Making space, clutter free The last book on decluttering you'll ever need

Tracy McCubbin

Book - 2019

Many have repeatedly tried to break their clutter's mysterious hold, only to fail. McCubbin explains what she calls the "7 Emotional Clutter Blocks," unconscious obstacles that stand between you and financial freedom, healthy relationships, and positive outlooks. She then offers a realistic approach to managing your belongings, and helps you create an individual strategy that helps you attain your life goals. -- adapted from back cover

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Subjects
Published
Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Tracy McCubbin (author)
Physical Description
282 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781492675198
  • Part 1. Finding the Real, Emotion-Based Problem
  • 1. What's Under the Clutter? A New Approach
  • 2. The Seven Emotional Clutter Blocks: Which One(s) Do You Have?
  • 3. How to Listen to Your Clutter, Room by Room
  • Part 2. Getting Down to It
  • 4. Before You Begin: Set Yourself Up Like a Pro
  • 5. Beyond the Basics: Decluttering Tricks of the Trade
  • 6. When the Going Gets Tough: Breaks, Breath, Gratitude, and Friends
  • Part 3. Arriving and Thriving
  • 7. Strategies and Systems to Organize What's Left
  • 8. Conscious Consumption: How to Halt the Clutter Creep
  • 9. Celebrating and Inhabiting Your New Space
  • Part 4. Life's Big Changes
  • 10. Downsizing: The Purge of a Lifetime
  • 11. Decluttering after Death or Divorce
  • Epilogue
  • Resources
  • Senior Downsizing Guide
  • Index
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Though organizing expert McCubbin touches a bit on the emotions surrounding the accumulation of stuff, this isn't another Kondo-clone, because she dives into the heart of why decluttering is so difficult. Like selling a house, stuff-riddance is laden with one or more of seven emotional blocks, like feeling that our stuff connects us to our past, or that we're trapped by other people's stuff. Wisely, McCubbin doesn't chastise; instead, she shares client stories that allow people to relate, get comfortable, and perhaps start thinking about lightening their loads. Particularly helpful are McCubbin's room-by-room lists of what to watch for (form and function, repurposed and double-duty furniture, adjusting adjustable shelves in the kitchen) and her five questions to ask about each and every item: Do I use it semi-regularly? Is it making me money? Will I buy it again or borrow it? Do I have a place to store it? Do I love it? Besides her eminently practical and understanding advice, the memorable testimonials will stick with readers, such as a soon-to-be divorcée's insistence that, ""I'll use it if it kills me."" A panacea for those who believe they can't cope with stuff.--Barbara Jacobs Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Founder of Los Angeles's premier organizing and decluttering company dClutterfly, McCubbin writes this work to assist people with clearing out the clutter that prevents them from experiencing a home that is restful, peaceful, and shareable. There is an emotional underpinning to cluttering, says the author. Thus, she conceives of the concept of "clutter blocks," or various attitudes that derail people in their striving for tidiness. These include storing fantasy stuff for a fantasy life, holding on to the good old days, and being trapped with other people's junk. McCubbin explores each of these issues, then provides room-by-room strategies for getting rid of the mess and keeping one's space neat. VERDICT While many books concentrate on either the emotional aspects of clutter or tips for getting rid of it, McCubbin interweaves both, resulting in highly practical guidance.

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