Montpellier, 09:06, temps pluvieux, humeur idoine.
Montpellier, 09:07, labo gris, humeur idoine.
Mon cher univers montpelliérain a eu la délicatesse de ne pas bouger, mon labo chéri s’est donné la peine de ne pas changer. Mes fiches de paye et mes journaux débordaient de ma boîte mais sinon, tout était comme ça avait été laissé.
Pour mon premier jour post-vacances, j’ai oublié mes écouteurs … va falloir que je supporte mes “collègues” au moins une demi-journée …. hip hip hip hourra.
Montpellier, 09:09, moral dans les chaussettes, humeur idoine.
J’ai oublié où j’ai piqué ça. Je glisse souvent des extraits de textes des sites que je visite pour les lire quand je serai dans le mood adéquat, et souvent je ne sais plus d’où ça vient. Celui là doit venir de Unclutter ou de LifestepHack, ou de je-ne-sais-où
Make your bed each morning.
Throw away the newspaper each night, even if you haven’t read it yet.
Follow the “one-minute rule” – push yourself to do any chore that takes less than one minute. Throw away the junk mail, close the cabinet door, put your dirty socks in the hamper, hang up your wet towel.
Identify an organization or person to whom you can give things you no longer need – it’s much easier to get rid of unneeded stuff if you can envision someone else getting good use from them. Also, figure out a place to store those things until you hand them over. We have a special shelf for books that we’re taking to the Housing Works thrift store. When the shelf is full, we drop off the books.
Pause for a moment before you “store” something. Storing something means you don’t intend to use it much. Other than holiday decorations and seasonal clothes, you should strive to “store” as little as possible.
Beware of freebies. Never accept anything free, unless you’re thrilled with it. A mug, a tote bag, a hand-me-down toy, the lamp from your mother-in-law—if you don’t need it, don’t take it.
Get rid of things if they break. When I went through our apartment, I was astonished by how many things I’d kept even though they didn’t work.
Don’t keep any piece of paper unless you know that you actually need it. I have a friend who, for years, carefully filed away the stubs when she paid her gas bill. “Why?” I asked, mystified. “I have no idea,” she said. Along the same lines, don’t keep anything that would quickly become dated—like travel information. Remember the internet! If you can easily find information online, you don’t need to keep a hard copy.
Hang up your coat.
Before you go to bed, take five minutes to do an “evening tidy-up.” Don’t tackle anything ambitious, but just stack up the magazines, put your shoes away, shove the chairs into place, etc. Just a few minutes of tidying can make your house look a lot better, and it’s a calming thing to do before going to sleep. Plus it makes the morning nicer.