The Simplifier #28 - Organization: The Mystical Destination (?)

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Contents:

1. A Note From Shawn
2. Our Featured Quote
3. Article: Organization — The Mystical Destination (Not!)
4. Your Simplification Tip
5. In the News
6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com
7. Keep Smiling


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1. A Note From Shawn

January is “Get Organized Month”. The National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) began this venerable tradition 3 years ago to raise awareness about the benefits of organizing.

I’m a Simplifier. To me, every month is Get Organized Month! However, the universal energy of NAPO’s designation must have pervaded my thoughts, and this newsletter’s article is on…. you guessed it - organizing! Specifically, it’s a look through the organizing lens about your relationship with your internal and external surroundings. Mmmm, interesting… Continuing in the spirit of contemplation, the first article In the News is about Tibetan monks. Studies on the monks are being done in an attempt to understand why they are so tranquil. My answer to that: Go meditate!

The sun is out. Cabin-fevered limbs are looking to make some trouble. Maybe I’ll go for a run and then meditate. :-)

Enjoy!
Shawn


2. Our Featured Quote

“First comes thought; then organization of that thought, into ideas and plans; then transformation of those plans into reality. The beginning, as you will observe, is in your imagination.”

-Napoleon Hill


3. Article: Organization — The Mystical Destination (Not!)

By Shawn Tuttle

“I wish I were organized…” I’ve heard this sighed with the same wistful feeling I might have on a cold winter day when I’d say, “I wish I were in Hawaii…” You’d think they were talking about some mystical place shrouded in fog reachable by secret pathways.

Is organization really that mysterious? Perhaps a more relevant question is: “What does it mean to be organized?”

Does it simply mean being tidy?

Nope. True story: a couple of years ago I received a phone call from a woman who felt debilitated by her lack of organization. “My office is a mess and I’m totally overwhelmed by the mere thought of dealing with it.”

She went on to explain that a death in the family had thrown her once-orderly routine into chaos and she couldn’t dig through the mess to regain her peace of mind. We set an appointment for the following week. I arrived at her home office expecting the worst. I wore my work clothes, ready to roll up my sleeves and jump in. I walked into an office that was more tidy than mine! What?!

Stuff was not her issue at all. When she said, “my office is a mess,” she meant that didn’t know where to find information she was looking for or how to effectively process incoming information. She needed systems to manage and access her information.

So does it mean having efficient systems?

Not exactly, though they help! What good is the most brilliant system in the world if it isn’t used? Answer: no good at all. Who hasn’t implemented a new, “fool-proof”, state-of-the-art system to organize this, that, or the other, only to stumble across it months later? (“Oh yeah. I forgot about that!”)

Organization is a process.

Just like housecleaning! Buying the cleaning supplies doesn’t make for a clean house. Nor does cleaning every surface once make for a permanently clean house.

It’s not just a process, it’s part of the journey. It’s a means to an end. What end? Your goals and dreams, of course! This is important because the more compelling your goal, the more likely you are to keep a satisfactory level of organization in your life. I use the word satisfactory here because it is entirely up to you. There is no right or wrong answer. If you (and whoever you share your space with) are happy with the amount of tidiness and the level of functionality, then it is perfect.

While “there is no right or wrong answer” to how organized you should be, it behooves you to see yourself through others’ eyes now and again. Your appearance and surroundings are extensions of you. Clients, potential clients, and even friends may be attracted, or repelled, by what they see around you and how they see you functioning. Alienating yourself by living in a pig sty won’t make you happy, will it?

Back to your end goal. Organization weeds out distractions so you can do what you want to do. Conversely, your goals are more important than every single thing being in place.

Now, I’m not suggesting you get accustomed to your current level of mess and be done with it. Acceptable levels of organization still take time, agreement with others (with whom you share the space), and effort to maintain.

Organization, like meditation, is a practice. It’s not something you complete and check off your list for good. It’s a part of life that we must come to terms with if we are to achieve peace of mind in our day-to-day doings. There will always be clothes to hang up, papers to file, new phone numbers to enter in the address book, emails to respond to, and so on. The issue is adjusting these to integrate with the rest of your life and your priorities.

One way to integrate necessary actions into your life is to create systems. Systems encourage organization to happen on auto-pilot, thereby decreasing the number of brain cells required to deal with it. The less you have to think about it, the easier it is.

Let’s look at three areas ripe for organization:

stuff covers physical items - where items belong, how they get to where they belong, and systems for maintaining them.

mind involves information - the data passes through your life, how to get data out of your head systematically so you know where to find it when you want it, and systems for processing and storing data so that you and/or others can easily find it and use it.

time involves your schedule - how much you pack in everyday, getting to appointments when you say you will, making (and keeping) quality-time appointments with yourself, and systems for recurring activities.

We know that organization isn’t monumentally crucial to our survival—yet it is crucial for our peace of mind. Everyone would rather do what they want to do rather than what they feel they must do. Removing organization from the position of frustrating-goal-that-is-never-complete, and relegating it to a position of assisting you in achieving your goals is a positive step towards making peace with organization.

Shawn Tuttle is founder of Project Simplify


4. Your Simplification Tip

Pre-printed Labels

Here’s a quick mailing tip that can come in handy when paying bills. While many recurring bills, such as credit cards and utilities, send remittance envelopes, not all do. To make life a little easier, you can pre-print your own address labels.

This is easy to do in a program like Microsoft Word. You’ll also want to have sheets of address labels on hand, such as Avery #5160 (1” x 2 5/8”).

Preparing the document
Make a list of the payments you’ll be making in the next 6 months for which you hand-write the addresses on the envelopes.
In Word, open up a new document. Then…

Mac Users Windows Users
Under the Tools menu, select “Labels”In the dialog box: -Click the tab that says “Label”, click “Options” , and select the label product that you are using. Then click OK.
-Click OK to close the window. This will create a new document full of label blanks.
-Close the (now-obsolete) first document that you opened at the beginning of this process.
Under the Tools menu, select “Envelopes and Labels”In the dialog box: -Click the tab that says “Labels”, click “Options” , and select the label product that you are using. Then click OK.
-Click “New Document” to close the window. This will create a new document full of label blanks.
-Close the (now-obsolete) first document that you opened at the beginning of this process.

NOTE: You can avoid having to repeat this process in the future by saving this blank label document to a memorable location on your computer.

Customizing your page of labels
Type in the first address on your list. (The cursor should automatically be positioned in the first blank label.)
Copy the lines entered and Paste in as many “labels” as you think you’ll need for the next 6 months.
Repeat for each address.
Try to use up an entire page at a time, though it’s not essential.

Printing
This part requires that you know your printer well enough to put through one sided label paper. For mine, it’s face down, top end first. If you aren’t sure, do a test run with a blank piece of paper on which you’ve written “Label side”. Note if the print ended up on the “Label side” or not, and then run through a page of labels accordingly.

My page of labels is stored in my Reference Binder which is always nearby when paying bills.


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5. In the News

If you know of something in the news that should be featured here, let us know!

The Pleasure of the Present (Seattle Times)
URL: http://tinyurl.com/y3my2n
“Take a deep breath and unwind,” says this article about living “in the now”. Now is the best time to do your living…way better than the past or the future. :-)

Confessing to a Big ‘Ol Mess (Honolulu Star-Bulletin)
URL: http://tinyurl.com/wfeda
A “totally messy person” admits her flaws, examines the possibilities for change, and checks out a ClutterBusters support group. This one’s worth it just for the opening cartoon.

January: Time to catch up (The Stockton Record - CA)
URL: http://tinyurl.com/wj2p6
The post-holiday period is a slow time for a lot of businesses and people - which makes it a great time to tackle your organization goals. This article looks into the possibilities of January, the “official” Get Organized Month.


6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com

The Best of December

Our December schedule was jam-packed with caroling and wassailing, but we still were able to crank out some nice, juicy posts to present to y’all.
And here they are:

Peace Entrepreneurs

I’m a lifeguard at Google

Molly Fisk on world peace and turn signals

(Shawn was) In the Union as Toastmaster

Minimizing distractions

(Don’t tell anyone, but I cheated…one of these posts is actually from the tail end of November. What can I say…it started crying and whining, and I’m a big softie, so I let it come along. - Lance)


7. Keep Smiling

FwdItOn.com - The Funny Email Repository

Forwarding humorous emails has become a staple of modern life, so it only makes sense that there would be a website that looks to serve the email humor crowd.

FwdItOn.com is just such a site. It appears that the site is a young’un - it’s in “Beta 2.0″ mode - but there’s no dearth of “Fwd”s to be chuckled over. And, of course, they have a tool so you can “fwd” your favorites on to your friends, colleagues, and congresspeople. (Don’t laugh - they’d probably welcome something lighthearted! :-))

Shawn liked this one: Girl’s Night Out
Lance found the Qantas Airlines engineer reports funnier.

They’ve got the bits of funny organized by “top rated”, “most fwd’d”, and so on, so it’s easy to find the cream of the crop. Anyone can add a fwd, so if you’ve got a funny one, this is a good place to share it.

Here’s the URL: http://www.fwditon.com/

(Fair warning: some of the humor is adult-oriented.)


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Thanks for reading!

Publication Information
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The Simplifier is published by:
Project Simplify
P.O. Box 597
Nevada City, CA 95959
phone: 530.205.5775
web: www.projectsimplify.com
e-mail: (newsletter@projectsimplify.com) newsletter (at) projectsimplify (dot) com