·“Tidy in 1 shot, as quickly and completely as
possible, start by discarding”
·Visualize the lifestyle that you want, ask
yourself “why do I want to tidy?”
·“Take each item in one’s hand and ask: “Does
this spark joy?” If it does, keep it. If not, dispose it.” --> does the piece give
you joy when wearing it?
·Sort by category, not by place --> collect everything that
belongs to the same category and lay them out on the floor: keep the ones that
spark joy, and discard all the rest
·People have trouble discarding due to the
following values of their belongings: functional, informational, emotional and
rarity
·The
best sequence: clothes first, then books, papers, komono (miscellany), and
lastly, mementos. --> from easy to the hardest, this sequence will horn your decision making skills, so by
the end, it seems simple.
·Putting
your house in order is fun!
·Don’t let your family see what you are getting
rid of: it’s stressful for them to see, and they may retrieve what they don’t need from
your pile of burden
·Ask your family: “is there anything that you
were planning to buy? If you happen to come across exactly what they need, give
it to them as a gift”
·Start by quietly cleaning your own space and
confronting your own stuff -->
tidying sets up a momentum, your untidy family will soon follow (“The urge to
point out someone else's failure to tidy is usually a sign that you are
neglecting to take care of your own space”). Don’t throw out other’s belongings.
Leave the communal spaces to the end.
·“What you don’t need, your family doesn’t either” --> only give things that
your family would really like, or would pay for. Don’t transfer what you can’t
part with to your family.
·Tidying
is an internal dialogue between you and your belongings
·The best time to start tidying is early in the
morning, when your mind is clear and the morning air is fresh
·Not every person you meet in life will become a
close friend or a lover. Same with your belongings. Part with the things that
have outlived their purpose (if you don’t wear a certain cloth, ask yourself
why? Maybe it doesn’t suit you, then it has already served its purpose of
telling you what doesn’t suit you)
·To
get rid of what you don’t need is neither wasteful nor shameful
·Start
with clothes first, go by subcategories. “Make sure you gather every piece of
clothing in the house and be sure to handle each one.”