This is the first in a three-part series of posts debunking the three excuses I hear most frequently from clients for wanting to keep items they no longer use or love. The series originally ran in January and February 2017 and I decided it was worth running again. Stay tuned for parts 2 & 3 next week.
When I work with clients on decluttering, we discuss their goals and motivations for letting go of excess. They understand that it makes most sense to hang on to meaningful items, not those that are sitting idle. Yet it’s not unusual for a client to want to keep an unused item that’s perfectly good because “I might need it some day.”
I usually push back, particularly if we’re dealing with severe space constraints and the need to let go of a lot of stuff.
Here’s what I say to those clients when I hear, “I might need it some day.”:
That last question is important, because if a client is keeping a lot of those “some day” items it may be difficult to organize the stuff they keep in a way that will allow them to find everything.
Here’s the thing about perfectly good items that aren’t being used. If they’re perfectly good, somebody else can use them. Rather than having them sit idle, taking up space, it’s better to contribute to the greater good by donating them and letting them be used. If you hang on to them until a future decluttering session and then decide to let them go, they may be less valuable or useful to others.
Basically it comes down to a couple of things:
I have seen over and over how living with less makes one’s life easier. A great first step toward living with less is letting go of the perfectly good stuff you don’t use.
Stay tuned for parts 2 and 3 of the No Excuses series: “I paid a lot for it” and “It was a gift.”
Tagged with: decluttering, worth repeating
Ginger, I encourage you to think in terms of the freedom of having less might bring. Think of how you would be able to use the craft items that you love if you let go of those you don’t love. If the excess has become a problem and you simply can’t let go, you might consult a therapist to help you with it. I wish you the very best!
Janine Adams April 20, 2018 05:26 PM
I have a particularly hard time getting rid of craft stuff bc I may use it one day. I have a huge collection of different types of media and tools and have invested quite a bit of money into it but it has taken over my home. I rarely use most of it and could actually use the things I love if I got rid of the excess, but I just cant part with these things. I’m just stuck.
Ginger April 16, 2018 09:06 PM