Simply Saratoga Home & Garden 2020

Page 152

Mindful MAINTAINING WRITTEN BY JORDANA TURCOTTE

One thing COVID-19 gave us was time! Time to pare down. Time to clean. Time to put things in their place. When normalcy comes back around, how do we be mindful to maintain all that we have accomplished? A system or space is never done. Initially when we set it up – absolutely everything for that system or space is put in its “home” and all is in order. Life means we use that stuff or gain new stuff. A system is only as good as the maintenance to keep it up. If you don’t, chaos ensues. Maintenance means purposefully putting the used item BACK to where it is stored. It may not be immediately done but usually within a weeks’ span of time (during weekly cleaning), the item makes its way back to its home. Or, if the item is used, putting it in trash or recycling. It is a process. If we are talking about a paper system, new paper is always coming in. Every single paper needs not only a decision (keep, toss) but an action (do, file). If we are talking about clothing, it is either dirty (4 steps of maintenance of wash, dry, fold, put away) or it needs to be replaced (rehung or refolded). All these steps take time and energy. Our belongings do not magically get put back, cleaned, folded, etc. We need good habits and constant reminders to keep on top of it all. The first habit to adopt is to be mindful when the item is literally in your hands. Before putting it down, ask yourself if that is where it belongs. If not, decide and try to take the time (usually 20 seconds or less) to put it where it really belongs. This takes a step completely out – picking it up from the wrong location and putting in the right one. This habit alone can take care of most of the maintenance. That one is hard and won’t always happen. The next step is to standardize your maintenance. Routine cleaning (tidying up each system) should be done. Most systems require weekly sessions. Leaving systems such as mail/paper and clothing longer than a week usually means it gets out of hand. But systems such as the basement overflow or garage fill over time can be done 1-2x/year and most are satisfied with that. Only you can decide the frequency of maintenance on an area or system.

152  |  SIMPLY SARATOGA | MAY/JUNE 2020

Create a weekly master list of maintenance tasks you want to do (these will be mainly cleaning tasks but some organizing related items like mail, filing, etc.) Other tasks that don’t need to be done weekly can be put on another list with their frequency noted. If you are one to not do it unless it is scheduled, create appointments for each and populate the appointments for a month or two to form the habit. Using your phone is pretty much the go-to now but you could write up a schedule and post it in the kitchen to check daily as well. Put a sheet protector over it and add a dry erase marker and you can use it as weekly checklist. There is great excitement in checking something off! Systems may also need to be reevaluated. Life, as we now know, can throw us major curveballs. A system that supported you a few months ago may not now. Hello home office that is now the classroom, zoom meet-up, and dance studio! Be mindful of what has changed and what you need now to support you. You may need to move systems or belongings to meet current demand/interests/healthy issues. A few tried and true tips to help you out with home maintenance is to have ample garbage bins. Having them in a lot of locations aids in getting trash to the trash can. I see it all the time – lack of accessible garbage bins. Another tip is to never leave a room empty handed. Leaving the living room – is there a cup that needs to go to the kitchen or a paper for recycling? Have an “out the door bin” for anything going out for return to someone or someplace. Lastly, always have a donation box – when you identify a usable item you no longer want, it goes there. When full, deal with the items. Clutter is a delayed decision – if you have decided you no longer want it, move it out of the mix of your regular stuff. Maintenance isn’t magic – it is habit and purposeful action. Finding tools that support you doing it is key; they keep you mindful of all that has to take place to maintain your space and belongings. SS

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Carol Godette

4min
pages 190-191

Charlie Kuenzel

6min
pages 185-189

A message from SPAC

3min
pages 194-198

Great options for your children (or grandchildren!) to think about

17min
pages 173-184

John Greenwood

3min
pages 192-193

Need to Get Away?

13min
pages 161-172

Peter Bowden

2min
page 160

Homesteading 101

2min
pages 158-159

Saratoga Signature Interiors

5min
pages 153-157

Entertaining with Ralph Vincent

4min
pages 150-151

In the Kitchen with John Reardon

5min
pages 148-149

Jordana Turcotte Keeps us Organized

4min
page 152

Drinking Water?

3min
pages 146-147

It’s Time to Remodel

5min
pages 144-145

Grampy’s House

3min
pages 142-143

Stay Safe

4min
pages 132-137

Meet Artist: Ashley Chandler

3min
pages 138-141

A New Way to look at TV

1min
pages 128-129

Meet Bruce Brownell

5min
pages 130-131

Meghan Lemery

6min
pages 125-127

Colleen’s Picks

9min
pages 121-124

Garden Therapy

3min
pages 116-120

Shades of Green

4min
pages 112-115

Architecturally Speaking

6min
pages 95-111

Meet Artist: Justin Francis Kane

3min
pages 88-91

Head East… to Schuylerville

2min
pages 92-94

Porch-Traits with Brian V Photography

3min
pages 58-63

Barre …From Afar

3min
pages 80-85

Dreaming in the Age of COVID

2min
pages 86-87

Preserving Saratoga

7min
pages 70-74

Lucia, Saratoga Trunk, Spoken and Violet’s

1min
pages 75-79

Home Sweet Home Illustrations

2min
pages 68-69

Meet Artist: Michelle O’Hare

2min
pages 64-67

Beauty, Blossoms & Hope

5min
pages 33-39

It’s a Porch Party

8min
pages 52-57

Stronger Together

5min
pages 18-23

A Story Book Garden in the Country

5min
pages 47-51

23 [and Fourth] is Inside Out rd

3min
pages 24-29

Meet our Hospital Heroes

7min
pages 30-32

TODAY in Saratoga

5min
pages 12-17
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