Getting started

Ask these questions to get rid of clutter

What you need to achieve a clutter-free environment is like being a winning contestant on Jeopardy! You need to ask the right questions.

In my role as a professional organizer, I ask clients a lot of questions. To me, the only bad question is the one you don’t ask. Asking questions during the initial needs assessment and throughout our sessions together helps me understand my clients’ needs and goals so that I can help them enjoy a successful organizing project.

What clients don’t realize, however, is that by asking certain questions of themselves, they can gain freedom from the clutter around them. Below I have shared some basic questions that you should ask yourself when deciding what to keep or discard. Answering them honestly will set you on a path toward organizing success.

“Where do I start?”

The answer to this question is easy: anywhere. When I work with clients, I like to use “the elephant joke” when they share that they didn’t start organizing their things because they were so overwhelmed by their stuff or the idea of getting started or both. The joke goes like this:

“How do you eat an elephant?”

“One bite at a time.” (Ba da bum!)

It doesn’t matter where you make your first bite – er, move. As long as you start somewhere, anywhere, the fact is that you’ve started. Celebrate it, then keep going.

“What condition is it in?”

One of the easiest solutions to getting rid of clutter is to inspect the items in question for potential damage. When you come across damaged items that are beyond repair, promptly throw them away or recycle them.

Don’t donate damaged items. Most organizations that accept used items (Goodwill, et al.) won’t take them anyway. If you’re still hedging on whether to donate a damaged item, put yourself in the position of someone who would be on the receiving end. If you wouldn’t want it, chances are that no one else would, either.

“Do I really need it?”

I have clients ask themselves if they need an item when they’re undecided on what to do with it. I prefer that they use “need” instead of “want” in their question because “need” elicits a response based on the function or purpose of the item, whereas “want” elicits a response based on the simple desire to have it.

More often than not, clients will respond with the following 1-2 punch: “I may want it, but I don’t necessarily need it.” The item then is discarded accordingly among the trash, recycling, and donation sections we have set up for the organizing session.

“When DID I use/wEAR it LAST?”

I advise my clients to use the one year rule. If you haven’t used or worn something in the past year, you’re more than likely not going to use or wear it anytime soon. Donate it so that it stays out of a landfill and someone else can enjoy it.

“Will I use/wear it?”

See the previous question for the same answer. 

“What size is it?”

This question refers to clothing, and it’s an important question to ask because if the clothing in question doesn’t fit you anymore, there’s no reason to keep it. I don’t subscribe to the practice of keeping clothing a size or two larger or smaller than what you’re currently wearing, just in case you fluctuate in size. Life is one entire fluctuation, so keeping clothing that you may never need makes no sense.

I worked with a client who was looking to downsize her belongings, which included an overabundance of clothing. She had lost a considerable amount of weight and was very proud of her work to achieve the physique she now has. She was thrilled to bid farewell to the mounds of clothing that no longer fit her, and in doing so she freed up not only multiple bins that she could now repurpose but also ample space in her closet that she hadn’t had in years.

“Who is this for?”

One of the most interesting things that I have experienced as a professional organizer helping clients declutter is the frequency with which clients have unearthed items that they had planned to give to someone but never did.

And I’m not just talking about borrowed items, either. I’m talking birthday and holiday gifts with the price tags still attached. I’m talking hand-me-downs (like kids’ clothing) as well as family heirlooms that clients intended to give away but didn’t. 

Giving away things intended for other people is a great way to reduce clutter. Just be sure to follow through and give the things away.

“How much do I need of (insert item)?”

There’s a bit more nuance to answering this question compared with the other questions in this blog, since the answer depends on a variety of factors, such as a person’s lifestyle, marital status, number of people in the home, the client’s occupation, and so much more.

The best way to answer this question – and this will seem like a sales pitch, but I promise it isn’t – is to work with a professional organizer who can ask unbiased follow-up questions about the items in question to get a better sense of how much of each item is actually needed. 

For example, I’m working with a client whose home currently consists of items from his and his fiancée’s respective previous homes. They never consolidated before they moved, so they have two (or more) of almost everything and now want to fix that. I have another client, meanwhile, who’s downsizing into a smaller apartment and wants to enjoy a minimalist lifestyle and has little desire or ability to host people in her new place.

How I work with these clients in my role as their organizer has been and will be different. By asking my clients the right questions, I can help them get the answers they need to meet their organizing goals.

So, when you are ready to start taking a bite out of the elephant in the room that is literally your room (or rooms) to be organized, ask yourself the aforementioned questions. I promise the answers will make your organizing project quite satisfying and go much faster than you ever imagined. 

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 Tom Harper is owner of Tom’s Organizing Made Simple LLC, a Bethlehem-based company dedicated to helping people declutter and organize their space, stuff, time, and/or tasks. Follow TOM’S on Facebook or Instagram.

The First Step is Scary ... And Necessary

The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.

- Walt Disney

Change is scary. Even as I sit here writing my first blog for this website, I’m scared. Not about the actual writing process (though your reaction to my writing is another story) but about something much bigger.

I have changed careers.

Becoming a professional organizer is something I’ve been excited about doing for a long time. I’ve loved organizing ever since I was a kid; I loved arranging the toys in my closet and, when my parents let me, cleaning out and redoing the kitchen pantry. I never thought that this lifelong passion could become a career, but life has a way of taking you where you least expect it. (See 2020 for more information.)

I’ve been blessed to have two unique and enjoyable chapters in my professional life. The first chapter involved 12 years working as a writer and editor for every publication here in the Lehigh Valley. I then pivoted toward what I felt was a more meaningful career: I raised money and awareness for several amazing nonprofit organizations across the Lehigh Valley over a 15-year span.

Being a professional fund raiser is rewarding – and incredibly stressful. The “what-have-you-done-for-me-lately” nature of fund raising took its toll on me physically and mentally, and my family helped me to recognize the need for a change. The best job I have (and will ever have) is being Dad to my two incredibly talented, intelligent, creative and beautiful teen-age girls, Katie and Allie. (Heart, meet sleeve.) I’ve told them since the day they could understand me to follow their passions; it was time for me to do the same.

After much soul-searching, I left the nonprofit world and started this business (Tom’s Organizing Made Simple – total namedrop). And here we are.

We all make choices in life that impact our paths. For me, making the choice to change careers – not one, but twice – was scary. Taking the first of many steps to make that change a reality was hard for sure, but it was so worth it.

For you, you’re considering a change in how you organize yourself and your things (you are reading this blog after all). Good for you, and you should be proud of yourself for recognizing your desire for change. (I’m a big believer in positivity and in giving yourself positive reinforcement.)

Where you go from here is up to you. You can choose to act on your goal to become better organized by hiring a professional organizer. Or you can choose to wait until the proverbial “tomorrow,” like a bad New Year’s resolution. The latter is easier for sure – but here’s what’s likely to happen: nothing. Nothing good, that is. The clutter will grow, and so will your frustration.

However, consider the possibilities if you invest in yourself by taking the bold step of acting on your intent to organize. (Here’s a helpful tip: check out the FAQ page about working with a professional organizer like me or a peer – but hopefully me!)

  • Your plan, with support, begins to become reality;

  • Clutter disappears;

  • More ideas start flowing (e.g., how to maximize space even better);

  • A completed project!

  • The opportunity to tackle other projects you’ve been yearning to do. 

 Plus, with that finished project comes the pride and satisfaction in knowing you took action. Your happiness levels soar, and you’ll enjoy the peace of mind that comes with living clutter-free space.

Take the first step. You’ll be so glad you did.