As
I finished up a can of whey protein, I stood staring at a little plastic scoop
in my hand. And like every other human my brain quickly and frantically
searched for a use, a home, a reason to keep this odd little item that can only
be acquired by purchasing a (fairly) specific product. My brain cataloged all the client’s homes
that I‘ve found these in, in friend’s homes, in my own mother’s home (in the
utensil drawer when I was growing up - awwww). I thought ”Everyone seems to
have one in their kitchen - everyone.” My brain, feeling encouraged, continued
falsely assuming that it was growing momentum, “I could put in the sugar, the
flour, the baking soda, salt, and anything decanted really.” At last the fog
lifted.
Why
was my brain so frantically thinking of reasons to keep the little scoop?
Because it knows I’m well trained to resist such temptations and it had better
act quickly if the fate of that little scoop was to live in my home, possible
accumulating other little scoops, maybe someday getting a whole scoops drawer.
But that was not to be!
Once
I took control my brain turned on a dime and began down the familiar, well-worn
path: Where would it live? Doesn’t everything scoopable come with another
scoop? There’s nothing different between this scoop and a measuring spoon
(which has a lot more uses). Everyone has (at least!) one and I use the same
reasoning on them all. Conclusion: Goodbye little scoop!
It
got me thinking about my own habits. This is pretty much what I automatically
do when I encounter anything that I might want to keep, a cute button, an empty
sauce jar, the ribbon wrapped around my new dish towels, and the scoop in the
whey protein. All trash, really. Oh sure, appealing, eye catching trash but
trash just the same. So, what to do?
Everything
in my home passes the “keep test”, using the following questions:
Do
I need, use, or love it?
What
(very specifically) will I use it for?
When
will I wear it? Really??
Does
anything I own do the same job?
Where
will it live?
Is
it realistic to my lifestyle?
So
let’s take the items above and put them to the test:
A cute button:
Do
I need, use or love it?
Answer:
It’s cute.
What
would I use it for?
Answer:
------
Where
will it live?
Answer:
My sewing kit.
Is
it realistic to my (non-sewing, non-crafting, non-remembering that I have a
cute little button in my sewing kit) lifestyle?
FAIL!!!!
Goodbye cute, little button.
An empty sauce
jar:
Do
I need, use, love it?
Answer:
------
What
will I use it for?
Answer:
What WON’T I use it for??????!!!!!!
Specifically??
Answer:
----
Does
anything I own do the same job?
Answer:
Yeaaaahhhhh.
FAIL!!!!!
Goodbye empty sauce jar.
The ribbon
wrapped around my new dishtowels:
Seriously???????
FAIL!!!!!
Goodbye ribbon.
The
idea behind all of this is that you put some thought into an object before it
earns, that’s right, earns a place in
your home. Without thought, you’ll probably keep something you don’t really
want; you’re just not sure what to do with.
Put
everything to the test. It only takes an extra minute or so at first until it
becomes habit.
Give
a little thought to every little thing and before you know it you’re recycling
bin will be overflowing and your countertops will thank you for it!
The scoop that stopped me in my tracks |