Decluttering made simple
I love to clean and organise, so I’m always up for trying the newest cleaning or decluttering hack.
So when I heard about popular cleaning guru FlyLady, who has been around since 2001, I had to check her out. Her cleaning method is more than just one simple idea or hack. Her website is full of cleaning and productivity tips, including a mandate about shining your sink every day.
FlyLady (aka Marla Cilley) believes cleaning is best tackled when broken into zones and bite-sized chunks. As she says, “Your home did not get dirty in one day, and it will not get clean in a day, either.”
Overall, FlyLady says cleaning should not be stressful. By utilising her daily and weekly routines, you can make cleaning and organising more manageable.
Her daily routine includes getting fully dressed every day to increase productivity. Then shine the kitchen sink, empty the dishwasher and do a load of laundry.
FlyLady also recommends a “weekly home blessing hour.” She identifies seven quick-clean tasks that take ten minutes each: vacuum, dust, mop, polish mirrors, purge papers, change sheets and empty all garbage bins.
“Don’t obsess, set your timer for 10 minutes for each task, then quit!” says FlyLady.
But here’s the kicker: Before you can clean your home, FlyLady says it must be free of clutter. Her secret? This 15-minute decluttering method.
Learn which 12 things professional organisers declutter every day.
What is the 15-minute FlyLady decluttering method?
Set a timer and spend 15 minutes a day decluttering. That’s it!
The timer helps you stay on task so you don’t wander off to dust the skirting boards when you should be recycling junk mail. The time limit also keeps you from burning out and giving up.
FlyLady suggests focusing each week on one of her five house zones: entrance, kitchen, guest bathroom/guest room, master bedroom/bathroom and living room/TV room. By spending just 15 minutes a day in one zone each week, your whole house will be decluttered before you know it.
Check out these 18 organising ideas for hard-to-store stuff.
Does this decluttering method work?
Yes. Anyone can do anything for 15 minutes, and you’ll be surprised how much you can accomplish.
By focusing on one area, you’ll see gradual progress every day. And by narrowing your work to one zone, you’ll be forced to face all those neglected places where clutter accumulates — the overstuffed linen closet, the cabinet of food storage containers and the chaotic kitchen junk drawer.
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