Over Labor Day weekend, inspired by an article in the (massive) September issue of InStyle, I spent an afternoon cleaning out my closet and dresser drawers. I’d intended to do this for several months, but the time and the motivation didn’t converge until that day. I didn’t think to take a Before picture, but here’s the After:
(Yes, it’s a small closet. I live in New England, and our house is old. Trust me: the space was much more crammed before.)
I ended up with two big paper bags of clothes to donate, and one plastic garbage bag of ratty, worn-out items to throw away. The latter bag was full of tank tops, T-shirts and pajama pants I’d kept long after they grew frayed or worn. It felt so liberating to toss them, knowing I’d never wear them again. I’d held onto them mostly out of a sense of obligation: they were still useful (albeit in a limited sense), and I have a horror of being wasteful. But the space cleared by tossing them was far more valuable than their presence had been.
A week later, I took about 20 books (mostly advance copies I’d received for free, but also a couple of books I’d bought and didn’t like) to the bookstore run by our library. It felt good to hand them over to the librarian – even better when she exclaimed, “Wow, these are quality donations!” I love our library, and I’m happy for my unwanted books to help it out in a small way. And now there’s a bit more space on my shelves for the books I really want to read (and keep).
It feels satisfying, this clearing out and making room, paring down my collections to include only the things I love and use. The beginning of fall always feels far more New Year-ish to me than January 1, and this “zenning” of my spaces (as Serenity calls it) feels right for this time of year. Before the rush and press of fall events, before the Christmas gift-buying, before the nesting instinct kicks in with the cold weather, it feels good to create space without filling it up again right away.
My closet isn’t exactly a minimalist’s dream, but believe me, there’s far more space in there than before. I can see what I have (and what I love) right away, which makes me more aware of it, more grateful for it, and more likely to wear most of what’s in there. The same thing applies to my bookshelves, and by extension, to my soul. If I can clear away the clutter and keep some of that space free rather than cramming it with new stuff, I feel lighter, calmer, more at peace. And I’m more likely to welcome the good things – a new red cardigan, a delicious novel, or something more intangible but no less valuable.
Do you do any “fall cleaning” at this time of year? How do you “zen” your space, and/or your soul?
Ive been threatening to attack my wardrobe for weeks…. youve given me the kick in the butt to get started…. watch out wardrobe im coming for you this evening!!!!
When my two girls were both off to college, I decided it was time for a long overdue cleaning out. All that stuff. Crafting stuff…all those school projects. And my girls are creative, artsy people. Too many books they’d long since outgrown (it IS possible!). Clothes. Oh my, the clothes. Well, it’s been a year and sad to say still ongoing. My fault entirely. All that stuff? It has sentiment attached, especially since my girlies are gone. I’m waiting for the motivation to get it finished!
Gearing up to clean out my closet sometime this week! I try to go through it in the fall and in the spring when I switch out clothes. (I feel your pain on the small closet.)
My fall cleaning involves windows, windows, and more windows.
I may need to clean my closets out so I have places to put more books 🙂