Marie Kondo's kurashi at home How to organize your space and achieve your ideal life

Marie Kondō

Book - 2022

"From the #1 bestselling sensation and Netflix star comes her guide to designing not just the home-but the life-of your dreams, fully illustrated with more than 200 photographs from inside the Marie Kondo lifestyle"--

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Subjects
Published
California : Ten Speed Press [2022]
Language
English
Japanese
Main Author
Marie Kondō (author)
Other Authors
Cathy Hirano (translator)
Item Description
Portions of this book were originally published in Japan as Mainichi ga tokimeku katazuke no mahō (Spark Joy Every Day) by Sunmark Shuppan, Tokyo, in 2014.
Includes index.
Physical Description
223 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781984860781
  • Preface
  • 1. A Dialogue with Yourself
  • 2. A Dialogue with Your Home and Possessions
  • 3. Visualize Your Ideal Home
  • 4. Your Joyful Morning
  • 5. Your Joyful Day
  • 6. Your Joyful Evening
  • Conclusion
  • Afterword
  • Your Ideal Lifestyle Worksheets
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Expanding on her enduring blockbuster, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (2014), Kondo moves her focus from belongings to kurashi or lifestyle. Still using her patented technique (examining each article and asking "does it spark joy?"), the author urges readers to visualize their ideal home (after tidying up, of course) and lifestyle choices. As she moves through each room, Kondo offers tips for making areas more playful and joyful. The Konmari method can also be used for social obligations and relationships, says the author. The key is to sift through these options and choose the ones that spark joy. Stories from her many clients are woven into the narrative, and the text is set tastefully amid nicely shot photographs of cleared spaces, striking accessories, and the serene author herself. Kondo includes worksheets in the appendix to guide readers in planning their ideal mornings, workdays, and evenings. Kondo's life has changed since the success of her first book, and she admits to challenges as a wife and mother. But she retains her overall peacefulness and her love of order, which readers find so very inspiring.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Kondo has a vast following, and her newest book is sure to attract legions of eager readers.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Kondo returns with a wise guide to achieving one's "ideal lifestyle" that builds upon the "spark joy" philosophy laid out in her bestselling The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up. She invites readers to ask themselves "what do you really want to put in order" and to imagine their perfect home. One's entryway should feel like "a sigh of relief" with just one pair of shoes left out for each family member, a living room should "foster conversation" and have a designated space for each object, and "a good kitchen makes cooking fun." Then come steps for tidying up each part of a daily routine: morning should involve a good breakfast, daytime plans should stick to an established schedule, and cotton or silk pajamas are a good idea for a calm evening. Along the way, Kondo includes family recipes, among them her mother's black vinegar chicken wing stew, miso soup, and "amazing amazake." While some suggestions will likely be a bridge too far (such as wiping the soles of one's shoes every day), the majority of her advice is sound and easy to implement. This one's another must-read for Kondophiles. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

If you could make any dream come true, what would your ideal lifestyle be? Exploring the answer to this question helps build the foundation for a life that sparks joy. That's why I begin with every client by asking them to share their hopes and dreams. Their eyes shine as they describe a palatial house with lovely furniture in natural colors or a big kitchen where they can bake cakes. But before long reality starts to sink in, and the light in their eyes fades. "I live in a tiny apartment," they'll say. "How can I make a palace out of a room that's just 80 square feet? I guess I should be more realistic." On the surface, this seems like a perfectly logical conclusion, and to be honest, for a long time I wasn't quite sure how to respond. How could I ask my clients to compromise on their dreams? How could I tell someone who loves Renoir to decorate their one-room apartment with something "more suitable," like Japanese woodblock prints, and just focus on keeping the space clean? That would never motivate them to tidy. The very thought would quench the least spark of joy. When visualizing our ideal lifestyle, should we give our imagination free rein, or stick to what's possible? This is a tricky question--one I had to mull over for some time. In Japanese, the word for "lifestyle" is kurashi . As I pondered this word, I realized I didn't know exactly what it meant. Looking it up in the Daijisen dictionary of Japanese terms, I discovered an interesting fact. According to this source, it means "the act of living; spending each day; daily life; making a livelihood." The verb kurasu means "to pass one's time until sunset; to spend one's day." In other words, the ideal kurashi simply means the ideal way of spending our time, and therefore is separate from the "ideal home." This realization reminded me of my university days when I lived in Tokyo with my parents. Even though I had my own little room, which in Japanese cities is a huge luxury, I was always full of ideals and aspirations. I dreamed of having a bigger room, a cuter kitchen, a little garden on the balcony, nicer curtains on the windows, and so on. But the kitchen was my mother's territory, which I was forbidden to change without permission, and my room didn't even have a window, let alone a balcony. But this gap between my dreams and reality didn't bother me. I used to boast about how much I loved my room. The reason I loved it was because it was my own space, a place where I could enjoy my ideal lifestyle, whether that meant relaxing before bed with aromatherapy, listening to my favorite classical music, or placing a small vase with a single flower on my bedside table. In other words, the ideal lifestyle refers to what we do, not to where we live. Once my clients finish tidying up their homes, very few of them consider moving or completely redecorating afterward. Often the biggest change they describe is how they spend their time at home. Through these changes, they come to love the space in which they live, regardless of whether it matches their ideal. Even if you can't move to a new house or apartment, you can still change your lifestyle. You just need to live as if your space is your ideal home. That's really the point of tidying up. So, when imagining your ideal lifestyle, think concretely about what you'd like to do and how you'd like to spend your time at home. Oddly enough, once they've finished tidying and have realized their ideal lifestyle, many of my clients actually end up with the house--and even the furnishings--of their dreams. I can't count the times I've heard my clients say things like, "Two years after tidying we moved into a house exactly like the one I imagined." Or "Someone gave me the kind of furniture I'd always wanted." This is one of the many strange and wonderful effects of tidying that I've witnessed through my work. Whether you believe it or not is up to you. But if you're going to imagine your ideal lifestyle, why not go all out? Excerpted from Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home: How to Organize Your Space and Achieve Your Ideal Life by Marie Kondo All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.