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Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Fri Apr 08, 2016 9:40 am
by slog
This is going to sound really mundane after all the discussion of ethics and self discovery, but I thought the best part was about folding clothes. I think I was genuinely amazed when I found out a folded t-shirt could stand tall without collapsing. My dresser drawers are looking fine!

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jun 05, 2016 7:10 am
by confused
I recently read this book thinking I could still learn something even though I did a huge declutter years ago. Stuff still creeps back!

mostly I learnt that marie kondo possibly has a compulsive disorder (throwing out her families things when she was just a kid), but hey, if it works for her...!

but the spark joy/thanking your things actually works a little for me. It sounds a bit new-agey nonsense, but I find just taking a moment to think about the object I'm discarding... why do I have it, did it work for me, why have I kept it? I find reflecting on it helps me not replace it with other crap!

And I took spark joy to be gives me joy or has a purpose. My iron doesn't spark joy at all but it serves the purpose of making me look less like a crumpled scarecrow!

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jun 05, 2016 11:26 am
by FBeyer
The thing about talking with your socks; It's not new age, it's been practiced since ancient Greece.
In its original form it was called Negative Visualization:
http://lifehacker.com/5847931/negative- ... ready-have

I always recommend that people read A Guide to the Good Life by Irvine before the KonMari book. Her crazy ideas make sense if you see them from a different perspective than that of a crazy Japanese woman who loves stacking and folding her possessions.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jun 05, 2016 9:00 pm
by inchicago
I read this book as part of a book club. The first third was an advertisement for her business. I got out maybe out maybe one or two things out of the book. A different way to fold my socks! The whole deal with "does this spark joy", well, probably it doesn't, but some things are necessities and I'm not going to run and lout and replace them so they have a pretty color or pattern on them that makes me happy. I couldn't believe she came out with a second book, but milking if for all it's worth she is with her five minutes of fame.

Sorry this sounds so negative, but really, this book makes it seem like people are really, really stupid, which may or not be true.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2016 2:15 am
by FBeyer
inchicago wrote:...Sorry this sounds so negative, but really, this book makes it seem like people are really, really stupid, which may or not be true.
I gave your post some very serious thought. And after hours upon hours of contemplation I can't find fault in your argumentation. People who don't like the same books as you are unintelligent, it cannot be any other way :lol:

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2016 7:26 am
by inchicago
FBeyer wrote: I gave your post some very serious thought. And after hours upon hours of contemplation I can't find fault in your argumentation. People who don't like the same books as you are unintelligent, it cannot be any other way :lol:
Oh no! That's not how I meant my post to come across at all! :(

I meant that I felt the author was making people sound like they are stupid, not that people are stupid from reading the book. Trust me, I'm not that mean-spirited or judgmental. Sorry you thought that. :(

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2016 12:52 pm
by Ego
Soon you can be certified in the Kondo method. $1,500 for a three-day session.

One of my favorite feature writers wrote a very funny Kondo piece in the New York Times magazine.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/magaz ... stuff.html

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2016 2:18 pm
by BRUTE
oh a cute japanese lady has an idea that isn't bonkers. let's fetishize her and commercialize everything she said.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2016 5:59 pm
by jennypenny
That article is funny ... "At Conference, I met women who organize basements. I met women who organize digital clutter. I met women who organize photos. I met women who categorized themselves as “solopreneurs,” which, what’s that now? I met a woman who organizes thoughts, and please don’t move onto the next sentence until you’ve truly absorbed that: I met a woman who charges $100 per hour for the organization of thoughts. I heard the word “detritus” pronounced three different ways. I met a woman in camouflage (though the invitation begged us to confine ourselves to our native business-casual), who carried a clipboard and called herself Major Mom, and instead of an organizer she calls herself a liberator, like in Falluja."

Honestly, this sounds like a hot business that suited to ERE-types.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2016 6:26 pm
by Ego
Taffy Brodesser-Akner is a wickedly funny writer. I discovered her by stumbling upon this article in GQ and have since followed her on twitter:

http://www.gq.com/story/sugar-daddies-explained

Maybe another ERE income stream idea? :lol: She also took her Hasidic mom to a stoner convention in Colorado.

http://www.gq.com/story/got-high-with-mom-hempcon

Sometimes I think the greatest loss from the death of print media will be that people like her will find other things to do. I sure hope she doesn't become a Kondo-organizer.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sat Jul 09, 2016 12:13 pm
by fiby41
jacob wrote: Each discard-fest begins with dumping all the like-kinds in the house on the floor and then going through it all. So it's not a room by room approach or a drawer by drawer approach. It's a class by class approach.
This is also how I decluttered books May 15. Stacked them one on top of the other on the floor.

Then sorted them into stacks based on:

study/non-study.
Study: Further into which exam they were for, so I could take them to the right reseller.
Notebooks/textbooks.
Notebooks into: Used up/Unused pages that can be spiral bound to make new notebooks.
Keep/discard.
Discard pile into: Resell/scrap.

I also made a list which is also in the journal to keep track of depreciation cost: viewtopic.php?t=6084#p92938

Only regrets are:
Should have kept few of the books which I had made many notes on for their sentimental value and later back referencing.
Should have sold remote controlled car which is still occuping 1 cu ft space for the figurative pennies on the dollar to the prospective buyer.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2017 7:48 pm
by Ego
.
THE LIFE-CHANGING MAGIC OF DECLUTTERING IN A POST-APOCALYPTIC WORLD

http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultur ... ptic-world

Image

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Mar 12, 2017 1:14 pm
by jacob
There's an app now: https://konmari.com/app/ (iOS only)

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2019 12:06 pm
by jacob

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2019 1:35 pm
by Scott 2
BRUTE wrote:
Thu Jul 07, 2016 2:18 pm
oh a cute japanese lady has an idea that isn't bonkers. let's fetishize her and commercialize everything she said.
The show doubles down. They even made the autoplay on hover moan.

My wife said the message is toned down from her books.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jan 06, 2019 12:59 pm
by TopHatFox
jennypenny wrote:
Wed Apr 06, 2016 5:10 pm
We're *not* minimalists. We're preppers/pseudo-homesteaders, so I aim for "Is this a part of the plan or vital to the functioning of team jennypenny?" Some things are cumbersome but necessary for accomplishing what we want to accomplish, like gardening supplies, sports equipment, supplies for my altoids tins, etc. Other things are part of our prep plan, so as long as they clearly check a box on that plan, I find a place for them. My plan is specific though--so many months of food, which kinds, a list of tools and dups, a list of supplies and how much of each I want--you get the idea. If I want three months of stored water and five years of water purifying ability, then I have to find a place for the bottles and the berkey supplies. I don't fret as long as the plan is clear. Where I struggle is with the 'just in case' stuff. I keep old blankets and bedding in case we ended up with a house full of family in a Sandy-type emergency. Same with old clothes that are functional (like coats and shoes).

None of my preps 'spark joy' but they definitely give me peace of mind. I can't imagine what Kondo would say about it though. Does a gas mask spark joy? Extra magazines? A hazmat suit?? :lol:
you’d really like fallout 4’s community building aspect. It’s like the Sims...but after a nuclear holocaust.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jan 06, 2019 1:13 pm
by Kriegsspiel
I've thought of jennypenny as one of the female characters from Fallout ever since she used to have an old-timey housewife as her avatar.

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Sun Jan 06, 2019 3:50 pm
by BRUTE
TopHatFox wrote:
Sun Jan 06, 2019 12:59 pm
you’d really like fallout 4’s community building aspect. It’s like the Sims...but after a nuclear holocaust.
too bad they never made a sequel after Fallout 2

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Mon Jan 07, 2019 11:48 am
by vexed87
BRUTE wrote:
Sun Jan 06, 2019 3:50 pm
too bad they never made a sequel after Fallout 2
Burn!

Re: The KonMari method

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2019 2:40 pm
by jennypenny
I'll have to try Fallout (although right now I'm a fangirling for Astrid from BFV).