Tara Striano

Start in the upper left-hand corner of one wall and start "reading"
from left to right and from top to bottom. "The room is a book, a
dresser is a chapter, each drawer is a paragraph, the boxes or
trays or Ziploc bags in the drawers are the sentences, and the
things in the containers are the words," says Alice Winner, an
organizing consultant in Hummelstown, Pennsylvania. "Get rid of the
extra words things that are making your life more complicated and
unmanageable."
Toss-It Tips
Any time you feel your attention straying to another part of the
room or house, take a break or simply repeat, "Left to right, left
to right."
Resist the urge to skip "chapters." If you jump around the room,
dealing with a pile here and a pile there, the room might still
look cluttered after a three-hour session.
Find a motivator for your work. Tack up an image from a magazine
or book of a room you'd like to emulate.
Why It Works
It's difficult to determine the best place to plunge into an
organizing project. This eliminates that problem: Just go straight
to the upper left-hand corner of one wall. It also curtails
aimlessness, because you always know what to tackle next.
You provide yourself with a prototype as you go. Say you're
editing your filing cabinets, and you feel your focus flagging as
you encounter another overstuffed folder labeled “Miscellaneous.”
Look at the drawer you've just completed for a visual reminder of
what all the drawers will look like when you're done.