Your first 5 minutes will be devoted to staring at the contents of your closet. With pen and paper in hand, jot down what items you haven't used in years (be honest). You will be throwing or giving these items away. If you can't bear to toss an item, give some thought as to where the item could go for a new home and a new life.
When your timer goes off, stop. Put the pen and paper on the closet floor and close the door. You'll be back tomorrow.
-- Tomorrow is here!
Continue your closet organizing adventure. Go to your closet and pick up your pen and paper. Keep on creating your list of what in your closet you can get rid of and what items need to find a new home. Use as many 5 minute sessions as necessary on this step. Feel like you're not getting anywhere? Nonsense! This step makes all the difference down the road when you are maintaining your organized closet.
Simply stated, it will be A LOT easier to keep your closet organized when it only contains what you truly use and is not being used as your personal archive. (In fact, it will probably help you if you can designate one closet or space in your home as a storage container for all those items you need seasonally or for keepsakes. Things you only access occasionally.)
In addition, doing this one step over several days will give you a chance to really think about those items you have collected over the years. You'll find you're ready to give or throw away things on Day 5 that you couldn't bear to part with on Day 1.
-- The next step to your closet organizing.
Once you have completed the list of unnecessary items in your closet, grab a couple of boxes and your timer. Set your 5 minutes and, using your list, toss the trash in the trash box and the give-away items in the give-away box. If this takes you more than 5 minutes, stop and continue tomorrow. This step will go fairly quickly, however, if you've done a thorough job with your list from Day 1.
-- Moving right along.
Now that all the excess stuff is gone from your closet, you can get down to organizing what is left. Use your 5 minutes to genuinely study what's remaining in your closet.
* Which items do you use everyday?
* Which items can be stored together?
* Which items can be stored on shelves?
* Which items can be stored in drawers?
* Which items should be put in bins?
* Which items simply don't belong in this closet?
Take notes during this step and use as many 5 minutes as you need. Again, doing this over several days gives you time to consider how you use each item in your closet each day and what type of organizational system will make the most sense for you. You're aiming for usability here and it may take a bit of trial and error. That's fine because the end result will be a closet you can easily keep organized without even thinking about it.
-- Time to organize your closet.
Using your notes from the previous step, get the supplies you need to organize your closet. Again, take your time with this step, noting what is working and what is not along the way. Tweak as necessary.
* Need more hangars, bins, baskets? Put them on your shopping list for next time you go to the discount store.
* For starters, use whatever organizing supplies you already have including old boxes. It can help to live with your ideas for a week or two to enable you to understand exactly the type of organizing supplies that will serve you the best, so feel free to use temporary containers while you're at this stage of your closet organizing project.
* OR...if you're unsure about sizes and shapes of organizing products, buy just a few samples, leave the tags on and try them out. Then return what you don't need and purchase what you do.
This step can either be completed as part of your normal shopping (requiring no extra trip to the store and keeping within the 5 minute concept) or simply dive in and do one big shopping trip. Your choice.
-- Live with it.
There's no substitute for living with your organizing to see what you've accomplished and what you need to change. Use your 5-minutes-a-day to ask yourself what you like and don't like about your newly organized closet. Take notes and make changes.
-- Last step.
This is the maintenance step and it's easier than you think. For your closet organizing enterprise to give you the results you want, you'll need to take 5 minutes each day and put things away in your closet where they belong.
But beware. Skip this step for just 7 days and you'll need to put in 35 minutes to get back on track. Maybe you don't have 35 minutes to organize your closet, so you don't do it. It won't be long before your closet will be in chaos again and you're using EXTRA time every day just to locate items that should be at your fingertips.
That's right, you're going to use the time anyway. Being disorganized is a huge time waster. So stick to your 5 minutes a day, no matter what. It won't be long until your new habit becomes second nature and you can't imagine NOT doing a quick tidy-up each day.
All it takes is 5 minutes.
Artisan Bread In 5 Minutes A Day
However, in today's society where everyone seems to be struggling to get more done in less time, the ideas in the countless books and articles that are out there, just seem to be a little too much to grasp and apply to our lives.
I am not discounting their value, for I strongly believe in the ideas contained in many of them. However, for most people finding at least twenty minutes a day to properly implement these ideas stops them cold.
It is for this reason that I developed what I call "The down and dirty five minute a day power affirmations routine". In this routine you take advantage of the most powerful time of day to work with affirmations, the half hour before you go to bed.
It is during this time that the subconscious mind is most receptive to receiving new ideas/suggestions for change. The entire routine can be completed in 3-5 minutes.
Before I give you the steps of the routine, I want to be sure you are clear about how to word your affirmations in the most powerful way.
First of all your affirmations should be worded in the present tense. For example:
"I am successful".
NOT
"Someday when I am rich and famous and people like me I will be successful".
Second, be sure to state what you want as opposed to what you don't want. For example:
I love waking up every morning vibrantly healthy and fully energized".
NOT
I'm not sick and sleepy when I wake up.
Finally, they should be filled with as much positive emotion, imagery, and enthusiasm as you can muster. For example:
I love the feeling of the wind blowing through my hair as I drive my new BMW along the sun drenched Pacific Coast Highway".
NOT
"I kind of like it when I drive my BMW".
You get the idea. Now pick at least one and no more than five things you would like to change in your life. Get a clear sense of what each change will look like and feel like. What will making the change mean to you?
After you get clear about the change you want to make, write a positive affirmation for each change. Don't worry about creating "the perfect affirmation". As long as it is positive and worded in the present tense, you are well on your way.
Now that you are armed with your positive and powerful affirmations, I want you to make a committment to your self to follow the routine below for at least thirty days.
First, every night before you go to bed, I want you to take a powerful stance, and with your hand on your heart, and all the positive emotion you can muster, powerfully state your affirmations out loud.
When you have said all of your affirmations, I want you to say one final affirmation. With your left hand clenched I want you to powerfully state, "I am a powerful creator of positive change in my life!" then pump your fist in the air and say "Yes I Am!".
Next write, don't print those same affirmations in a notebook that you will use only for this purpose. Writing is an ideomotor response which automatically puts what you write into your subconscious mind.
Finally, write down and commit to at least one thing you are going to do the next day to move forward toward the life you deserve and desire.
It doesn't have to be a big thing. It can even be a committment to do your power affirmations routine the next night. Small consistant positive steps are the key to your success.
Completing all three steps should take no more than five minutes. I hope you will agree that you are worth at least five minutes of your time to move your life forward in a positive direction. Honestly I hope you think you are worth much more.
If you do nothing else for yourself, do this down and dirty five minute routine for the next 30 days. If you do I know you will be surprised how something so simple can be so powerful.
Both Colleen Langenfeld & Mitcell Dahood are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Colleen Langenfeld has sinced written about articles on various topics from Parenting, Health and Parenting. Colleen Langenfeld has been parenting for over 26 years and helps other moms enjoy mothering more at http://www.paintedgold.com . Visit her website and get more easy tips about. Colleen Langenfeld's top article generates over 49500 views. Bookmark Colleen Langenfeld to your Favourites.
Mitcell Dahood has sinced written about articles on various topics from Home Management, Energy Healing and self improvement and motivation. Mitchell Dahood has a Masters degree in Spiritual Psychology, and is certified in Clinical Hypnotherpy & Therapuetic Imagery Facilitation. His company "The Champions Heart" empowers individuals and organizations to conquer the negativity of their minds in. Mitcell Dahood's top article generates over 3600 views. Bookmark Mitcell Dahood to your Favourites.
Carrying Water On Head It does not mean we have to give up the things we desire. It simply means we should not take on more than what we are able to manage while maintaining our ability to experience happiness