![]() In my opinion, these were some of the most inspiring books I looked through. Once you’ve banished the clutter from your life, you’ll probably want some assistance on how to organize what’s left. Not to be outdone, Living With Less by Mary Lambert gives advice on how to downsize to just one hundred personal possessions. That’s one idea a week for a whole year to help you become less attached to “stuff”. In the book Live More Want Less, Mary Carlomagno shares fifty-two ways to find order in your life. For instance, Throw Out Fifty Things by Gail Blanke shows the reader the physical and emotional reasons why people tend to hold onto things. It was interesting to me that when I started researching resources on decluttering, that several of them focused on some sort of magic number. ![]() Next, the author provides helpful daily and weekly checklists in order to keep the chaos from coming back. Anderson gives tips on how to shed possessions by tackling some of the biggest clutter culprits in our homes and then moves on room by room. Help, I’m Knee-Deep in Clutter! is a book by home organization professional Joyce I. ![]() Rowan Public Library has many resources to help you shed some of your excess belongings and organize the ones you decide you can’t do without. ![]() LIBRARY NOTES: DECLUTTERING AND ORGANIZINGĭo you have too much clutter in your life? Do you find yourself quickening your pace and averting your eyes whenever you pass through that messy garage? And let’s not even discuss those piles up in the attic that are out of sight and out of mind. ![]()
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