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Home arrow Organize Your Homearrow The Organized Homearrow Teeny-Tiny Tips Can Equal Big Changes

Teeny-Tiny Tips Can Equal Big Changes
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If every long journey begins with one small step, then every organizational process begins with one small task or rule. The smallest tips can bear the biggest rewards and results. Focus on the end, and implement rules to make it a reality.

For some reason, so many people equate getting organized with achieving an enormous and impossible feat. Something that only some lucky people are capable of having.

One woman, Elena, told me once that she felt she'd be more likely to succeed at climbing Mount Everest than to succeed at decluttering her living room. In her mind, she was only half joking. She really believed that getting organized wasn't something she could ever do.

If your thinking is not far from Elena's thinking, then let me ease your mind.

Being organized does not require you to perform time- consuming, complicated systems. It is not rocket science. It is not something that's going to take you years of soul-searching to start. And it's not something that only some lucky people are capable of having.


Just a few small organizing tips--a few little, teeny- tiny tips, applied with a positive attitude, can help you be more organized today, than you were yesterday.

As you are able to apply tiny organizing tips to your life, and those teeny tips becomes habits that you do each day, you will be more and more organized.

Your goal should never be to get totally organized-- that's an overwhelming, difficult, frightening, major, impossible goal--and something I would never recommend you try to take on. There is nobody that's always totally organized. Even professional organizers are occasionally late for appointments, or sometimes even have a messy desk.

Your goal should be to apply small organizing tips today that will make your life just a little more organized tomorrow. Small, teeny-tiny tips can help make big changes in your life.

For example, upon further conversation with Elena, she told me that one time her neighbor stopped by unexpectedly to bring over some muffins she had just baked. Elena reluctantly invited her in, but was immediately mortified by the appearance of her living room--mail was piled high on the end table, her childrens' toys were strewn about and jackets were tossed over the chairs. She even had to move a toolbox, a stack of library books and a bunch of music CDs from the sofa just so her neighbor could sit down for a minute.

She was so embarrassed about the situation that in the days following her neighbor's visit, anytime her doorbell rang, she pretended she wasn't home. She just couldn't bear the thought of anyone seeing her mess.

But Elena didn't have to live like this.

a) My first teeny-tiny tip to Elena was that she had to assign a home for the items that were strewn about. One sheet of paper, a pen, and 10 minutes later, Elena listed an appropriate home for each of the items:

Now that she had an appropriate home for everything, I offered her two other teeny-tiny tips:

b) Once she, or other family members, was done using the item that was removed from it's home, it should simply be placed back immediately.

c) Third, every night at 6:00 was designated 'Pick-Up Time.' Basically, for 15 minutes starting at 6:00, each family member would join in and pick up any item out of place, and return it to it's assigned home. Only after everything was put away would everyone sit down and enjoy dinner.
Elena made a sign that she hung on her kitchen refrigerator to help her remember these tips. It read:

A: Assign a home.
B: Put it back when you're done with it.
C: 6:00PM Pick-up Time

After Elena saw these tips, she became excited. She said, 'It seems so simple. I think I could do this.' I said, 'I know you can do this!'

To my delight, Elena contacted me a week later, and said she could not believe how these teeny-tiny tips have lifted such a weight off her shoulders. Her living room had been magically transformed from chaos into calm--just by sticking to these teeny-tiny tips each day.

She even said that when her doorbell unexpectedly rang a few days ago, she actually went to the door and answered it, and didn't feel embarrassed to invite her neighbor inside. In fact, she felt proud to do so!

I hope Elena's story has inspired you to see a light at the end of the tunnel--to see that getting organized is completely possible --that is, as long as you keep smiling and you apply some teeny-tiny organizing tips to your life each day.


by Maria Gracia - Get Organized Now! Want to get organized? Get your FREE Get Organized Now! Idea-Pak, filled with tips and ideas to help you organize your home, your office and your life, at the Get Organized Now! Web site http://www.getorganizednow.com