Organizing For Next Year's Tax Season
Tax season can be stressful for many reasons but finding your documents doesn’t have to be one of them. Follow these steps and you’ll be amazed how much time and energy you’ll have a year from now.
Document Your Progress
Documenting your progress in any endeavor of importance is vital if you want to know exactly where you came from to compare with where you end up. This can help prevent feeling like you’ve not made any progress (like when you are decluttering a room) or give you evidence that you are making progress that might not otherwise be visible (like practicing a daily shutdown ritual).
A Technique For Making A Decision About Your Belongings
Most disorganized individuals find it difficult to determine whether to keep an item or let it go. For those who struggle, there are various techniques that you can learn from Professional Organizers to guide you towards effective decision-making.
The Practice Of Organizing
When we learn new things we expect to practice in order to be good. Why wouldn’t that be the case with organization, too?
You Might Need A Commute
Home workers are continually surprised that they can’t simply ease into a work or school routine while working from home. For productivity specialists, this isn’t all that surprising. Our minds don’t make transitions as quickly and as easily as we’d like to believe. It’s because they’re missing one critical piece of the puzzle: The commute.
Landing Zones Aren’t Just For Airplanes
Unlike other belongings such as clothes or dishes that have permanent homes in a closet or cupboard, transition items are usually stored right by the entrance where they can easily clutter up a tight space.
What’s the solution? A landing zone for personal items. It’s a place where items in transit ‘land’ on their way elsewhere.
Ditch The Big Goals
We’re at the end of January. Have you given up on your goals and resolutions yet? You have, haven’t you? Me too. Maybe that’s ok.
Steps To Get Started On An Overwhelming Organizing Project
It’s common for people to feel overwhelmed by the thought of organizing their entire home, especially if disorder has been a longstanding issue. They look around, and it seems like they’ll never be able to figure out where to start, in what order to work, or how to move through the process.
Setting Up A Digital File System
When it comes to digital clutter, it’s easy to fall into the trap of ‘out-of-sight, out-of-mind.’ Make sure that you can find digital files when you need to reference them. That is the first rule of filing: Organize your files in a way that makes retrieval possible.
An Easier Way to Journal
You’ve probably heard that keeping a journal will improve your life in some way. Dust off one of those journals you’ve been collecting (I know I’m not the only one who has dozens of unused or partially-used journals). It might be time to revisit closing out your day by doing some focused reflection.
Making Use of Accountability
Using outside accountability is a great strategy for those of us who struggle to do things when the only one expecting the change is us.
Finances in a Time of Crisis
If you have experienced a significant decrease in or elimination of your employment and are freaking out about how or if you can pay the bills, I’d like to offer some tips. Times might be tough, but there are steps you can take now to improve the situation. There are things you can control and ways that you can move to a more stable financial position.
Setting up Learning Stations for Virtual School
Have you finally accepted that your kids will likely be doing a lot of virtual learning for the foreseeable future? It looks like virtual learning, at least part time, will be here to stay.
While a lot of parents muddled through the first round of at-home school when things shut down in March, now might be a good time to set up an on-purpose learning station in your home.
9 Ways to Ease Your Work-From-Home Struggles
As a productivity and time management consultant, I’ve been helping my clients get a better handle on the new work-from-home reality that doesn’t have a known end-date. If you’re one of the ones who are struggling and feeling like there’s something wrong with you for not adapting well, know that you are not alone.
No-Cost Organizing Tips
We’re 7 weeks into the stay-at-home order in my state. In my last blog I talked about being ok with not getting stuff done during this difficult time.
Now, for a lot of people the fog seems to finally be lifting. Maybe it’s the sporadic, sunny spring weather here in New England that’s helping us feel ready to move forward in this new reality.
We Should Stop Worrying About Getting Stuff Done
Here in the United States, most of us have been ordered to stay at home for the past 6ish weeks. While everyone is experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic crisis in their own way, I’ve noticed there are a lot of similarities in the ways many of us are feeling.
My conversations with a lot of colleagues, friends, and clients have shown that many of us spent the first few weeks in a sort of denial and fog. I think we had a hope that this was all very temporary and that things would get back to “normal” soon enough.
Is Perfectionism Keeping You from Getting Organized?
Feeling that nothing can be done until perfect is achieved or a perfect outcome can be assured is an awfully heavy burden the perfectionist takes on. It can be completely paralyzing and incredibly stressful.