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A Fresh Start for 2025: Finding New Freedom by Downsizing and Decluttering

By Becki Cohn-Vargas January 12, 2025 Lifestyle

It’s the new year, time to start fresh, making resolutions for changes that contribute to our well-being. One way to do it is to make peace with our possessions and remove the unwanted clutter from our lives. In addition, as we get older, we often need to downsize.

When my 93-year-old father died in January 2020, my sisters and I dismantled our parents’ home where they had lived for half a century. That year, I resolved to make things easier for my children. Soon, I realized that decluttering my life was more than a one-shot process. It was a lifestyle, and it was empowering, even liberating.

Where to Start?

The good news is that there are great resources to help you. The most well-known is Marie Kondo, the Japanese organizing consultant, who said, “The question of what you want to own is actually the question of how you want to live your life,” offering six commitments:

  • Commit yourself to tidying up. Starting with a commitment will help you eliminate the feeling of overwhelm.
  • Imagine your ideal lifestyle: Consider the life you want to lead and make your home a space that reflects how you want to live.
  • Finish discarding first: Removing unnecessary items will help you organize the things you want to keep.
  • Tidy by category, not location: Instead of going from room to room, focus on specific categories like clothing, books, papers, and sentimental items.
  • Ask yourself if it sparks joy: Take each item and only keep it if the answer is yes.

Margareta Magnusson, author of The Swedish Art of Ageing Well and Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, says that once you have “unburdened by baggage (emotional and actual),” you can dedicate your life to valuing each day, the challenging moments, and the many joyful times. She describes removing or redistributing items as uplifting rather than overwhelming, writing about death and dying in hopeful and sometimes funny ways.

Another resource is Rachel Kodanaz’sFinding Peace, One Piece at a Time. Kodanaz describes the spiritual aspects of honoring beautiful memories and the power of special possessions in ways to keep our loved ones with us while not accumulating too much.

Making These Ideas Work for Me

I purposely listed resources at the beginning of this blog because we each need to find our unique approach and don’t need to follow the suggestions to the letter. I hope my personal examples can help you feel more connected to the process of downsizing and decluttering.

Keeping Accumulation Down

When we moved into our small home with three children 35 years ago, I was forced not to accumulate too much. We converted the garage into my office, so there was limited storage space. As our kids moved out, we asked them to take their “stuff” with them. Yet, it is incredible how things continually pile up.

While regularly donating clothing, books, and dishes, I accumulated old receipts, voided contracts, and useless financial documents. Recently, I filled eight garbage bags with documents that were too sensitive for home recycling bins! I was careful not to dump the deed to my home or pink slip for a current vehicle. Watching each bag go through the shredder at a local facility left me feeling lighter!

Books, Books, and More Books

Following Kondo’s suggestion to keep items that give joy, I had to face my love of books. Over the years, mountains of books piled up on top of packed bookshelves. So, I organized my books by category. In the living room, I kept unique books and family photo albums. In my office, I kept professional books used for writing and another bookshelf with family history and journals.

On a smaller shelf, my little collection of children’s books had been saved for my grandchildren. Reading them to my grandchild is special. The rest I regularly donate. Even those in less-than-perfect shape that I place in the little free book boxes around my neighborhood. When the time comes (hopefully not too soon), I plan to find places to donate my professional books and any family history materials my children may choose not to keep.

What to Do About Inherited Items

As you might imagine, dismantling my parents’ home during the pandemic was emotional, with so many things that bring back memories. I decided not to keep anything that would clutter my home. My father, a Jewish cantor, had a huge collection of Jewish books and an archive of music, including reel-to-reel tapes of his voice.

Finding places for them was not easy during the pandemic. Many places turned me down, but I persisted. The University of California’s Jewish Studies department accepted 17 books, and a bookseller took the rest. I was very excited to donate seven boxes of tapes to the Jewish Music Association, which had an archive of cantors of the 20th century. It was harder to figure out what to do with the art.

During the 1920s, my grandfather collected art from budding German artists who became famous. He managed to get the art out of Germany before the Nazis forced him to flee. After these works of art traveled across oceans of time and history, how could I think about letting go of any of them? But we had to.

My sisters and I kept a few and donated the others. It was painful but healing as I turned the experience into an adventure. I researched the artists and created a database with links to their stories. I even befriended the daughter of one artist.

What About You?

How have you sorted through all your possessions and kept the ones with meaning for you? Do you have any tips? We can learn from each other!

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Melody Owen

WEll when started declutterinjg I figured my daughter would not give the catagories of my books to people who would appreciate them so I have been trying to give them to stores that deal with the subjects I have such as metaphysical books instead of St. Vinnies.

Debbie

Excellent article. I moved twice in the past six years and went through all my “stuff” before each move. First time was very time consuming and difficult to do but second time was so much easier to discard the remaining things that no longer held meaning for me. I’m enjoying my home more now without the clutter plus it makes cleaning quicker and easier. I’m determined to keep it this way not just for myself but for my family if they should need to step in.

Linda

An interesting article for me as we have to think about clearing things out in the next year or so. Husband is waiting to find out if his company want him to retire this year and this means moving away from Switzerland as it’s too expensive for us to live here on our level of pension. Some things from Scotland will be shipped back, the rest we’ll sell or give away here. I’m not looking forward to the prospect ☹️

Sue Maule

I hope your new and exciting life works out wonderfully for you and your husband. I do understand why you’re not looking forward to it though, change can be tough 😕 🧡

Ellen Lombardo

It would be nice if you could suggest some places to sell or collectibles as in Lennox Sterling, silver, etc.

Becki Cohn-Vargas

My parents had a beautiful set of silver in an Art Deco style with my great-grandfather’s initials. However, none of our family gives those kind of dinner parties. My sisters and I kept a few pieces. I unsuccessfully approached the big auction houses (Sotheby’s and Bonhams). I also suggest looking on Google and checking all kinds of sources. Ultimately, we went through the real estate agent selling my Dad’s house and found someone who sold it. https://www.unexpectedtreasures.net/. She was able to sell the set for $2,400, but I don’t know who she sold it to. This is a time-consuming process and a lot of work!

Angie

Thanks for sharing-I am sitting in a house with lots of my “stuff” I love, but the cluttering is visually overwhelming to me now that I am retired and here at the house more! I like the idea of focusing on types of items instead of rooms…

Kate Ludwick

When I started to clean out, I did both by item and also by room. Some of it was easy so that’s why I did it both ways. Also, I read tons of online advice about decluttering to keep me motivated. I confess that I didn’t always believe what I read but have found it all to be true! For instance, it gave me a sense of purpose, it felt freeing, even exhilarating. Another tip was to let go of bigger items first. Tables, bookcases, chairs, beds, etc. It was the oddest thing that the more I let go of, the easier it was to find I could let go of more. So the online advice was great advice for me. I also made sure to try to find the best way to get things out, very little went into the actual trash. I decided it was too much work to try to sell things so I donated everything over a period of time. I could surely use the money if I had sold things, but decided the aggravation wasn’t worth it. Plus it moves things out much quicker and left no time to second guess my choices of things to purge. The first purge lasted a frw weeks and was the largest and at times I thought it would never be done! And truly I’m learning that things came into my home in layers, and will go out that way. Lately I wasn’t feeling well and I hadn’t purged anything for about 2 or more weeks. This was after a steady period of decluttering weekly. So I wasn’t really as motivated and began to think I was done. Then while reaching into my closet for something, I seemed to see my dress slacks. Why had I not seen them before? Most didn’t fit me now. (I even downsized my diet since retiring. LOL) But somehow I had not yet seen those 10 pairs of slacks!! Today, I washed them and bagged them for the thrift store. It jusr surprises me when I have overlooked something so obvious. Anyway, layer by layer it leaves. I’ve never seen my home looking so open and clear. It gives me peace. Hubby agrees. My goal was to make it easier to clean, to dust, mop, etc. As well as prepare for aging in place as long as possible with less to maintain. We have no children to pass down to and I am the youngest sibling. It definitely is much easier to clean. While there is less and less to go and the loads to the thrift store are smaller and less often, I still will have these aha! Moments like I did with the slacks. For me it’s a true blessing to let go. The peace I feel is genuine. A long time ago, a friend told he had lost everything in a house fire. He said he was surprised how free he felt. I never forgot his words.

The Author

Becki Cohn-Vargas, Ed.D, has been blogging regularly for Sixty and Me since 2015. She is a retired educator and independent consultant. She's the co-author of three books on identity safe schools where students of all backgrounds flourish. Becki and her husband live in the San Francisco Bay Area and have three adult children and one grandchild. You can connect with her at the links below.

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