YouTube: https://youtube.com/watch?v=tQvjd6mKSD8
Previous: 7 Money Habits That Are Red Flag Behaviors
Next: Ask Polly’s Heather Havrilesky On Self-Help, Tim Ferriss, & Getting Healthier With Money

Categories

Statistics

View count:155,931
Likes:5,551
Comments:137
Duration:05:29
Uploaded:2020-02-20
Last sync:2024-04-10 09:00
In this episode, one woman shows us how she keeps her home tidy and organized despite her lazy tendencies. These are cleaning tips anyone can follow for a more effortless home life!

Learn more about getting great credit no matter where you're starting from with CreditRepair.com: https://www.creditrepair.com/?tid=17191

Through weekly video essays, "Making It Work" showcases how *real* people have upgraded their personal or financial lives in some meaningful way. Making your life work for you doesn't mean getting rich just for the sake of it. It means making the most of what you have to build a life you love, both in your present and in your future. And while managing money is a crucial life skill for everyone, there's no one "right way" to go about it — you have to figure out what works best for *you,* full stop.

Video by Grace Lee
https://www.youtube.com/c/WhatsSoGreatAboutThat
https://twitter.com/whatssograce

Based on an essay by Kate Sortino
https://thefinancialdiet.com/3-ways-to-effortlessly-keep-your-house-clean-according-to-a-reformed-slob/

The Financial Diet site:
http://www.thefinancialdiet.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thefinancialdiet
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TFDiet
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thefinancialdiet/?hl=en
Making it Work is brought to you by creditrepair.com.

Start rebuilding your credit today. I have a confession to make.

I'm naturally pretty damn messy. Not hoarders messy, but definitely need advanced notice of company is coming over messy. A couple of years ago, I realized I needed to make a change, and that my messy environment was negatively impacting my mental health.

Going to sleep and waking up every day in a cluttered environment felt like a double whammy, starting and ending each day with a failure. It had to stop. These are the changes I made and have sustained over the last three years that have kept my mess at bay.

Number 1, be extremely intentional with what you own. A lot of people don't like the idea of minimalism, but becoming intentional about what I owned was a turning point in my transition from slob to not slob. I have a habit of acquiring stuff, either through impulse purchases or adopting things when friends move out of state.

This means I had closets full of fishing poles and wading boots. I have never fished in my life. Baking accessories?

I hate to bake. And abandoned hobbies. Turns out I don't have a real strong passion for wood burning.

This contributed to my overall messiness, because even when I wanted to clean up my act, all this crap I'd accumulated was working against me. I ended up just moving piles from one area to another in an effort to tidy. One weekend, I decided I was done.

I took two cars full of perfectly usable stuff to my local thrift store, and I haven't missed a single item since. I also went through and digitized. Breed took pictures of a giant box of sentimental cards, knickknacks, stuffed animals, and other gifts I'd been lugging around with me for years.

I can still look at those items and read those cards if I'm feeling nostalgic, but without the physical items filling up my space. I also curbed my impulse spending by deactivating my Amazon Prime and deleting my saved payment data from my most often used shopping sites. Now my environment is filled with the things I use constantly and nothing else.

Number 2, create better systems. A lot of my mess came from having inadequate systems around my house. Take my mail, for example.

I had it absolutely everywhere. Bills, important tax documents, Costco flyers, and junk mail were strewn over my house because I didn't have a system for anything incoming. The first thing I did was collect my mail from every corner of my house, sit down on my computer, and opt for paperless billing every chance I had, which easily cut the problem in half.

Then I bought a small recycle bin that I keep near my front door. Everything that doesn't require a response or need to be filed away doesn't come in the house. Systems can be applied to any source of mess.

Constantly piling dirty clothes in one area of your room? Put a laundry basket there to remind yourself to toss it in the washing machine when the basket is full. Have a certain coffee table that collects trash and junk?

Get rid of the table, or move it farther away from the sofa so it doesn't become a catch-all. Find mess hotspots in your home and create systems to circumvent the issue before it even becomes a clutter trash pile. Number 3, don't put things down, put them away.

In the last few years, this has become my spiritual mantra, and has reduced actual cleaning time to a few minutes a day instead of an entire weekend. Every time I'm tempted to leave a half empty can of LaCroix on a bookshelf or leave a pile of papers on the floor, I tell myself, "don't put it down, put it away." Do I occasionally mess up? Absolutely, but the amount of time I've saved by being mindful and choosing to be deliberate with how I operate within my space has been a game-changer.

Along the same lines, I also take on a clean as I go mentality, whereas before, I operated with a clean eventually when I have to because of shame mentality. Maintaining is much easier than cleaning. Rinsing newly dirty dishes with soapy water is much easier than scraping off caked-on old food.

Once you realize the power of maintaining, you'll never want to go back to wasting an entire day off elbow-deep in old messes. These key things helped me transition from gross slob to functioning 95% clean person. My mental health has improved significantly, as I have my finances.

I can now use my environment as an indicator of my mental state because I have the clarity to recognize when I'm filling up my usually clean counters with dishes, or when I'm using retail therapy to justify buying duplicates of items I already have. Plus, the lack of impulse spending allows me to really focus on what I know to be meaningful to me, and I'm able to interact with my environment as something that recharges me instead of embarrasses me. Staying organized is one of the best ways to eliminate stress in every aspect of your life.

And if you need help getting your credit in order, you should check out creditrepair.com. If you're one of the millions of Americans with an inaccurate or unfair credit score, think about working with creditrepair.com. As their name suggests, creditrepair.com helps people work to hear their credit, and they've been crushing it for the better part of a decade. creditrepair.com's advisors will help you analyze your credit report, identify any questionable negative items, and work to get them removed.

If you have questions about the credit repair process or what the creditrepair.com team can do to help you, give them a call or visit the link in our description to learn more.