stuff you collect at trade shows, and more. They fit on almost any shelf in
any home and can hold most of the stuff in your house. I order them by the case.
People who think they’re disorganized always run out and start buying baskets, containers and hooks. You come home and try to use them, and they’re not the right type or size, because you
didn’t sort through your stuff first. That’s just backward. All those new containers just end up adding to your clutter.
The whole idea of a paperless society is a complete myth. People are seriously scared to get rid of it. Remember, 80 percent of the paper you get you don’t need to keep. So it’s imperative to
keep weeding out every single day, whether that's magazines, catalogs, mail, receipts, or anything else.