At least, once in our lifetime, we
all have de-cluttered our bookshelves, our closets, our rooms, that garage that
has more space for rows of boxes than for our car, the entire house, or maybe
our life in general.
De-cluttering, like we all know,
is throwing away things that you do not want to hold on to or that no longer
matter —
a photograph of an ex-boyfriend who didn’t treat you well, discount coupons
that have way passed their ‘valid upto’ dates, and business cards of people you
have no chances of needing them again whatsoever.
In my case, it was a file folder of
newspaper cuttings and a bag of countless newspapers from last year. I thought
back to the time when reading the morning newspaper was as important and pious
to me as reading the Bible or the Quran would be for some people. Newspapers
were my ‘holy book’. There were newspaper cuttings on politics, foreign
policies, anti-corruption bills, nuclear energy, environment, and academics. Opinion
articles comprised an altogether different set of the clutter. Those articles
and stories had once informed me and inspired me to form an opinion and speak
my mind.
Among the bundles of newspapers,
I found an old bracelet. Embedded on it were tiny green beads of glass. It was
a gift from a friend in the seventh grade. I remember her vividly. Her tall
physique, fair skin, and lustrous brown hair had made her look like an
Anglo-Indian though she was not one. She
was the one close friend I had in the sixth and the seventh grades. She
transferred schools after the seventh grade and we lost touch. I also found two
long lost journals wherein I had endlessly rhymed away. Those journals brought
back memories of the time when I would get up from my bed in the middle of the
night because a possible-Grammy-Award-winning-song had just popped into my
head.
I got rid of the newspaper
cuttings on politics and other stuff even if reading about them had once been
my passion. Somehow, articles on environment and academics still found a place
in my now-cleaned bookshelf.
De-cluttering makes you strong
because you throw away things (often without a second thought) that once seemed
to matter the most. At first, it might feel like you have fewer things now or fewer
choices because the place is no longer crowded. But, suddenly that one problem
you had been running away from seems to untangle on its own.
Suddenly your writer's block flies away. Suddenly you know how to tell your boss that you want to resign. Suddenly you realize that gardening is your hobby. Suddenly you are willing to open your heart to a new love and to love fearlessly. Somehow, a cleaner bookshelf or closet makes life seem simple.
Suddenly your writer's block flies away. Suddenly you know how to tell your boss that you want to resign. Suddenly you realize that gardening is your hobby. Suddenly you are willing to open your heart to a new love and to love fearlessly. Somehow, a cleaner bookshelf or closet makes life seem simple.
We all have the capability of
de-cluttering our bookshelf, our closets, or our lives. We just need to be in
the right mood. Until we are in the right mood, we will continue to dig for our
favourite pair of trousers in that heap of clothes. But, the good news is if
you have de-cluttered before, you will de-clutter again. If you haven’t ever,
you will someday be in the right mood. The ‘right mood’ could be —
running away from problems; having nothing to do; being unemployed; or going through
quarter-life crisis.
Most of the time we believe what we
collect is treasure. We, therefore, lock it up and bury it somewhere deep only
to discover it later after some digging. Not all treasures bring cherishment when
discovered; not all treasures are precious just like not all that glitters is
gold.
De-cluttering teaches us that we
can still survive if something is taken out of our lives, that what we think of
as our oxygen is merely a fog that needs to be lifted for us to see ourselves
clearly. De-cluttering also teaches us that there is sure to be at least one
thing that we will choose to keep for good.
I kept the bracelet.
De-cluttering is really essential. It brings out the things that have been disturbing us but it also reminds us of the things which had made us.
ReplyDeleteTrue. I had almost forgotten that I used to love reading newspapers and that newspapers were the reasons why I got interested in politics in the first place. It's strange how things lead to other things. Newspapers led me to the university program I am currently pursuing- political science!! So yes, de-cluttering reminds us of the things things which had made us.
DeleteYES! I am in the midst of this right now...and it makes all of us feel better. My husband,my 3 boys: more space and peace.
ReplyDeleteFor me...it feels SO GOOD to throw up, giveaway, repurpose.
It is psychologically lifting.
Loved your post. thank you!
Thank you Alexandra! Happy de-cluttering! :)
DeleteI love that you kept the bracelet :)
ReplyDeleteYou hit the nail on the head, decluttering frees up so very much because we've learned that we can live without things! I've never seen it as such, but that makes so much sense, thank you!!
:) Thanks Corinne. I was in the middle of the de-cluttering process that day when I realized that I can survive without things. It is amazing how we move on with our life on in about an hour or so of de-cluttering when we thought we can never move on at all.
DeleteI've moved so many times now I've been forced to declutter to only my most important stuff. It really does feel good to unburden yourself of the old baggage--emotional or otherwise.
ReplyDeleteYou're so right, Tina. It sure is liberating.
Delete