Tackle it Tuesday – My Bathroom Shelves

In the bathroom that Kaitlyn and I share, I have a deep recess in the wall with shelves that I use to store all my makeup and skincare stuff. I never meant to let it get this bad. The storage cabinets with the multiple drawers seemed like such a good idea at first, I would have one drawer for face makeup, one drawer for eye makeup, one drawer for lip makeup, etc. Everything would stay neatly in it’s drawer and I’d always know where everything was.

Yeah, right. Not only have I failed at keeping the drawers organized, but I have all this big stuff that doesn’t fit in the drawers that ends up piled up in FRONT of the drawers. Which means I can’t OPEN the drawers. I’m going to show you something that causes me all kinds of embarrassment any time someone comes over here and needs to use my bathroom:

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And here’s my biggest problem, bigger even than these shelves – I can’t throw things away if they still seem useful. For example, I have lipsticks I bought that seemed great at the store but turned out to be the totally wrong color at home. How can I justify throwing away a lipstick I only used once or twice? It seems so completely environmentally irresponsible. And yet, I don’t think people at Goodwill are looking to buy lipstick that has touched someone else’s mouth. Right?

So let’s assume I’m going to clean out those shelves. What do I do with the stuff that’s still good but that I don’t want? Anyone have any ideas? This is a Tackle that needs all the help it can get!

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Tackle It Tuesday – Trying to Achieve Inbox Zero

Tackle It Tuesday Meme Tackle It Tuesday posts are usually about getting something done around the house, but I’m using it today to discuss a problem I have that is much, much bigger than just a messy house – my email inboxes. My inboxes are the bane of my existence. Everyone in my family and most of my close friends have, at one time or another, had to listen to me talk about how I cannot get caught up on email. I use Gmail, which lets me create folders to put messages in, or labels to mark what messages in my inbox are for, and I’ve tried. Believe me, I’ve tried.

And to make it worse, I have three Gmails. One for Table for Five, one for MomReviews, and one for MomCooks. Gmail lets me combine all three into one inbox if I want, but with hundreds of messages a day coming into all three, it just got stressful seeing that many messages all in one place!

My ultimate goal is to achieve Inbox Zero. Inbox Zero is the creation of Merlin Mann of 43 Folders, a site about finding the time and attention to do creative work. In 2006, Merlin created the Inbox Zero Series on 43 Folders as a way of  “looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way.”  A video of a presentation he made at a Google Tech Talk on July 23, 2007 has become internet-famous, and for a good reason – it’s inspiring.

So, when I thought about a Tackle It Tuesday post for today, I knew right away that I not only wanted to write about tackling email, but also DO IT.  I’m not going to complete this task today, but I’m going to start today and I’m not going to stop until I’ve learned a way to make Inbox Zero work for me. Not just because I need it for me, but because I’m pretty sure my family and friends would like it if I would just stop complaining about my dang email already :P

If you tackled a project this week, just add a comment and add your link below.

Here is a fun thumbnail style linky…

Tackle It Tuesday – Books and Bedroom

PART 1. THE BOOKS: It started with a notice at our township library that they were having a used books drive. All I had to do was pull my car up to the curb and volunteers would unload as many books as I wanted to bring in. With Chris out of town on a business trip, I wanted to do something to surprise him when he got back, the way he builds me a piece of furniture every time I go to BlogHer. And the fact is, I’m a book hoarder. I was hanging on to decades of books, stacked three boxes high in our basement. That notice at the library was the jump start I needed.

I set aside 4 big packing boxes from product review deliveries and started sorting through the boxes in the basement. I made piles to keep, piles to donate, and piles to throw away. As a book lover, it’s almost painful for me to throw away a book, but if I came across one with a torn off cover or the beginnings of mildew, out it went. Into the keep pile went everything by my favorite authors – Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Jonathon Kellerman, Janet Evanovich, J.D. Robb, Patricia Cornwell, and into the donate pile went everything by authors I liked but didn’t love enough to give space to on my shelves – Tami Hoag, Sandra Brown, Lisa Gardner. I reminded myself that if I got in the mood to read something by those authors, I could get it at the library.

I filled up all four of those large packing boxes, plus three more of the original boxes from the basement. I tossed out several boxes that were so old, I knew I had used them to move books from our apartment to our first house, FOURTEEN YEARS AGO. I filled the trunk and back seat of the car with those seven boxes and drove to the library. You should have seen the look on the librarian’s faces! Apparently not that many people had noticed the announcement about the book drive. They said bring in my used books any time, they sell them in their used bookstore for fifty cents or a dollar, and the funds go back into the library. So, I went home and filled up four more boxes and drove back and dropped those off too. I didn’t get any pictures though :(

And you know what? I don’t miss any of those books at all. But it sure felt good to finally get rid of stuff I didn’t need that other people will want and that will help my library too!

PART 2. THE BEDROOM: Chris came home from his three week business trip last Saturday night, and besides surprising with the books, I wanted the house to be especially clean. I’ve written several times about what a slob I am, and I’m not a very good housekeeper, either. Chris is the one who does the picking up, and I didn’t want him walking in the door after sleeping on a plane all night and feel the need to start cleaning. So I got up early Saturday morning, told the kids that they WERE going to help and were NOT going to complain, and we set to work.

While Ryan was cleaning the kitchen and Nathan was cleaning the bathroom, I decided to tackle the mess that was our bedroom. I took a bunch of “before” photos specifically to post here so you could see just how bad it was (click to embiggen):

And then I started on one side of the room armed with Swiffer cloths and Pledge, a trash bag and another big “donate” box. The first thing I did was fill a smaller cardboard box with about 20 magazines that were piled up on the floor by the bed gathering dust. I didn’t even stop to look at them or tear out any articles to keep, I just put them in that recycling box and didn’t look back. That huge box at the foot of my bed was filled with clothes I had been tossing aside knowing they will be too small in the Spring, so I filled the “donate” box with those.

I dusted and vacuumed, I used the hose attachment to get the dust bunnies around the edge of the bed frame and between the wall and the dresser. I pulled out all my shoes and put three pairs in the donate box and one in the trash (trust me, they were beyond saving). I cleaned off the top of my dresser and my bedside table, and finally I pulled paperbacks I didn’t want anymore off of my bookshelf and tossed those in yet another donate box. When I was done, the bedroom looked like this:

The last couple of months of my life have been one surprise after another. I don’t know why, but I’m changing things for the better. I’m letting go, I’m making tough choices, I’m sticking to my plans. And you know what? It feels really, really good. Did you tackle a project this past week? Write a post about it and link it up on Tackle it Tuesday at 5 Minutes for Mom!