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Clutter Bother You? Don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater! 5 VERY helpful tips…

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We’ve all got piles of stuff. And it gets really bothersome, especially for someone who aspires to being organized. But ask yourself, “Really! What is ‘organized’?”

Yes, I know there are books and courses on being clutter free… even organizations similar to AA that want you to go on a 12 step program. From the results of a Google search, you’d think it was a pathological psychological mental disease.

There are extremes: I’ve known people who barely have a pathway wide enough for a thin person to pass through their house through the piles of clutter. And I’ve seen a family sell EVERYTHING they own and dispose of all memories/traces of their past in an effort to live a lifestyle unattached to physical items. I’m NOT writing this article to or about those folks.

My parents weren’t exactly polar opposites but my Dad was unemotional and unattached to stuff… including the things that normally would document a person’s life. My Mom was creative and loved to gather things that made life more fun and documented our lives. I kind of got the archivist gene passed onto me. I could always be better organized but my life is not a mess. Most of us just want to be a little more organized… but at the risk of what? It’s a common fear to clean up the clutter because “What if you throw something important away?!!!!” At one level of intensity or another we all feel this to some degree.

As humans, we are wired with two instincts, usually: 1. To gather things that are important to our lives and 2. protect and save those important items. That’s what history is made of. Imagine a world or society without history. Imagine a family without history.

Put, you are right, we don’t need to keep everything. So how do you choose your priorities when you want to start eliminating things? Here are 5 VERY helpful hints:

  1. Important legal, vital documents – Gather your passports, birth certificates, wedding certificates, christening documents, driver licenses etc.
  2. Other major important legal docs – IRS returns, car ownership slips, titles on real estate, bank records, loan docs
  3. Historical documents – college degrees and certificates, important love letters, important letters from family, historical personal and family news clippings
  4. The most important photos! Ancestor’s photos, weddings, family portraits, photos of important events
  5. What has financial, historical or emotional value to your family? Ask your kids; they will have a different perspective than you.

With a little imagination, you can easily substitute business/work/office terms in this list.

Not only do I strongly urge you with all my heart not to throw out the baby with the bath water, but I’m going to ask you to do one more BIG thing in the interest of preserving your story (or your company’s vital info) and emergency/disaster preparedness, especially important if you live in area prone to natural disasters:

Make a copy on a LaserWriter of the docs included in your list (above) and

  1. put a copy in a safe place off premises (out of your home or office) and
  2. send a copy out of town to another friend or relative to keep for you.

Just having a copy on a hard drive isn’t archival. Having a copy on a CD or hard drive will not be readable by the technology in 10 years. It will be so outdated that you won’t be able to retrieve the info.

An option, however, are some on-line storage services that allow you to download your docs onto their server. They also provide “redundancy” a favorite word for multiple locations of storage so no one location could get knocked out by a disaster. But be careful about information security. Storage services can run from $10 per year to $25 per month!

This suggestion may make it possible for you to reopen your business after a disaster! This may be the suggestion that saves your family history even if you are blown to OZ and in the middle of total devastation. Think of the peace of mind!

Sign up now for free preservation tips at the top of the Home Page.

Scott M. Haskins, was dubbed “The Preservation Coach” by NewsWire. Free Spanish language material can be found at www.salvesuscosas.com.


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