Publisher's Letter

Contributors




1. Organizing Photos:
Digital and Film
2. Stuff-flow™
3. How to Get More of What You Want in Your Life: Scarcity vs. Prosperity 

1. The Do’s and Don’ts for Creating a Business Web Site
2. Four Essential Characteristics Your Target Market Should Have

C'mon, Let's Laugh!

1. Across the Divide

2. Lett’s Set a Spell: Back to School…as a Guest Author

1. Winning Ideas from Winning Women with Paula Turner

2. The Highs and Lows of Running a Small Business

3. Shams, Shells, and Charlatans

1. Manage Your Way Out of the Pressure Cooker
2. The Power of Purpose
3. Nurturing Her Fellow Artists
Cheryl L. Weisz, author, The Artist Handbook

Do you understand?

1. Durham Parks and Recreation's Shoe Box Campaign
2. Habitat Charlotte’s Gift from the Heart Holiday Card Program

1. Mint Museums' Long Range Programs & Events Schedule

2. Mint Museums' Long Range Exhibition Schedule
3. Design Made in Africa, November 17 – January 6, 2007 McColl Center for Visual Art
4. McColl Center for Visual Art December 1, 2006 - January 6, 2007

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Janice Russell

Stuff-flow™

If you are disorganized, I am sure that you realize that you have clutter. It may be in one or more areas of your home or office. To get organized and stay organized, you need to become fully aware of your stuff-flow™. Now is the perfect time to develop your clutter radar.

The principle of stuff-flow™. is critical to managing the items that accumulate in any space. Despite the fact that we would like to believe that things enter a space by themselves-you bring it in or someone else brings it in. This stuff originates from a variety of sources, including:

• Intentional purchase from a store
Gift-holiday or otherwise
• Freebie picked up somewhere
Unplanned purchase from a store
• Papers, projects, etc. started in another location and sometimes unfinished

Some of this stuff has a particular purpose for a specific time. This stuff may get turned into another article or it may eventually depart from the space. Other items are consumable so in theory they should only be in the space for a limited amount of time and then they will permanently leave the space. A few items are permanent residents of a space until the owner dies. While these three categories of objects cause clutter, it is the remaining category that is the most problematic. This is the stuff that gets “caught” in limbo and seems to accumulate to enormous proportions.

Let’s take a trip to a department store (or home improvement, office supply, or any other store that is arranged in departments) to gain a practical understanding of how our thinking about our stuff needs to change. A department store gets a shipment of stuff—clothing, jewelry, housewares, makeup, etc. These articles are placed in the correct departments (men’s, women’s, housewares) and then into sub-departments (formal clothing, casual clothing, lingerie) throughout the store. It is often organized by type of clothing and then size. Shipments come in on a regular basis—every few days, once a week, every other week, etc. Sometimes the employees may know exactly what is included in the shipment and sometimes the contents are a surprise. The employees are responsible for finding “homes” for the new articles. This might include rearranging a space, maximizing a space, putting current items on sale to make them sell faster, or some other method for making room for the new stuff. At some point, there isn’t enough room for the new things and so so stuffme of the old items have to leave. This might occur when there is a new season, a new model, or a brand-new product. Regardless, there comes a time when there is no more space and some of the stuff has to leave. This is stuff-flow™: stuff comes, stuff resides for awhile, and stuff departs.

But that is what happens in a store with its rules, processes, and expectations. In “real life” our stuff often gets stuck “in the store.” Why does this happen? One reason is because we don’t have a good process for ensuring that stuff leaves our space on a regular basis. Another reason is that we have difficulty giving ourselves permission to part with our stuff. It may be an item that was a gift, but even if we don’t really like it or use it; we feel that we must keep it. It may be that we don’t think that anyone else will “love” the object the way we have. It may be that we are afraid that “life as we know it” won’t continue unless we have access to this item “just in case” we might need it. Or there may be any number of other reasons why stuff doesn’t leave a space.

Now that you have developed some clutter awareness, let’s create an action plan to help increase stuff-flow™:

Do not bring any item into a space unless it has a department where it can be located. The minute you bring in stuff that doesn’t have a department, it becomes clutter!
• Implement the one in-one out principle. Every time you bring in a new item, remove an item of similar type and value. You can donate, dispose, or sell the item as long as it leaves the space.

Time to implement the stuff-flow™ principle in your home and office space!


North Carolina’s first Certified Professional Organizer in Chronic Disorganization, Janice Russell, and her firm, Minding Your Matters® Organizing, have built a reputation for helping business and residential clients organize their space, items, documents, and time using the flexible structure principle™. Janice’s workshops on topics such as tackling the “no time” trap, perishing paper piles, and stopping “stuff” from being overwhelming are dynamic, informative, and practical. Minding Your Matters® is dedicated to helping people achieve organization with lasting results™ in their personal and professional lives. Janice is highly regarded within her industry. She is Education Chair for the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) and past president of the North Carolina Chapter of NAPO. Janice is the author of Get Organized This Year! For more information, please visit www.mindingyourmatters.com or call 919-467-7058.

 

Janice Russell, CPO-CD
Minding Your Matters® Organizing Consultants
Past President, National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) - North Carolina Chapter
Education Chair, NAPO
Member, National Study Group on Chronic Disorganization
Adjunct Professor, Meredith College