How to Edit Everything
Here’s a simple truth: The more items we own, the less we value them. For example, digital photos are abundant, and it’s easy to take more. As a result, we rarely look at them. But I’ve framed the single...
Here’s a simple truth: The more items we own, the less we value them. For example, digital photos are abundant, and it’s easy to take more. As a result, we rarely look at them. But I’ve framed the single black-and-white snapshot of my parents’ wedding, and display it proudly.
How about overstuffed closets filled with “nothing to wear”? We often choose the same five or six outfits over and over.
And the more scented candles or fancy moisturizers we collect, the more likely we are to shove them into a cupboard, never to be used again. The more nail files or flashlights we own, the less likely we are to be able to find one when we need it.
The Opposite of More
Our cupboards and closets burst with items we need to clean, organize, maintain, upgrade, store, and retrieve. It’s exhausting. But here’s another simple truth that fixes everything: The less we own, the more we use and enjoy what we have. I think of:
• the denim jacket that tops so many of my outfits
• the skillet I use to cook most family meals
• the super-comfortable black Sketchers I wear every day
• my favorite vanilla lip balm
• my chosen easy chair
Owning less isn’t deprivation. Owning less makes more space for things that matter.
Yes, we can fill our lives with whatever we want. We can keep adding until we run out of space, money, energy, patience, and time.
But if we edit the clutter from our homes the way a writer edits words, we wind up with just what we wanted. No fluff. Just the pure and useful cream of the crop.
What Does It Mean To Edit?
Editing is a mindset. You learn to think critically about your belongings, purchases, and activities. You stop wasting your assets and start investing them in things and projects that return value to your life.
Editing produces quality. You stop adding freebies and junk, and opt for things that will last. You might spend as much money as before, but you spend it on the good stuff. You raise your standard of living without increasing your cost of living. You own fewer, but better.
Editing is a practice, like yoga or piano. You improve slowly, over time. Pretty soon you’re reasonably skilled. It becomes part of you – second nature.
3 Steps to Start
Stephen King has published dozens of best-selling books and hundreds of short stories. He’s known not just for horror, but for page-turning plots and compelling characters. He’s also the author of one of Time Magazine’s Top 100 Nonfiction Books of All Time, the now-classic On Writing.
One of the best takeaways from this book is the “10 percent rule.” After completing a piece of writing, determine the word count, then go through and ruthlessly remove at least one-tenth of the words. How?
• Cut unnecessary details or digressions.
• Eliminate redundancies.
• Replace each weak phrase with one powerful word.
Can we apply this to decluttering? Let’s remove just 10 percent in any area, such as a kitchen cupboard, clothes closet, living room wall, or bathroom drawer.
• Remove what you don’t like or haven’t used in the past year or more.
• Remove extras and duplicates.
• Remove shoddy items to reveal quality pieces.
This same idea can be applied to our calendars, phones, or filing cabinets, or even our diets or address books.
When we edit everything, we’ll be happier with what remains.
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About the Author: Karen Trefzger is a writer, singer, teacher, wife, mother, and grandmother who has been choosing a simpler life for over 20 years. She is the author of several books about minimalism, and blogs at Maximum Gratitude Minimal Stuff.