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Subject: |
Avoiding the Packrat Syndrome |
| Date: |
2008-09-08
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Avoiding the Packrat Syndrome
By Laura Stack
www.TheProductivityPro.com/blog
Perhaps your parents said, "Don't throw anything away! Everything has value." And you're still holding on to those
beliefs. While necessary during the Great Depression, that type of thinking today will create a society of pack
rats who can't throw anything away but desperately need to.
The underlying drive behind this behavior is an excessive concern that a given object shouldn't be discarded, as it
might be needed later. This behavior can also include excessive acquisition, such as compulsive shopping, extreme
collecting, or hoarding free items, such as free newspapers or junk mail. Following the acquisition behavior is
extreme indecisiveness about what to keep; the indecisiveness is so extreme that the hoarder completely avoids the
decision-making process and ends up keeping everything. Then, the hoarder experiences difficulty figuring out how
to best organize all the kept items.
Sometimes hoarding behavior becomes severe. Not only can it extend to the office and one's vehicle, but fire
marshals have even declared such residences a fire hazard. In one extreme case, a hoarder rented a second apartment
to live in because his own had grown too full of belongings. This behavior is more common in men than women. If
your behavior is severe -- such as having to create pathways in your home and avoiding having guests -- you can
obtain help from a psychologist or psychiatrist.
It is not uncommon for compulsive hoarders to also experience tension in all manner of interpersonal relationships,
low self-esteem, weak decision-making skills, poor social skills, and even occupational or legal issues. Treatment
focuses on sorting items, developing decision-making skills, analyzing unwarranted emotional attachments, and
curbing the acquisition of additional possessions. If your symptoms are mild -- in other words, if you're like
most people -- the ideas below will help clear your clutter and boost your energy immensely.
Unworn clothing, unwanted gifts, ancient paperwork (not needed for tax purposes) -- just get rid of it. If you
haven't used it in two years, ditch it.
- Start a bag or box for charity; keep it in the basement or garage. There are so many worthy causes to choose
from: Goodwill, women's organizations, Salvation Army, St. Vincent DePaul, church organizations. Add to your box
or bag regularly. When it's full, take it with you to donate when you run errands. Get a receipt each time you
drop off a donation for your IRS records.
- Sell it on eBay. If you don't have an eBay account, set one up on www.ebay.com. Locate all your possessions that have strong resale value -- but are of no use to
you whatsoever and are only collecting dust. Take digital photographs of them. International commerce -- what a
fun way to get rid of duplicate or unwanted gifts. Turn your junk into money.
- Write a yard sale date on the calendar. The kids can sell lemonade and get a nice little math lesson about
making change, plus a little lesson about earning a profit. Get the neighbors involved, and turn it into a fun
multi-household yard sale to boost your profits even more. Donate whatever is left over to a local charity.
- At the office, keep only one hard copy of final documents. Recycle the rest. If you have a digital version,
only keep the paper copy if required by company policy. Be sure to do a daily backup of all your computer
files.
- Keep financial documents only as long as IRS regulations require. For tax returns, that's six years from the
filing date. The same holds true for investment purchase and sale records, from the tax filing deadline in the year
of sale. Cancelled checks and bank statements should likewise be kept for six years. Shred documents that have
become outdated at home and work. Devise a plan to repeat this process at the same time every year; just after the
New Year is a great time, when you're in the mindset of making a fresh start.
- For non-IRS documents at the office, decide how many years that you'll keep things on file. Certain things may
have historical value, such as annual reports. But for anything that doesn't possess inherent historical value, get
rid of it. You don't need that coffee-stained piece of paper with a rusty paper clip on it. Go through all your
files and recycle everything that's now outside your time frame or from the job of the lady who had your office
before you. This will also prevent you from having to keep buying more and more filing cabinets, which also helps
retain ample space. Again, devise a plan to repeat this process at the same time every year.
- Look at your possessions through your children's eyes. Pretend what it's going to be like for your children
when you pass away and they have to sort through your belongings. Do you really need those love notes from sixth
grade? The lock of your mother's baby hair? Keep it. Your grandmother's retro red diva suitcase? Keep it. Do
you really need that box of photos from the junior high field trip? You're not even in any of the photos. Your
children won't even know who these people are.
Do you keep unwanted gifts due to a sense of guilt, simply because they're gifts? Do you have rented storage units
to hold all the stuff you never use? Do you have boxes of things in your crawl space you haven't used in years-if
you even know what's in there? Worse yet, do you surround yourself with things that make you miserable? Do you
keep a "thin section" in your closet? You know-the things you'll wear again once you lose twenty pounds? Every
time you look at an item of clothing that doesn't fit, you feel deflated. Your energy plummets as you focus your
attention on how fat you are versus finding something attractive that fits your "real" body.
Instead, accentuate the positive. There's a reason women burn photographs of their old boyfriends. If you're
hoarding tangible proof of emotional baggage, you're sabotaging your energy, not to mention your mood. You're
keeping that figurative negativity hovering around your life. Clear the air. Get rid of it. If there's one
particle of anger attached to it, get rid of it. Why take up valuable space with outdated physical negativity?
Don't keep mementos of failed relationships. If it's a legal issue such as divorce, or custody dispute, keep only
the bare minimum of final legal documents that you need. Out with the old, and in with the new.
© 2008 Laura Stack. Laura Stack (www.TheProductivityPro.com/blog) is a motivational speaker who helps busy workers Leave the
Office Earlier® with Maximum Results in Minimum Time™. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time
management firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations. Since 1992, Laura has given
presentations on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today’s workplaces, for companies such as
Microsoft, Starbucks, and 3M. She is the bestselling author of The Exhaustion Cure (2008); Find More
Time (2006); and Leave the Office Earlier (2004). To have Laura speak at your event, call 303-471-7401.
Permission granted for use on DrLaura.com.
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