SoulSpace update: what does your clutter represent?

soul cakeThese past few weeks, I have been working toward settling my frantic, to-do-list self down and finding inner peace.  I know that sounds grandiose and it’s probably really quite simple.  Sometimes clearing outer clutter helps clear inner clutter.  Sometimes giving myself permission to relax isn’t enough and I need outer permission to take it easy.  I need a guide.

I spend most of my time at home and therefore a calming, peaceful home environment that truly reflects my spirit is essential.  I was gifted the lovely book SoulSpace: Transform Your Home, Transform Your Life — Creating a Home That Is Free of Clutter, Full of Beauty, and Inspired by You by my friend Amy about a year ago and I loved using it to guide me toward a home that more reflects me and my family.  Now our 100-person bookclub that Amy started is on week 6, CREATE.  It is a stage all about manifesting.

Marianne Williamson’s introduction to the book says it so well: “SoulSpace is about more than how we decorate our homes; it’s about how we care for ourselves. It guides us into a deeper understanding of more than mere home decoration: it teaches us how to create a home that provides not only for our physical comfort but for our emotional comfort too.”

In their new book, Breathing Room: Open Your Heart by Decluttering Your Home, Melva Green and Lauren Rosenfeld write that “your heart is like a home. The home is like a heart. And you, my friend, can make both places open, light-filled, and a joy to reside in.”

They also wisely write that…

“Our physical clutter is simply a manifestation of the emotional clutter we carry inside. If we attempt to remove the physical clutter without consciously acknowledging the emotional clutter it represents, then two things might happen. First, we might resist decluttering altogether because of the natural urge to turn away from our painful feelings. Second, we may find that even if we have the courage to remove the clutter, if we don’t mindfully and compassionately acknowledge our feelings, the physical clutter will return, because the emotions that caused the clutter want and need to be acknowledged and will manifest as physical clutter again and again until we do so. In the first step, we also introduce you to the emotions that tend to generate clutter and teach you how to loosen their hold on your heart.”

Agap being_bf206So.

In beginning this process, I had to accept that I was feeling hugely overwhelmed by the task before me.  In our group, it’s been a very common theme.  We have gradually encouraged each other to shift those feelings of overwhelm toward mindfulness… letting our feelings be there and acknowledging that they are valid.  I have gone from there to anger (at my excess belongings and at myself for allowing it all in) to release and finally landed in peace.

What I’ve found my own piles and stacks to mean is that I was protecting myself “just in case” and also I was surrounding myself with past letters and photos because I couldn’t quite let go just yet.

For example, I was hanging on to 10 extra 11×9 baking dishes because there was still this idea in my mind that I might become more “Martha Stewart”ish and host large gatherings.  Most of the kitchen items fell into this category, like they were all jumbled together in every cabinet or drawer just in case a party is called for.  Well, I realized that I am not likely to ever want that party! I like simplicity and comfort.  I like having one family over at a time so we can really focus on each other and talk.  And it’s the same for having 5 sets of sheets, a closet full of clothes I’ll never wear, maternity clothes and baby clothes sitting in bins in the garage, etc.  It was all a hypothetical life and I felt great letting that fall away, accepting the simplicity of who I am and what I want our home and our life to be in this stage.

As far as keeping sentimental items, I had to draw the line somewhere.  Middle school notes passed between classes evoked good memories, but I know that those thoughts are there regardless of whether I keep the shoebox of papers or not.  They already became part of me when I got them in the first place.  I enjoyed reading them for 15 minutes, reflected about how much I have grown stronger and more sure of myself over the years, and tossed them.  Same for old journals, yearbooks, cards, and letters.  I don’t need 100 cards signed by my grandparents… one or two can represent all.  I condensed 12 boxes of memorabilia down to 1, mainly deciding to keep certain things so that someday I can show them to my daughter.  Also, I may make a collage with some of these special things so I can look at them and enjoy them much more than I ever could when they were hiding in a closet.

Going through these items mindfully allowed me also to uncover some aspects of myself that I want to incorporate much more of in my life.  I’d forgotten how much I enjoy music.  I was reminded that Judaism is hugely important to who I am and I want to make sure I live and embody those values as a role model for my daughter.  (But I don’t need to keep ALL the books I had and donated them to our synagogue for someone else to study.) I let go of lots of sewing projects, but I did keep a couple in case I find time to explore that hobby again because it used to bring me much peacefulness and time to contemplate.

Eliminating the excess became an analogy for the realization I had when I was a child at a slumber party… that even if I don’t have my security blanket and special pillow, I am still quite capable and completely safe.  “Stuff” can’t really keep us safe.

Bliss framed-001CREATE and the final two phases, Elevate and Celebrate, will finish giving us the opportunity to bring those important aspects of ourselves into physical manifestation in our homes.  It’s about displaying those precious photos, living with your true self, being surrounded by a positive, inspiring, and enriching environment every single day.

Xorin Balbes promised at the beginning of his book that “once you face your belongings, confront your fears, unclutter your space, and discover your personal desires and truths, you will have more energy, feel more inspired, access more creativity, and find that you can harness your creativity and find refuge, renewal, and splendor within your own four walls.”

So far it’s all remarkably true.

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9 Responses to SoulSpace update: what does your clutter represent?

  1. I’m SO celebrating you Naomi! I literally feel the spaciousness this project has created for you – internally and externally. It’s like being able to draw a slow full breath and be really present with it. Fabulous!
    Deborah Weber recently posted…It May Be February But I’m No SmellfungusMy Profile

  2. This is so true!! “Our physical clutter is simply a manifestation of the emotional clutter we carry inside” Couldn’t have said it better. I learned 3 years ago when we moved that nothing is as soothing to the soul as letting go of things that serve no other purpose other than to clutter house and mind. What no longer needs to be needs to move on. I’ve moved out so much and in its place there has been this little sanctuary created which I call home. 🙂

  3. Kathy says:

    I am on the decluttering path too. Always a challenge with four kids and husband. Yesterday I rounded up bags of clothes to donate. It felt so good! The journey continues. Thanks for sharing!
    Kathy recently posted…Hello Again. A little raw and authentic video.My Profile

    • Naomi says:

      I just read something so interesting about decluttering with kids… here’s the excerpt from Breathing Room: Open Your Heart by Decluttering Your Home by Melva Green, Lauren Rosenfeld.
      “For adults, physical clutter is a manifestation of their internal clutter—consuming emotions and indecision. But for children, cluttering is a natural result of the powerful blossoming of consciousness. If someone has been walking the planet for less than one or two decades, they are still wide-eyed. They are not trying to order life or make sense of it. They are in it, absorbing every bit of life—taking in what works, tossing what doesn’t. They’re exploring, searching, and wondering. The result of this vast emotional, intellectual, and spiritual openness to life? That’s right. Mess. Clutter. But it’s not a testament to a negative mental state; it’s evidence of their positive emotional, intellectual, and spiritual condition.”
      “According to Jean Piaget in The Psychology of the Child, children’s brains will not allow them to witness the world from another person’s perspective.”
      I could site more but isn’t that fascinating? I feel so much better.

  4. Amy Putkonen says:

    Naomi,

    I so love the way that you are doing this book study. You are sharing such a rich experience and it inspires me every time I read your words. Thank you for being such an incredible human being. I am lucky to know you and SO GLAD you told me about this book! 🙂
    Amy Putkonen recently posted…Happy Chinese New Year: Three Goats Bring HarmonyMy Profile

  5. I think my clutter represents anxiety that I might need these things some day, and my value that I shouldn’t waste resources. I imagine altering a torn sheet into a new shape, to put on a smaller bed, for example. I think about repairing things much more often than I actually do it. I have an old bread machine that I used often for years, and I wore out the replacement pan. Now I don’t want to buy another one of those, and we have another bread machine, but I have a hard time throwing away such an emotionally significant thing. Because it’s broken, it’s not good enough to donate either, and I hate the idea of hefting into the trash. I’ve made little progress on my decluttering goal, but I have had so much else to work on this month, and I did finally add some decorations to our house, and I feel more ownership of it.

    • Naomi says:

      I think it’s true that we keep “junk” because we hate to picture it in a landfill somewhere. For me, I felt better when I knew it could be used somehow. Sheets and towels went to an animal shelter. Broken appliances went to someone who can repair them and then make money selling them to support his family. I kept all my stuff like that in the garage and was finally able to find the right places for each item to go.

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