I agree with all the other posters - Baby Steps but will add - YOU HAVE TO REALLY WANT TO MAKE IT HAPPEN! Like quitting smoking (or more), you have to be able to look at the problem straight in the face and commit to fixing it. Its not going to happen unless you want it. Last year I vowed to get rid of the clutter and get my house cleaned up (and mine too was embarrassing), lose weight and get a handle on our finances (not out of control but we needed to save & long-term plan more.) I am a list-maker and like to see what I've accomplished so I have a binder with a sheet of paper for each room in my house (seriously, even one for my 4x7 entrance foyer and the upstairs hallway!) Each room's sheet lists every single item that needs to be cleaned, drawer to be organized, closet to be purged, grout to be scrubbed. The lists can be ridiculous looking but it keeps it all in perspective for me. Also on the room sheet I keep track of things I need for the room - either practical or decorating-wise. I also write on the list who I can donate items too. So - my daughter had outgrown 2 pairs of
Crocs that were still thrown in my coat closet. A bag was started for my friend's daughter 2 years younger. On the room sheet I made a list "For Sarah" and then when I saw Sarah, I had the bag ready to go to her house (and out of mine!!) Also, before I started I found out exactly where I could donate stuff to. My town's recycling center takes EVERYTHING - clothes, computers, normal recycling, etc. My binder has a sheet with contact numbers for local shelters, curb pick up schedule for recycling, etc. Its all in one place, ready to be used. Everyone makes fun of my binder. My friends call it my 4th child because I'm so careful with it!
I started with just one thing - the house. Each week I picked a room in my house and did the 15-30 minutes a day in that room. I bought a $1 digital timer that travels from room to room with me. A half hour for 5 consecutive days did alot. And did I ever do that room! I'm talking not just the major stuff like decluttering but down to scrubbing baseboards, washing down walls and touching up paint! It is like a dumb game I play with myself - how much can I do in this 30 minutes?! If a room took me less than the 5 days, I would use the "extra" days of those 15 minutes to drop off stuff at Good Will, FreeCycle posts, etc. At the end of the 30 minutes, I would force myself to put what I was working on to the side and go about the rest of my normal day. Trust me, for the first two or three days the room may be crazier than before you began but by day four - it was easy to put it all back together. I even cleaned out two garages this way, although sometimes the work-times were an hour each! I was in the garages in January, in New Jersey, it was cold! But I bundled up and worked quicker. I even put a space heater on in there a few times. I brought my phone with me to the room so I didn't have to leave the room to answer it. And I started using my caller id more - no answering anything but the most important stuff (i.e., kids' school) during that time.
I streamlined my kids' stuff. Three kids, three activities, three different places to be at the same time many nights. I forced the habit of getting practice & game uniforms in one spot, put together at the start of the week. Its a hanging sweater bin by the door of my garage. One bin for each kid full of socks, practice clothes, cleats, and a second bin for gloves, equipment, bags, etc. I made a habit of making up water bottles for the night's activities when I made lunch boxes that morning (or the night before). Put them in the bins along with that night's clothes. I also put a laundry basket under the hanging bins. The kids take off their dirty practice clothes and uniforms and into the bins they go. I told the kids, and my husband, that they were in charge of getting it all into the basket and I'd take care of washing it and getting it into the bins in time for their activity. No more searching under beds for the one lone baseball sock or a team shirt! Believe me, all three of my kids have gone to a game without a team hat or matching socks or shin guards because THEY didn't do their part. They learned - quick!
Weight Loss & Exercising - well, that didn't start to happen until September 23rd. As with any change in your life, you need to WANT to MAKE it happen. Nothing will change on its own. I needed to lose 20 pounds badly but didn't want to work at it. And then in September my best friend was put in the hospital with a serious problem that I have also experienced in the past and am at high risk for the rest of my life (DVT and PE's). She had just been admitted and I was with her and in walked my own doctor! My friend is a fitness instructor and her concern at that time was would she be allowed to go back to working out and how soon, would the PE affect her job, etc. My (our) doctor laughed and said, "You'll heal and can go back to your normal life. Don't believe this sloth (shrugging to me) when she says the clots keep her from getting in shape!" Now, he was being sarcastic and teasing me (as is his way) but it hit me like a ton of bricks! I was giving my body an excuse for the clots to cause problems as I aged by not taking care of myself & could end up in that same bed she was in, and the outcome may not be the same given my severity. The next week another friend and I started WW, started walking and I was down 20 pounds in 2 months. Another month and I'm down 25. I'm going for 5 more by the end of January. But, I couldn't start until I wanted it and I needed that reason to want it.
The savings thing never happened in 2009. It was too much for us to handle. Its happening in 2010! My husband really has an "ignore it and it will go away" attitude but just this past weekend I made him listen to me and we talked it out. We made a "date" for ourselves for Saturday night. Grandma & Grandpa are going to take the kids for dinner & game night at their house and DH and I are going to use the few hours to hash out a better savings plan over take-out Chinese & a few beers! We're going to go through statements and spending line by line and figure out how to plan better. We figure the 3-4 hours will be more than enough time to get a plan in place.
So now, at the start of 2010, my garages need to be cleaned again (but not majorly decluttered), my pantry needs to be organized again, I need to get some sort of indoor exercise going (stupid arctic wind keeps me from walking!), Christmas stuff needs to come down and put away and my laundry room needs a major cleaning and de-cluttering (it never really needed it last year so it never made "the list"). The kids and DH went back to school & work yesterday and I gave myself the day to re-group (and enjoy the quiet!) After I finish typing this post, the big binder will be coming out and a schedule will be made of what rooms to do on what days, based on their need!
You can do this. Decide what major thing you want to work on first - don't try to do it all together. My weight loss feels great even though I didn't start until September. I refuse to look back and regret that I didn't start sooner. It wasn't the right time for me. Same with the house cleaning or the financial gain we're going to make this year. No matter what you start with you will work hard, you'll go to bed tired and you'll sometimes wonder why you're putting yourself through this. But let me tell you, there is nothing better than
not having to step over a pile of junk to get to your closet,
not have to search under your car seats for a single shin guard,
not cringe everytime you look in the mirror because you can only focus on your belly (or rear or thighs or whatever!)
There's a "Great Destash of 2010" thread here - post your accomplishments and praise yourself. Others will praise you too and be inspired by you. Or start a new thread - I'll cheer you on!
