Bath Chronicle

20 ways to clear that clutter

LUKE RIX-STANDING suggests some household items it might be time for you to get rid of

-

Declutteri­ng is one of those tasks that even the most decisive householde­r puts off tackling. A nebulous, bitty endeavour, the main trouble is knowing where to start, but tactically discarding even small, apparently unimportan­t items can make a big difference to how a home feels.

Here are a few items you can get rid of right now, to help your house or apartment feel roomier, and get the declutteri­ng ball rolling...

1. OLD MAGAZINES

Yes, in theory you could read that interestin­g-looking article about the state of southeast Asian geopolitic­s you put aside for a dull moment. You won’t though, will you? It’s been sitting behind the loo for five years. Time to get rid.

2. SPARE HANGERS

Wire hangers just accrue, and we’re not even sure how. If you open your wardrobe to find that there are twice as many hangers as the clothes they’re hanging, then binning some can only make your life easier.

it also means you don’t have to wake your whole house with aggressive jangling every time you get dressed.

3. OLD SHOES

People can be strangely sentimenta­l about their shoes. By the time they’re unusably tattered, you’ve probably been through a lot together, but there’s not really any way to repurpose them.

they will be discarded at some point – save yourself the bother and do it now.

4. CLOTHES THAT DON’T FIT

There’s no commodity more fit for the charity shop than clothes that don’t fit you.

You can’t reclaim a garment you’ve grown out of, however many memories it might contain, and a gift can be the wrong size regardless of who gave it to you. if you bought something erroneousl­y, just cut your losses – don’t let it clog up your wardrobe in a stubborn refusal to admit your mistake.

5. ODD SOCKS

Do not throw these away too quickly. Socks end up in different washes and if you find sock two right after discarding sock one, the annoyance may be enough to stop you sleeping.

there is, however, a limit, and once a sock has spent a few months in the odd pile, it’s time for it to go.

6. YOUR TOOTHBRUSH OK, so this isn’t really declutteri­ng, but we would bet our life savings you don’t change toothbrush­es as often as you should.

Dental and medical organisati­ons almost universall­y urge switching it up every three to four months. if the bristles are frayed,

swap sooner. And if you have ‘spare’ old ones, bin them while you’re at it.

7. EXPIRED FOOD

Have you ever even been to the darkest recesses of your cupboards?

A no man’s land filled with dusty bottles of unknown origin, and the canned food you’ll live on come the zombie apocalypse, long-lived kitchens invariably contain at least one item a good decade past its expiration date. You don’t see it, but it’s taking up space you might usefully repurpose.

8. DVDS AND VHS TAPES

It’s 2021. If you can digitise them, go for it; if not, one of your many streaming services will probably provide. Start with the movies you don’t like.

9. OLD BUSINESS CARDS Clothes go in and out of fashion; old video games have replay value; and you might one day find a use for that spare bedside table. But you will never find yourself needing a business card for a position you no longer hold at a company you no longer work for. Same goes for old calendars. it’s not 2014, so...

10. DEFUNCT ELECTRONIC­S

In most modern houses, there somewhere sits a giant box of matted wires, which once charged this or connected that.

Electronic­s date quickly, and at least some of them will hail from the digital stone age, applicable only to ancient equipment that long since gave up the ghost.

11. EXPIRED MEDICATION

We sincerely hope you’re not drawn to your medicine cabinet too often, but the situation-specific nature of medication­s means they can sit there on the top shelf for years, and years, and years. Medicine expiration dates matter. If it’s past its prime by any margin, remove and replace.

12. OLD TOYS

Yes, toys can work as hand-medowns, but only some toys. The old hoop n’ stick struggles to find a place in today’s tech-savvy childhood, while completed or part-completed puzzle books are definitely singleuse.

You wouldn’t give someone a sudoku book with half the sudokus filled in, and that should include your future children.

13. DEAD BATTERIES

We don’t know how they do it, but dead batteries possess a near-unique ability to just turn up in random drawers.

Purge them. Purge them all.

14. BROKEN CLOCKS & WATCHES There are plenty of profession­als out there who have carved careers out of re-heeling defunct timepieces. Either contact one, or don’t. There is no in between.

15. TAKEAWAY MENUS

They’re all online. All of them.

the same goes for most catalogues, and a decent number of instructio­n manuals.

16. CARDS

Binning the heartfelt wishes of friends and relations feels faintly cruel, but it’s better to briefly sting your sensitivit­ies than scotch your storage long term.

Birthdays and christmase­s come around – spoiler alert – once a year, so it doesn’t take that long to amass enough cardboard to post and pack a small whale.

17. ORNAMENTS YOU DON’T LIKE

An impulse buy from IKEA, a remnant of a long-lost relationsh­ip, a knick-knack that ‘came with the house’ – there is almost certainly some piece of plaster or ceramic sitting around somewhere that you secretly despise. When it comes to ornaments we agree with Marie Kondo – if it doesn’t spark joy, it goes.

18. OLD TOWELS

Often accumulate­d over time, old towels tend to get faded, dog-eared, and just a little bit weird-smelling. If you wouldn’t be happy offering it to a guest, get rid of it or use it as a rag.

19. BOOKS

OK, before you yell at us, books take up a lot of space, and some houses are positively rammed with them.

Some advise removing the ones you’ve already read, but you may want them for reference, rereading or loaning to friends. We’re more interested in the ones which, if you’re honest with yourself, you haven’t read and never will.

20. OLD CRAFT SUPPLIES

Paints, glues, markers – once they dry out, they’re dead. We’re not saying you won’t use them – we’re saying you physically can’t.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ditch those dusty mags
Ditch those dusty mags
 ??  ?? Sort through your clothes
Sort through your clothes
 ??  ?? Bin those ancient tins
Bin those ancient tins

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom