As a professional organizer, it's my job to help clients find
the balance between organizing career and family. However, most of
us don't want to invest much time or money to accomplish this goal.
Some of the best organizational tools are very inexpensive and can
be found at most discount stores. Often developing a personal system
involves just a bit of creativity rather than a substantial investment
in a professional product or service.
When establishing a general storage system, you have four storage
choices. You can hang it, put it in a drawer, store it on the floor,
or shelve it. If you haven't used it in a year, chances are you never
will. Get rid of anything that you haven't used for the past year
or two, except tax and business documents. Sorting will reduce your
storage needs, and save you valuable time and money in the process.
Managing paper is a challenge we all face. Consolidate important
notes into a daily planner, spiral notebook, large calendar, or wipe
off board. Use a multicolored pen or marker to flag special events,
with one color per event or person. Create a follow up system using
a file box and index cards, or notebook with pocketed dividers. For
bills and other correspondence, buy a notebook with twelve pocketed
dividers, one for each month of the year. Label each with birthdays,
anniversaries, and billing due dates, then fill with correspondence.
The binder can be used as a portable desk, or can be stored at your
work area. Set a specific day of the month to do your paperwork.
Minimize organizing product costs by clipping articles and recipes,
then discarding the remainder of the magazine. Store in magnetic
photo albums, or a notebook with dividers.
Closet organizing ideas can be implemented for storing clothing,
crafts, sporting goods, and just about anything else you can shove
into a closet. Use dowel rods hung at multilevels for clothing on
hangers. Plastic bins and shelf dividers keep folded items stacked.
Hang ties and belts on a plastic coat hanger, buy cardboard cubbies
for shoes and purses (or make your own by decorating divided grocery
store boxes). For quick retrieval, hooks for caps, bags, umbrellas,
and purses keep things in sight. A hanging storage closet system
purchased at a home store or discount store is a portable alternative
to built-in organizers. (These hang by hooks over your closet rod
and have multiple milk crate cubes suspended below.) If you live
in small quarters or move frequently, this is a cost-effective solution
to custom shelving.
Hanging organizers with divided pouches store and display at the
same time. These come with small pockets for jewelry, or larger pockets
for shoes, pantyhose, or scarves. I've used them in lieu of junk
drawers for office supplies. The large sizes can be found at dollar
stores, and the smaller sizes are featured in mail order catalogs
or home furnishing stores.
Use over the door organizers such as laundry bags, bookracks, ironing
boards, utility racks (good for storing tapes, CDs, or cleaning supplies).
Store small items under the bed in boxes with lids, tackle boxes
or fishing lure boxes. Save an empty thermometer case to store needles,
and film canisters or empty pill bottles with lids for small buttons.
Stash your chest of drawers in the closet to save wall space and
to hold additional craft items. Stacking kitchen racks expand cabinet
space (dishes, corner racks, lid racks, plastic wrap racks, stackable
trays for junk drawer and cutlery), and over the door racks hold
additional pantry items.
For the garage, there's no need to purchase expensive shelving or
cabinets. Hang firring strips with nails or spring latches for long
handled tools. Use hooks for hanging bikes, pegboards for tools,
freestanding drawer units, lidded plastic tubs of all sizes, shelving
for large items and those in containers, an old inverted barstool
or trash can for holding tall items such as bats and fishing poles,
and dish tubs on shelves with labels. A wraparound cloth apron with
pockets for a five gallon bucket makes a wonderful tool tote, and
can be found at a home improvement center, or make your own from
scrap material.
Make your items do double duty. Invest in a cardpunch for your business
cards, then file them on your Rolodex. A basket runner system creates
a file cabinet or kitchen storage unit. Use a bedroom closet to create
a niche for hobby work; the doors close to hide work in progress.
Folding screens are decorative and disguise a work area. A folding
card table or banquet table can be stored under the bed when not
in use, which is convenient if your hobby room doubles as a guest
bedroom. Find a large piece of plywood to place over the spare bedroom
mattress as a workspace, which can then easily be stored when guests
visit. Use wicker baskets to hold important papers or fresh fruit,
and a kitchen crock for utensils. Hanging wire baskets hold produce
and utilize vertical space as well. Top a large garbage can with
a simple wooden circle and skirted cover to make a bedside or end
table to conceal stored items.
Keep your eyes open for creative ways to contain the clutter in
your life. Be only as organized as you NEED to be. This means establishing
a workable system for yourself that you know you can follow for a
long time. Remember that being organized is an ongoing process, not
an end result. Tackle those paper piles ten minutes a day until you
finally see your desk under all those stacks. It will get done, and
just think of the sense of accomplishment you'll feel every day as
you do just a little bit more to organize the clutter in your life.
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