Orderly Places: Getting Organized to Enjoy More Time, Space and Freedom in Your Home

Orderly Places: Getting Organized to Enjoy More Time, Space and Freedom in Your Home

by Mary Frances Ballard
Orderly Places: Getting Organized to Enjoy More Time, Space and Freedom in Your Home

Orderly Places: Getting Organized to Enjoy More Time, Space and Freedom in Your Home

by Mary Frances Ballard

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Overview

*Are your mornings spent frantically looking for the misplaced keys or the field trip form?
*Do you have trouble deciding what to keep and what to let go?
*Are you too embarrassed by the way your house looks to invite family and friends in for a visit?
*Do you have stacks of things and no where to put them?
*Have you missed paying a bill on time because you could not find the monthly statement?
*Have you forgotten an appointment or to pick up a child from school or ball practice?
 Orderly Places offers you the strategies for when, where and how to overcome disorganization in your spaces and schedules.  Practical step-by-step instructions and organizing tips are given for organizing every room in your home.  Time management solutions are provided for schedules that are not efficient or effective.  
If you want to create a more peaceful, comfortable and organized environment or find more time in your day for the activities you love, then you are not alone.  
Learn how to get organized and be free to enjoy those things now.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781600376849
Publisher: Morgan James Publishing
Publication date: 01/01/2010
Pages: 292
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

When Mary Frances’s mother told her to clean up her room, she could have never imagined it would lead to her becoming a professional organizer.  But that is exactly what happened.  It did take a few more lessons, many more years and considerable metamorphosis but today she is living proof of the power of a mother’s persuasion.
As a professional organizer, Mary Frances owns Orderly Places a business whose mission is to encourage, assist and educate others in organizing solutions.  She is a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers, the National Study Group on Chronic Disorganization and Faithful Organizers
As a public speaker she presents programs and workshops to business, professional and clubs and community organizations with humor and practical applications that even a spouse can understand.  Using her experiences as a classroom teacher, wife, mother and grandmother, she appeals to all age groups, sexes and occupations.
Mary Frances is a Newport News, Virginia native and a graduate of James Madison Universitywith degrees in Home Economics and Education.  In her leisure time, she is a quilter and has written and led Bible Studies.  She and her husband, Eddie, live in Newport News with their border collie, Kasey.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

What is in Our Spaces and Schedules?

The lawn at Andrea's house was green and manicured, the shrubs trimmed and a few bunches of blooming flowers greeted me as I entered the home. Inside was a different story. The dining room table was layered with stacks of old newspapers, magazines, purchases from local stores still in their bags, craft projects for the Boys Scouts and piles of mail, old and new.

And that was just the beginning. Every room was bulging with stuff. Toys were scattered around the edges of toy boxes, clothing was jammed into closets and drawers, and there was no room to walk in the garage much less contain a vehicle.

Was this the home of a non-caring parent, a lazy adult or an overworked single mom? No, this was an upper middle class family that simply had so many misplaced things and was overwhelmed with what to do with all of it.

Andrea not only had a house full of too many things, but her schedule was packed with responsibilities. She was a part time educator, a wife and mother of young boys, a scout troop leader, a neighborhood watch liaison, a garden club member, etc.

Like many of us, she was very talented and gifted in so many ways that she was often called on to help out in many capacities. Being the generous and accommodating soul that she was, it was almost impossible to turn down requests to assist or even lead others in their activities. She was committed to doing too many things and she didn't know how to make her schedule better.

Our Spaces and Things Now

Have you ever become frustrated because you could not put your hands on a receipt you needed? Is there ever a hunt for a child's missing shoe or the car keys as you get ready to leave in the morning? And what about that bill that needs to be paid and you can't remember where you saved it? Trust me, you are not alone and I speak from experience. Those scenarios play over and over across the country every day and yes some have been taken from the pages of my life.

Many of us can relate to the dilemma of not knowing where to put the things we have collected over the years. In our affluence, we have so much that we assume a bigger house with lots of walk in closets, a 2 or 3 car garage, a bigger basement or attic, or as last resort a rented storage facility will fix the problem. I have found this not to be so in my visits to homes small and large, old and new, maintained and neglected.

What Happened to Our Homes?

The world and especially America has changed drastically since the post war era when I was born. I grew up in a custom built home, small but considered sufficient for that generation. My sister and I shared a bedroom with a 3 foot wide closet and a chest that had 4 drawers. It held all of our clothes, toys, games and other personal belongings. It also hid our cat when we wanted to bring it in the house without our parents knowing about it. We even dressed that poor thing in our doll's clothes. (PETA, I have reformed.)

Today that space would hardly hold the clothes of one child, much less the countless other possessions. We have been convinced by the bombardment of stimuli in many forms that we need more things. While I applaud capitalism and enjoy the wonderful advances in our quality of life, accumulating more and more things has brought on a new set of challenges.

Our Schedules Now

Our daily lives have become flooded with more and more things to do but we are not doing those things we really would love to do. We want to avail ourselves of every opportunity out there for growth, leisure, motivation, inspiration, etc. And we want all of that for our children, too. In our effort to excel, we have multi-tasked ourselves into a revolving door that seems to have no end.

It is not uncommon for a mom to prepare herself and her children for a day away from home at work and school and never get back there until evening hours when the chauffeuring and errands are completed. We have convinced ourselves that no opportunity should be missed that could broaden our lives or that of our children. In doing so we have lost the greatest opportunity of all, that of spending time building relationships in our families. There will never be more than 24 hours in our days but we have overscheduled them as if there were no tomorrow.

What Happened to our Schedules?

As our physical lives have become crowded with things, our schedules have become crowded with obligations, responsibilities and opportunities that our forefathers could never have dreamed. The modernization of our lifestyles has given us more time away from the menial tasks of our grandparents but at the same time it has left us with an emptiness and inner drive to do more.

We are obligated to support our families and have responsibilities in caring for them, but we have engaged in opportunities far beyond the basic things needed to provide an adequate and satisfying lifestyle.

In fact, we are not content with adequate but want to do more and more for others as well as ourselves. There is no end to the educational, musical, physical, social and spiritual classes, courses, groups and opportunities for us to join. And it is so hard to choose which are best for our children and us individually. We over commit our time and find ourselves exhausted at the end of every day without having done what we really wanted to do.

Future Generations

Every parent wants their children to learn more, earn more and have more than they have experienced. That is human nature. And we have set the example for them ourselves by stretching every resource we have to accumulate and do all of those things. What we have not learned is that more of those things have often led to more debt, more stress, more mess, and more frustration and less freedom.

Our budgets are straining and our spaces simply cannot contain in an orderly manner what we now own. Our schedules are filled to overflowing and we don't have the time to build relationships with those we love because are doing so many things.

We are prisoners in the problem of what to do to correct these situations. We need freedom to live comfortably and orderly in our spaces and freedom to enjoy the time we have with our loved ones as well as the activities in our schedules.

Is Help Is On The Way?

It is not surprising that television programs, magazine articles and other books on organizing, decluttering, redesigning spaces, planning our day, our meals and our entertainment have become so popular in the last few years. (Even I get inspired with Clean Sweep, Mission Organization, Martha Stewart and Rachel Ray.) In addition a relatively new career, professional organizing, has come on the scene. We are professionals who provide individuals with assistance and training in strategies that create order in the house and time in our day.

Now we have new sections in department and discount stores devoted exclusively to organizing products, and specialty stores are available now that carry only containers and other organizing supplies. All of these are to help us better control the things in our homes.

There are more courses on time management than there is time to take them and more styles of calendars, planners, notepads, blackberries, blueberries, or whatever berries, etc. than one could use in a lifetime of planning. But they have not solved our over scheduling dilemma.

We must admit we are smothered by our many things and activities and we need to get set free. We need to get organized. The purpose of this book is to help you get organized in your spaces and schedules and enjoy the freedom that brings.

The Solution Begins in Our Heads

One of the most frequent features couples look for a new home today is how much storage space is available. Bigger is not always better and it is not the answer to better organization. More hours in a day would give us time but for what? It might help for a little while, but the same problems will manifest themselves over again in the new space or schedule. Why?

Lack of organization is not a space or time problem, it is a head problem.

Think About It ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

Think about the space you have now. Unless you have downsized from your previous home, you probably had adequate space when you first moved in. Like the Field of Dreams, the empty spaces began to be filled until now there may be just too much stuff for the space.

The same is true of time. You have always had the same amount of hours in your day but there seems to be less now. The older you get, the more you try to cram in each day as if it may be your last or you might miss out on something good. It is hard for you to stop filling each block of time with another activity and yet you are not reaching those goals you set for yourselves.

Obviously an expanding family requires more time and space and babies have their own demands like no one else in the family. We will discuss those concerns and the challenges children bring to the equation in later chapters.

We cannot blame them, however, for all of the organizational problems in the home. After all, they haven't even learned how to use those 36 shapes of cookie cutters or the melon ball shaper or how to use the remote as we sit in a fog switching channels all evening. (And we won't even mention the items in the most sacred of places — the garage.) Well, yes we will mention it. After all, how many flat head screwdrivers does it take to change a light bulb?

CHAPTER 2

What is Organizing?

The definition of being organized means different things to different people. We each have our own organizing personalities just as we differ in learning styles, talents and skills. But there are basic organizing principles and strategies that work for everyone, and likewise there are common problems that can keep any of us from being organized.

We live in a world that was created with orderly systems. It is so orderly that we set our clocks by it and send men into space with precision timing. Gravity always works, and unfortunately it sometimes proves itself in our bodies.

We have an inborn desire to be orderly, too. Normal babies learn specific developmental tasks in a given sequence. They learn to say, "No" before "Yes" which we are now discovering is a good thing and are rehearsing again as adolescence approaches — "Just say NO". We develop routines that are comfortable to us, and we enjoy spaces that accommodate our lifestyles in an orderly fashion.

Regardless of your personality, intelligence, income, talents, race or religion, I believe you were created by an orderly God to be an orderly person and you will never be content until you can see that fulfilled in your life. Order brings peace and stability to the most humble or the most ostentatious environments and freedom to our lives

Organizing is possible.

When spaces are organized, items can be located within a minute, every item has a permanent and specific home, there are not too many items in any one space, and one can move about and use things efficiently and safely.

If there is order in our spaces, there is a much better chance for our schedules to be organized because time is not lost dealing with things. Lost items, misplaced items, missing items and items in the way require more upkeep and attention and steal our time It could be the Shakers had it figured out with their simple way of ordering their homes. I have often thought that if I could start my married life over I would use their decor as a guide for mine. The rooms had simple furnishings with quilts, a few other textiles and baskets as the decorations. With so much less in the room they were safe and orderly places that were much easier to maintain. I doubt they wasted time looking for things.

Organizing is a learned skill and behavior. Finding what organizing systems work for you may take some time and energy, some challenging decision making and some lifestyle changes, but it is possible to be successful at it. I am living proof of that.

Confession Time

Being a left brain and more logical personality, I think I have always been organized in my head. Even in college I made my bed every morning and kept my desk cleared so I could study without distraction.

But as a busy young mother with three children, two dogs (and various other short lived pets) and responsibilities at church and in the community, I allowed my schedule and things to accumulate in our home to the point where there was considerable clutter.

We are talking about lots of stuff and I was responsible for most of it. (Not all of it because we did have a garage at every house we lived in.) But I did have lots of hobbies and "collections". I was a home economics and education major in college which means I had 3 hours credit here and maybe 6 hours there on topics all related to home and housing. In other words, I graduated a jack of all trades and master of none. This created an interest in all kinds of things including craft projects and collecting of nostalgia. It also meant I could help others with lots of projects that took lots of my time.

Binging on Things

Some of you may remember macramé plant hangers, fabric flowers, painted skirts and stenciled hand towels. The country's bicentennial celebration came along with quilting, basket weaving and decorative pottery. Finally, I tried my hand at tole painting followed by watercolors.

And we are not done yet. There was the collecting of tin canisters, Precious Moments figurines, folk art angels and antique sewing notions and equipment. At one time I had a treadle sewing machine that we used as a lamp stand for lack of space for it.

The dining room was fondly called the Bermuda Triangle because once things went in there, they were rarely found again. (I think I mentioned another dining room table earlier. They are just too convenient for stuff.) Although that room was already crowded with a table, computer desk, china cabinet and large buffet, there was one corner vacant but not for long.

Camping Gone Astray

When my children were too young to know their parents were boring, we took them camping. Behind our 9 passenger station wagon (forerunner of the mini van) we pulled a pop up camper. On one summer weekend we went to the Shenandoah Valley to spend time at a lakeside campground.

While the kids were busy I took a trip to see the local scenery and found a great Hoosier cabinet for sale in an old barn. Later when I talked with my husband about buying it he asked where I would put it. My answer for that question was always, "I will make a space for it." The Lord knows there was precious little vacant space in that house, but I remembered the only empty corner in the dining room.

You might think that is the end of the story, but remember we were camping. My obsession with collecting even more stuff forced us to put some luggage in the camper, some packages on the carrying rack on top of the car and that tall cabinet in the back of the station wagon.

In order to accommodate it, we had to fold down all the seats but the bench in the front. Since there were seatbelts for three in there, the youngest of the three children sat between my husband and me and the other two were stuffed prone on each side of the cabinet on the 3 hour trip home. At least they could not be seen not wearing a seat belt.

Even with lots of stuff I was internally driven to be organized so I tried shuffling the things in the house around hoping it would look and function better. We all know how that was working for me.

Different Strokes (Order) for Different Folks

Your personality may be more right brain, creative and abstract allowing things to literally fall into place as you go about your business. And so you might assume that you will never be able to get or stay organized. The exact opposite is true. While your spaces may not look like everyone else's and your systems are very different, you can improve your situation.

Donna enjoyed doing her paperwork at her kitchen table although there was a nice office in her home. Unfortunately the calendars, notepads, etc. were always in the way at mealtime. We created a storage area for her supplies in a rolling cart that could be pulled away from the wall and over to the kitchen table when she was ready to use it. When it was time to eat, the cart was moved back to its home against the wall. While some might think she should have moved her paperwork to the home office, that was not her preference.

Organizing does not always look the same for everyone but it is possible for everyone to be organized.

Organizing As a Gift

Incredibly, God believes in organization as a gift. Trust me on this. In the Old Testament, II Kings 20:1 the prophet tells the king to put his house in order because tomorrow he will die. Any of you who have had to clear the estate of a deceased packrat can appreciate that verse of wisdom.

My father lived through the Great Depression and saved everything from books to bolts and silver coins to shirts (dozens still in original packaging). As my sisters and I sorted through his things after his death, I promised myself and my family that I would never put my children through that experience. It is physically, mentally and emotionally exhausting, not to mention time consuming. It was never his intent to burden us in that way but what little bit of cleaning out he would do from time to time was insufficient to take care of his lifetime habit of consuming and saving things.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Orderly Places"
by .
Copyright © 2009 Mary Frances Ballard.
Excerpted by permission of Morgan James Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements,
Introduction,
PART I The Problems in Organizing,
CHAPTER 1 What is in Our Spaces and Schedules?,
CHAPTER 2 What is Organizing?,
CHAPTER 3 What if You Are Disorganized?,
PART II Solutions for Organizing Any Space,
CHAPTER 4 The Starting Point,
CHAPTER 5 Identifying the Priorities,
CHAPTER 6 Applying the Principles,
CHAPTER 7 Making a Plan,
CHAPTER 8 Using the Organizing Process,
CHAPTER 9 Finding Places for Help,
CHAPTER 10 Keeping it Organized,
PART III Solutions for Organizing Specific Spaces,
CHAPTER 11 Paperwork and Mail,
CHAPTER 12 Bedrooms and Clothing,
CHAPTER 13 Children's Rooms,
CHAPTER 14 Kitchens,
CHAPTER 15 Bathrooms,
CHAPTER 16 Family Living Spaces,
CHAPTER 17 Dining Rooms,
CHAPTER 18 Entrances,
CHAPTER 19 Garages, Attics and Other Storage,
CHAPTER 20 Laundry Spaces,
CHAPTER 21 Hobbies, Collections and More,
CHAPTER 22 Guest Rooms and Family Office,
CHAPTER 23 Business Home Office,
PART IV Solutions for Organizing Time,
CHAPTER 24 Time Organizing Tools,
CHAPTER 25 Time Organizing Systems 2,
CHAPTER 26 Preventing Lost and Wasted Time,
Final Thoughts,
Organizing Resources,
About the Author,
Presentations for Your Organization,
Bonus,

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