Friday, June 27, 2008

only 100 things?

Time magazine had an interesting article. The idea was to clear up your clutter by paring everything down to 100 things. Here's the guy's blog.

One lady was quoted as keeping categories, such as "shoes", so she kept most of her shoes and counted it as ONE of her 100 things. That's what I'd have to do with my books. There's no way I'd be able to pare down my collection to less than 100 books. It would be work to pare it down to 100 authors!

Let's make categories: clothing, shoes, accessories, reading material (that includes text/technical books), housewares, music, movies, computer related, hobbies.

So check out the link and come back to comment. Can you think of other categories? Do you have something that demands that you count all of them as one? You may not do this, but do you think you could?

I read, sew, quilt, cross-stitch, do yarn work and scrapbook. In addition to all my books, I have two sewing machines, a serger, countless needles & thread spools, scrapbook tools & papers and skeins of yarn. And fabric. Oh, man, do I have fabric. Really, this one is almost as bad as my books.



I've been reading the comments on the link. I think some of these people just don't get it. Just because the list says "Undergarments" instead of "underwear", the post asked if the guy was going to go commando. Duh!

The paring down is only for personal items. If you live alone, that may be easier. Married? don't touch their stuff or you may not be for long. I don't understand...
plates - though apparently not silverware...
How can silverware not be a shared item in a family setting?

I have never lived by myself. I was with my parents, roommates at college (shared bedroom), then with my husband. We started in a one bedroom/no garage unit. Moved to three bedrooms/carport unit. Now we're in a four bedrooms/2-car garage unit and our stuff has expanded to fit each larger home. Well, we also went from two people to four but I am a...stasher? I know I have too much stuff but we aren't living in wall-to-wall stacks.