Synopsis
You are not bad at decluttering. You are trying to declutter the wrong way.
Most decluttering advice was written for a different kind of home than yours, rather one full of duplicate coffee mugs, forgotten gym equipment, and things with the tags still on. Interchangeable things. Replaceable things.
That is not your home.
Your home holds your mother's china, your children's drawings, your grandfather's tools, and the letters written in a handwriting you would recognize anywhere. It holds the accumulated evidence of lives genuinely lived. And no one has ever given you a useful framework for making decisions about things that really matter.
Decluttering the Home Full of Meaningful Things is that framework.
Written for the person standing in a room full of meaningful things feeling paralyzed, this book offers a gentler, more honest approach to the home that holds lifetimes. Unlike many other decluttering guides, it covers both decluttering and organizing, because in a home full of things worth keeping, knowing where everything lives makes all the difference. Decluttering and organizing can be done separately or at once, your choice is supported in these pages.
Inside you will find:
- A four-part decision framework built specifically for objects with histories, that goes far beyond the blunt instrument of keep or toss
- A clear, compassionate way to distinguish between honoring something and storing it out of guilt, and why the difference changes everything
- Practical guidance for the hardest categories: inherited heirlooms, family photographs, children's artwork, collections, trophies, and the belongings of people no longer here
- Complete coverage of every space in the home including living areas, kitchen, bedroom, wardrobe, and the hidden spaces where unfinished decisions accumulate: the garage, attic, and cellar
- Honest guidance on linens, tools, holiday decorations, sports equipment, and the boxes that have been moved several times without ever being opened
- Short-session working methods designed for real life, real energy, real time, real competing demands, rather than the fantasy of a free weekend and unlimited willpower
- A practical containers chapter with specific guidance on what to use, where, and why, because the best decluttering decisions are undermined by poor storage
- Checklists at the end of every practical chapter so you always know exactly what to do next
- Responsible, values-aligned ways to let things leave, including specific organizations that will put your professional clothing, tools, books, and children's items to genuinely good use
The result is not a sparse home or a reinvented one. It is your home, but airier. The things you love are visible rather than buried. The things you use are accessible rather than hunted for. The low-grade mental hum that comes from living among unresolved objects from a sense of guilt, obligation, and the vague sense that something needs to be dealt with quiets considerably. Everything that matters, held better.
This is not a minimalism guide. It will not ask you to become a different person or live with less history. It will ask you to be honest about what you have, why you have it, and what your home could feel like if everything in it were there from clear decisions.
Above all, it will ask you to be kind to yourself about the pace. Yours is a fuller, more layered, more meaningful home than the ones most decluttering books are written for. Begin where you are. Move at the pace that is honest for you.
That pace is exactly right.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.