martelvonc (
martelvonc) wrote2009-04-24 06:46 pm
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How do you get over it?
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When I finally have an unusual clear spot that has not been that way in recent memory, I've found something odd. The sight of the "less" makes me happy but then later I start to feel anxiety about it for no discernible reason.
Is it because I'm afraid I've now given away what I might need someday?
Is it guilt for having acquired things that were not the best choice for our needs?
I don't know how to reconcile the feeling. I should be relieved especially after a trip to a thrift shop to drop off a donation. I would never just throw these things away. I will do almost anything to donate or outright give it away for free. The stuff is a burden on my mind, sitting by the front door, until I get it out of the house.
On television and in the magazines, you see clean, clear, clutter free homes. I want that for myself and my family but when I achieve it, it makes me feel uncomfortable. Like I know it won't stay that way so why did I bother? Is this self-defeating behavior? I haven't been cluttering up again. It's staying clean but why the guilty feeling about having a clean area?
The family is happy with the changes. I should be too, right?
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I don't actually have an answer to it, just empathy.
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I can tell you my thoughts on my problem with this though - rooms that are too clean and ordered a) look impersonal, and b) evoke all of those 'company coming' feelings and anxieties from my youth. When cleaning the house has *always* been a stressful time right before one is held captive by guests in one's home (that one's parents invited), then a clean house can easily trigger anxiety. I first noticed my problem with this when I started travelling without my parents as an adult; I can't spend five minutes in a pristine hotel room without putting my towel by the sink, turning down the bed, and getting my books and blanket unpacked on the sofa! If a space is too tidy, I can't relax in it!
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By the way, when we stayed with you for KASF, your house was fine!
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I've found it needs to happen one small bit at a time. Trying to do plan a whole day to do it all just makes my brain all splody'.
I have found though that I have less housework to do because it's easier and faster to dust, clean, vacuum etc. the neat places.
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