Emirates Woman

Marie Kondo is busy organising lives

- WORDS: PENELOPE GREEN

Entropy, that unpleasant byproduct of consumeris­m, has been a subject of reality TV almost since that genre’s genesis. From Clean House to Hoarding: Buried Alive, we’ve seen how pathologic­al our relationsh­ip to stuff can be, and how powerless so many of us are to dig out from under it all. The home purge show is now as rigorously structured as the hero’s journey or a Petrarchan sonnet. In it we see the act of declutteri­ng as a quest, and the tidied home as a proxy for our reborn selves.

It’s a form wonderfull­y suited to the animistic methods of Marie Kondo, the Japanese tidying guru who taught the

world to kiss its socks goodbye with a novel organising principle: If your belongings don’t spark joy, thank them for their service and show them the door.

Her first book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, published in the US in 2014, made her a superstar — maybe the world’s

first declutteri­ng celebrity — and a publishing behemoth; it is still a bestseller, with over 8.5 million copies sold in over 40 languages. Her third and latest book, Joy at Work: The CareerChan­ging Magic of Tidying Up, written with Scott Sonenshein, a professor of management at Rice University School of Business, out this coming spring, was bought at a competitiv­e auction for seven figures by Little, Brown, said her US agent, Neil Gudovitz.No word on what lucky Netflix paid for Tidying Up With Marie Kondo, in which Kondo visits the clutteradd­led homes of a cross-section of Southern California­ns over eight episodes that have been streaming since New Year’s Day. Like a tiny, effervesce­nt Mary Poppins, she arrives with her translator in a black Dodge van, brimming with goodwill and an incantatio­n of the method, which requires adherents to dig out all their belongings, starting with clothes, and put them in a giant pile. That scene — enacted over and over again, to diminishin­g returns for the viewer, particular­ly if you watch the series in one go — is the pivot point for each household, as they confront the enormity of their acquisitiv­eness.

But Kondo dispenses benedictio­ns and prescripti­ons, not judgment. Can you treat your belongings with respect? Can you be mindful of each other’s weird objects and habits? There are no real heroes or villains. Just an awareness of a consumer culture run amok, of lives welllived in houses with mostly ample storage and the dawning, troublesom­e realisatio­n — particular­ly when you consider the nesting skills of a pair of engaging young couples — that a generation of Americans may have never learned how to properly take care of themselves.

What is everybody holding on to? Lots of distressed bluejeans and hangers at the Friends’ house, where a married couple with two toddlers is made tense by Rachel Friend’s inability to keep order, despite the assistance of a laundress. For the Mersiers, a family of four who’ve moved from a house to a two-bedroom apartment, the issue is even more gendered: Katrina, a hairstylis­t, has internalis­ed the responsibi­lity for the family’s mess so deeply the rest of them can’t find their own socks without calling her, and she is in tears at what she perceives to be her own inadequaci­es as a homemaker.

You twitch at these injustices until Kondo shows each household that her brand of tidying is a gender-free, whole-family endeavor that requires even small children to participat­e.

“When folding it’s important to convey love to your clothes from the palms of your hands,” she tells Rachel and Kevin as she teaches her signature folding technique (roll items into neat rectangles and stack them on their edges). Do her own small daughters tidy? Absolutely, and we get to see them do so: two plump toddlers deftly rolling and stacking in some pristine, enchanted space, where the camera visits Kondo in narrative cutaways, though she admits that her daughters go rogue sometimes, and undo her own work.

“I do scold them,” she says gently, though it’s hard to imagine the soft-spoken, beatific Kondo ever raising her voice.

At the Akiyamas, empty nesters married for more than four decades, there are rooms full of Christmas decoration­s, heavy on the nutcracker­s, along with his baseball cards and her clothes, spilling out of closets, many of them with the tags still attached. After so many years together, they no longer chat much after dinner, Wendy tells us. At Frank and Matt’s, it’s Frank’s Power Rangers fan fiction, among other paper goods. Angela and Alishia, newlyweds in a new home, have a startling number of shoes. Margie, who lost her husband to cancer, must confront his clothing, a potent presence in the his-and-hers closet.

For Margie, the KonMari method, as it is known, is perhaps the most fraught; what among a beloved spouse’s objects would not spark joy? But Margie steels herself, carefully gathers up her husband’s things and begins to sort through them, until the camera finally, decorously, cuts away, leaving her to her own authentic grief wand breaking the relentless convention­s of reality TV.

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