
Hector Sanchez
What Is Your Best Easy Organizing Tip?
Real Simple readers share their tricks for keeping everything in order.
Muriel Gluck
Huntington, New York
I wrap my holiday gifts in groups by paper: silver for my sister, gold for my brother, and red for my in-laws. I know exactly
what to grab when we’re heading out.
Jacqui Cooley
Maitland, Florida
I bought a shoe holder to store charging cables and the small accessories for my cell phone, MP3 player, digital camera, etc.
I hang it over a closet door and simply label each pocket.
Nancy Cunniff
Mansfield, Massachusetts
I use a pant hanger with rubber-covered rungs that swing out to organize my jewelry. I slip rings on the first rung, bracelets
on the second, and necklaces on the third. I just swing out a rung to take the item of my choice.
Joy Rasin
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin
Quite by accident, I developed an almost pleasant way to declutter: I learned to putter. I loaded my iPod with songs I like
(that’s key) and just walked around picking things up, tidying, humming, and dancing like a fool, but getting things done―and
at a faster pace than I had expected. Puttering is productive, it doesn’t seem like work, and it sounds so much better than
“cleaning house.”
Patti Palmer
Konawa, Oklahoma
Last Christmas my friend and I decided to forgo the usual gifts and give each other five hours of our time instead. I helped
her clean her bedroom closet, and she helped me clean my basement. We had fun, saved money, and made a lot of progress.
Jane Roberts
Southbury, Connecticut
I keep a bag in the trunk of my car, and I slowly fill it with items for charity. When I run across a pair of shoes or a toy
my children have outgrown, a shirt I no longer wear, or a paperback I’m ready to pass on, I take it to the car and drop it
in the bag. Sometimes it takes a week, sometimes more, but the bag eventually gets filled and dropped off at the nearest donation
site. My children are aware of the bag, and I think it has provided them with a valuable lesson in giving and recycling.
Rachel Donihoo
McKinney, Texas
With a family of six, I find a dry-erase calendar essential. Each family member has a different-color marker so we can see
at a glance who needs to be where and when.
Janet Ellert
Evansville, Indiana
Related Content

What Is the Best Thing Money Can't Buy?
If the economic downturn has clouded your countenance, then this column is for you. Real Simple readers, a resourceful bunch, have come up with dozens of examples of things that make them happy and don’t cost a dime. So ignore the gloomy forecast and get your bliss on. For free.
