The magical power of tidying up by Marie Kondo

The magical power of tidying up by Marie Kondo is a text that deals with a topic directly related to personal growth, ordering the space around us helps to rearrange our life.

The magical power of tidying up by Marie Kondo

Reordering is like engaging in a dialogue with oneself through objects.

Marie Kondo

The magical power of tidying up (find it here on Amazon) is a practical book, which is not lost in useless chatter but clearly defines the solution to a problem.



Having and being able to maintain order around oneself is a concrete possibility of benefiting from one mental cleansing which is reflected in a higher quality life.

Marie Kondo - Creator of the Konmari method

Marie Kondo she is a thirty year old Japanese woman who has made order her job, she even obtained a degree in this specific sector, studying for years and trying to find the best method to put into practice and to teach in her tidying lessons.

It is not just a question of home economics: the magical power of tidying up aims to bring in those who follow it an order that is not only external but physical, as if living in order were a real ritual that produces spiritual advantages by freeing the mind. , severing sick links with the past and realizing what is important and useful today.

Whoever tidies up his house tries to tidy up his life.


The Konmari method

From her studying and re-studying Marie has understood that there is no method that works and that it is sporadic and free of programming, its procedure must be followed in one go in a maximum of a few months.


To begin with, we need to know that we do not proceed from room to room but from category to category, for example the books scattered around the house, to evaluate what is to keep and what does not "excite us more" by evaluating what is useful and what is a useless use of space.

The most practical phase consists in filling black bags with useless things, never used, kept and left to gather dust for too long.

What is accumulated should not be passed on to relatives or friends who would end up feeling obliged to keep the recycling of others and be even more submerged and suffocated by objects, but rather given to charity, if in good condition, to thrift shops or libraries depending on what is being released .

The method described in the magical power of tidying develops in several stages or categories:

# 1 Get dressed

All clothes must be taken out of the closets as well carefully evaluated, once you put aside what you no longer use, the survivors are divided by category:


  • Top parts (shirts, sweaters)
  • Bottom parts (pants, skirts)
  • Things that need to be hung up (jackets, suits, coats)
  • socks
  • Underwear
  • Bags
  • Accessories (scarves, belts, hats)
  • Swimwear
  • Shoes

Once the closet has been emptied of what is not needed, it will be there space for clothes for any temperature and you will no longer need to make the change of season being overwhelmed by clothes you don't know where to store.


# 2 Books

Once the wardrobes are in place, we move on to the bookcases, another sore point.

All the books whose reading has been postponed indefinitely or which did not excite you or were useful to you, must be excluded and given away so that it remains a selection, a small "Olympus", including all those books that have really changed you and that you loved.

# 3 Documents

At home we have lots of documents, photocopies of documents, bills, contracts, medical prescriptions, which clutter up but cannot be thrown away and therefore need to be reorganized effectively.

Once again it is worthwhile divide them by category in special containers so as not to have clutter and to be able to find what you need as quickly as possible.

# 4 Miscellaneous items

  • CD and DVD
  • Body care products
  • Cosmetics
  • Accessories
  • Valuables (bank books, credit cards)
  • Electronic devices (digital cameras, cables and anything else electronic)
  • Utensils for daily use (stationery, sewing utensils)
  • Products for daily use (non-durable consumer items such as medicines, household cleaning products, handkerchiefs)
  • Kitchen utensils, dishes and more

If there are specific objects related to hobbies they should be considered separately as a category of their own.



# 5 Small change

All the coins found in clothes, bags and any other place around the house are to be put in a single coin holder and left there until it is full, so as to set aside a small but important nest egg.

# 6 Remember

They remain last in the book the magical power of tidying up, because they are the hardest to let go but we live in the present.

As bright as our past was, it is in no way possible to relive it and the emotions we feel now are the most important thing.

Therefore, even in the case of an object that contains a particular emotional value, the same rule used previously applies, you have to take it in your hands and ask him: "Do you still make me happy?".

Select by category, in the correct order e keep only what makes you happy. Do it in one go, in a short time, completely.

If you have followed the method of Marie Kondo you will realize what the right amount is, when it is enough and you have thrown away all the futile thanks to instinct you will understand what that moment is.

Suddenly, there will be a click in your head and you will say, "Ah, this is the amount of stuff I need to live without problems!"

Do you recommend the magical power of tidying up?

The magical power of tidying up undoubtedly falls within the ranks of books useful for one's personal improvement.

If you often find yourself having to decide or select items in your workplace or at home, only to discover that many of them are not all that useful, the magical power of tidying is a book I recommend you read.

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