18 Things You Can Get Rid of Today

Overtaken by stuff? These mom-tested strategies will have you cleaning house in no time.

By Diana Reese

kitchen

Just Say No to Too Much Stuff

Stuff. For many of us it's worse than any four-letter word. That's because "stuff" can weigh you down andTell Us! hold you back, says Gail Blanke, author of Throw Out Fifty Things. And, in the end, much of what we accumulate in life isn't all that important. As Marilyn Bohn, author of Go Organize!, points out, "No one ever says, 'I wish I'd kept more stuff.'"

Still, getting rid of our discards can be a challenge. Carla Eskelsen, a mom in Farmington, Utah, admits she had trouble letting go of stuff until she figured out how to manage her "pioneer DNA." Once she figured out that donating and recycling "honored" her pioneer ancestors, she found it much easier. "It's about sharing and blessing others instead of keeping it all for yourself," she says. Here's how you can share and bless others with all of your stuff-and end up with a cleaner, more peaceful home while you're at it.


1. Kitchen Utensils

Is your utensil drawer so full you can barely open and close it? You're not alone. When Robin Austin started cleaning her kitchen in preparation for a move, she found she had plenty of duplicate utensils, the result of a new marriage that combined households and six kids. Many of us also buy new utensils but forget to get rid of the old.

Here's a smart way to figure out what you're really using, from Motherboard Mom Jeanne Smith, Overland Park, Kansas: Toss everything-all the spatulas, rubber scrapers, pie servers, and so on-into a box. As you use a utensil from the box, put it back in the drawer. After a month, check what's left in the box. Keep those once-a-year items that remain in the box, like a turkey baster or candy thermometer. But donate the rest.

2. Coffee Mugs

Another item many moms find hogging valuable cupboard space: coffee mugs. "We had over 20 coffee mugs," says Kansas mom Dawn Schnake. She and her husband each chose four mugs to keep and donated the rest to a church rummage sale.

"Even if you received something as a gift, it's okay to let it go," says organizer Marilyn Bohn. "You only need to keep what works for you."

3. Plastic Containers

Mary Pankiewicz, owner of Clutter-Free and Organized in east Tennessee, suspects that plastic containers have a secret life (probably hanging out with those AWOL socks and hangers). How else can you explain why so many lids and bottoms don't match up? She suggests holding a "lid party" to match up those errant tops and bottoms. Pankiewicz recently took her own advice. "I had 25 lids with no bottoms and six bottoms with no lids," she says. After swapping with friends, she recycled the rest of the mismatched items.

4. Little-Used Kitchen Stuff

When was the last time you used that Bundt pan? If it was months ago, maybe you should give it to a friend. That's what Suzy Ayres and a pal did when they performed a joint kitchen cleanup. They took everything out of their cabinets and only put back what they used regularly. "The things that we left out that didn't get used much, we had to choose. If we put one thing back in the cabinet, we had to pick one thing to donate," Ayres says. The two also traded items: "She had lots of muffin pans and I didn't."

An added bonus to the plan: They now know what's in each other's kitchens, and don't need to buy some of those rarely used items, like a Bundt pan. "We've been trading the same ice bucket back and forth for years," Ayres says. "I can't even remember who it belongs to!"

5. Vases

Got vases from the last three Valentine's Day bouquets? Take them back to the florist, says Marla Cilley, who lives in Transylvania County, North Carolina, and runs the flylady.net, an Internet site devoted to housecleaning and organization.

"It takes away your creativity and takes over your mind," Cilley says.

6. Food

Cupboards full of food you're not sure you're going to use? Some solutions:

•Check the expiration dates on everything in your pantry, fridge, or freezer. If it's about to expire, put it on the menu for that week, says professional organizer Bohn.

•Motherboard Mom Dawn Schnake gives her sons what they call "muffin pan snacks" to get rid of those almost-empty bags of cereal, crackers, and chips. She fills each of the 12 muffin cups with a different snack and throws in some veggies, cut-up fruit, and cheese cubes. "The boys think they've sat down to a feast," she says-and she gets her pantry cleaned out.

•If you know you're never going to use an item-and it's still good-give it to your local food pantry.

•Have an "Eat Out of the Pantry or Freezer" week, says Marla Cilley, flylady.net. You'll be surprised at how creative you can get with your menu planning when you're only using the ingredients on hand. She also suggests this as a way to inspire creativity and frugality: "When you throw away food, imagine you're throwing dollar bills in the trash can!"

Organize Your Pantry

7. Spices

They don't mold and don't appear to go bad, but spices don't last forever, not even cayenne pepper. (Cinnamon's an exception to the rule.) "Dried is one thing, tasteless is another," says organizer Blanke. Give your spices the smell and taste test and if they've gone bland and boring, dump them. To find out how old your McCormick or Schilling brand spices are, go to http://mccormick.com/Spices101/HowOldSpices.aspx. And when you buy new spices, mark down the date on the package with a Sharpie.

8. Receipts

Computers were supposed to usher in a paperless society, but it hasn't happened quite yet. "Most of us are still drowning in paper," says organizer Pankiewicz. She suggests an annual cleanup. Check with your accountant about how long to keep important papers like tax returns but, in general, materials that support tax returns (receipts and so on) can be tossed after seven years.

9. Magazines

Do you have a stack of magazines by your bed that you haven't read? If two months have passed and they're still sitting there, consider donating them to a retirement home, hospital, doctor's office, or school. Many take magazines for art projects (if not for reading material). If, like former magazine editor Cherie Spino, a mom of four in Toledo, Ohio, you "can't throw a magazine away without reading it," do the flip-and-rip. Spino rips out recipes or articles she wants to keep and throws the rest into the recycling bin. She's putting the recipes in a binder.

Organizer Bohn suggests tearing out articles and putting them in a folder you can grab when you know you'll be sitting and waiting (think doctor's office). Or, if you're a tech-lover, you can get many popular magazines as an app for your phone or electronic reader.

10. Mail

It's a common bad habit: Grab the mail, flip through it for anything interesting, and then set it on "the pile" that accumulates until the day you start searching for overdue bills. "Scan and stand" is the system recommended by organizer Pankiewicz. "Standing is the trick," she says. Don't be tempted to sit down: Bring in the mail. Leave your coat on. Find a place by the wastebasket, recycling bin, or shredder, and stand and handle each piece of mail. Put bills in a basket or pretty gift bag, take magazines to where you read them, scan any newsletters and bulletins for important information, and discard the rest. "Your goal is to make the mail disappear," she says.

Clearing Paper Clutter

11. Unread Books

"Books are our friends," says organizer Blanke. "I know my husband won't ever get rid of his dog-chewed copy of Rudyard Kipling's Kim that he's read 50 times." So, keep your favorites-the ones you'll read again or you use for reference-neatly in a bookcase. In fact, if you're a book-lover with a big collection, a whole wall of books can make a dramatic statement and keep them organized. But, if you have lots of volumes that you have no intention of reading any time soon, donate them. Blanke suggests giving them to www.booksforsoldiers.com. "You really are paying it forward when you donate things," she emphasizes.

Make Over Your Home Office


12. Clothes

Here's a sad truth: You're probably not going to lose the weight to fit into those 10-year-old clothes you have in the closet. Just give it up and give them away, says Pankiewicz. This doesn't mean you're giving up on ever being healthier or thinner, it just means you aren't going to be held hostage by some old clothes that don't fit, need repair, or were on sale (but you never liked). Donate them all and we guarantee you'll feel "lighter."

Need closet culling tips? Here's what some Motherboard Moms do:

•"I can't stand to have a closet full of clothes that I don't wear," says Michelle Speak, mom of three in Parker, Colorado. She sorts through her clothes each season, weeding out what she hasn't worn, although she'll make a few exceptions for items like skirts that she wears infrequently.

•Mom Suzy Ayres has an easy way to tell what she's worn. At the beginning of a new season, she turns all of her hangers around backward. After she wears something, she puts it on the hanger and turns it around the right way. Anything still turned backward is donated at the end of the season. "Right before cooler weather hit this year, anything I knew I couldn't part with, I wore it so I could put it in the 'save' pile," she says.

Organize Your Clothing Closet

13. Kids' Clothes

Michaela Freeman, a mom in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, keeps clothes for her children a year after the end of each season in case things still fit. What doesn't is passed to friends with young children. "How can you put a price on helping another person?" she asks. She's benefited as well. Friends with older kids pass clothes on to her youngsters.


14. Kids' Artwork

Of course every piece of artwork your child ever did is a masterpiece. But that doesn't mean you need to keep it. If it's not something you want to put on the wall or in a portfolio to save, take a photo and toss it. You can develop a digital "art gallery" or put photos in a photo album and you'll take up a lot less space. After all, think about it: If you keep four pieces of paper per week per child, by the time they've graduated from high school, you'll have one huge collection, points out Bohn. "Take a picture and let it go!" she says.

15. Electronics

Power cords, USB cords, and other paraphernalia for electronics clog up our desks and cabinets, says Chris McKenry, owner of Get It Together LA!, a professional organizing company in Los Angeles. "It's a jungle," he says. "And there's not room for the things you need."

Sort through that "jungle" and match cords to gadgets. Old cell phones can be donated to women's shelters. Other old electronic items, like some printers and computers, should be properly recycled. "It's against the law in some cities to put electronic waste in the trash," warns McKenry. Check with your city for E-waste collection sites. Ditto for old VHS and cassette tapes. McKenry suggests transferring them to your computer for digital storage and then putting the tapes in E-waste collections.

16. Linens

"Most of us have way too many towels and sheets," says The Fly Lady. "Some people no longer even have beds that the sheets fit!" She recommends two sets of sheets per bed and keeping the extra set under the foot of the mattress or in a drawer in the bedroom to free up room in the linen closet.

Organize Your Linen Closet

17. Medicine

Check your medicine cabinet for expired prescription and over-the-counter drugs, but don't flush them or throw them in the trash. Instead, take them to your local pharmacist for proper disposal.

Organize Your Bathroom

18. Toys

Start teaching your children early to donate the toys they're no longer using, says organizer Blanke. "I know one mom who tells her kids Santa won't come until they give away the toys they're finished with." Here, other Motherboard Mom solutions to too many toys:

•Carol Showers Brown, mom to three in Manassas, Virginia, also taught her kids to donate toys. "We lived in Bangkok and the orphanages there were so grateful for toys, even used ones." Her kids would fill a basket with toys to give away several times a year. "It worked really well because the kids picked out what toys they were ready to part with," she says.

•Remember that preschool song of "Clean up, clean up"? At Diana Dawson's Austin house the song was more likely "Wade through it," she says. That's why she set "dump-it deadlines"-if the kids' stuff wasn't picked up by a certain time on a certain date, she would gather their things and donate them. Sure enough, the first time she had to follow through with her daughter. "The most difficult were the books on the floor, and I donated those to her elementary school," Dawson says. "The school librarian told her she appreciated the donations and other kids enjoyed her books." Her children and a group of neighborhood kids also put on their own garage sale of their toys to raise money to adopt a family at the holidays.

•Mom Michelle Speak has donated many of her children's toys as they've outgrown them, but not all. "I've kept the toys I can imagine my grandchildren would play with." Put the special, keepsake toys away in a well-labeled box.

Tell Us What You Think: What Could You NEVER Part With?

Recycling and donating are great, but is there one thing you could never part with?


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374 comments

  • Janice  •  19 days ago
    There are some free clinics in some cities that welcome meds. Take name and prescription number and drugstore name off the bottle but be sure to leave all drug imfo on it.
  • Katherine  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    I take my old medicines to a firestation. If one doesn't take them, ask which one does.
  • happy customer  •  1 year 2 months ago
    I have had mixed results with disposing of old medicine at pharmacies. Some will take it. Others will not. A pharmacy at Tom Thumb (Safeway, Randall's family) took it and said they have it incinerated. Some cities will take it on hazardous waste disposal days. DO NOT FLUSH IT. It will end up in the water supply, and we will all be drinking it. Our water treatment plants are not equipped to remove pharmaceuticals from the water.
  • D  •  1 year 2 months ago
    #17 doesn't work. The pharmacy wont take the stuff back for any reason. I just picked up a pamphlet there that said NOT to flush it. There are too many Rx's getting in the ground water and city water supplies.
    It said to take something unappetizing like kitty litter or coffee grounds crush up your pills and dissolve them in water and add to the kitty litter, let it dry out and put in a plastic bag and seal and toss. Don't forget to remove identifying info on the Rx bottle as well.
    • Linda 6 days ago
      This is the advice my sweet hubbys Hospice nurse gaave me....in fact, she GAVE me a ziplock bag of kitty liter from her bag!! it's what they use when someone passes away!
  • jo-jo  •  1 year 4 months ago
    well done thanks Myrt...
  • jo-jo  •  1 year 4 months ago
    well done thanks Myrt...
  • Jess  •  1 year 4 months ago
    Children's books and DVD can be donated to your local pediatrician's office. Books often get torn or worn out and replacements are hard to come by. When I worked in peds I'd buy books at garage/yard sales and dontate them to the office. If there is a DVD player in the waiting room the staff would love some different moives. To this day I can't stand Willie Wonka because it seem to always be on when I was working. Hard plastic toys (things that can be cleaned/sanatized easily) are also appreciated.

    I don't think the writer of the article meant that one should throw out all their children's art work. My mom kept a box of art, papers, report cards, ect for each of us. She didn't keep everything, just the things we were most proud of. Same with our toys and clothing. She kept those that were most loved or treasured and passed on those that weren't.

    I try to do a large purge once a year or so. During the rest of the year I keep a bag for donations and when it's full it goes to the church, Good Will or St. Vincent's.
  • Cat  •  1 year 4 months ago
    Books for Soldiers is an all volunteer organization. Volunteers send books directly to the troops rather than sending them to BFS to distribute. Volunteers need to complete an application per DoD rules before having access to troop addresses. We welcome anyone wishing to support our troops through reading materials, cds, dvds, games and hope everyone looks at out website.

    CT
  • Gayle  •  1 year 4 months ago
    #7: Spices?... I bought some I already had...tossed out the oldest one's.
    #9: Magazines?..Please don't give them to Your Dr.'s office. they are already cluttered by year's old ones. Use paper recycling instead.
    #10: Mail?... Stand and Toss! Yeah! Only keep bills (no too long), personal mail, then pay or toss.
    #17 Medicines?...No on the Pharmacies! Not in KCMO. Once a year our communities have a turn in old Med.'s and the police Dept. take them back. Be prepared for long lines. I have over $1,000.00 worth of them after my husband passed. I wish there was some way to re-cycle to those who take the same med.'s in the same strength.
  • New Hampshire Native  •  1 year 4 months ago
    We have a rule in our house !! If you bring something in then something has to go out. This works well with clothing and you don't get bogged down with "stuff" !! We have a rather large house for just two people and the more room you have the more that stuff breeds in the dark !! Once you start to clean out you will feel so much freedom, but that's only the first step - you need to keep it out. Stuff in, stuff out !!
  • KIM  •  1 year 4 months ago
    i have to agree with chris mckenry on the electronics overload. i am one of those people, i have 7 medium uhaul boxes full of every cable, charger, and all electronic wiring one could imagine. i donate just about everything, recycle with the best of them, yet i cannot get rid of my wires. if anyone could give me an idea of where i could put them to good use,...please let me know. many are brand new still in packaging, and some i just have no clue what their uses are, and yet i keep them. go figure
    • Lana 2 months ago
      donate to a church rummage sale or salvation army for their thrift shop.
    • Linda 6 days ago
      Old magazines to hospital waiting rooms, carwash waiting areas, nursing homes, some Dr. offices welcome them, cancer waiting areas, teachers.
  • Raymond  •  1 year 4 months ago
    S-T-U-F-F

    Five letters, not four. Other than that, yeah, my mom needs to clean out her cupboard.
  • Robin  •  1 year 4 months ago
    The way I discard old drugs is to place the pills in a zip lock bag and smash them. I then add water and throw in with the old kitty litter. I am now trying to unclutter now. Really having a hard time with tossing out old stuff, but then I think if I died tomorrow what would my niece do. She would throw it out.
  • Angela  •  1 year 4 months ago
    Jaleou, take the things to a consignment shop. Do not have a yard sale. You won't make as much at a consignment shop as it's worth. But something is better than nothing and give you some space back.
  • pixie  •  1 year 4 months ago
    This article is great. I wish it would have covered what to do if living with someone that will not throw stuff away, or give anything away. insisting on keeping things that are tossed out. example: 36 plates 4 people.
  • Rosa  •  1 year 4 months ago
    Throwing away a child's work of art is a shame. Taking a picture of it is not the same. A child should have memories and items for keep sake that they can toss when they get older if they choose. I believe throwing away anything a child makes for their parents or family is the worst this you could do to a child's mind. Find room to keep their master pieces. Why in the world you any one throw away a part of the child. Art is from the inside and throwing away art work would be like throwing away part of the child. Tech. and pictures do not replace an original piece of art.
  • Randi  •  1 year 4 months ago
    If you have gently used household goods a great place to donate them is a thrift store on a military base. In the Air Force it is called the Airman's Attic. These places either loan items (such as appliances) or sell items at a very low cost to military members in need. Contrary to popular belief, these people don't make a lot of money and a lot of them are just starting out with no household goods at all. If you aren't military and don't know anyone who is you can call the main base number and ask about it.
  • john  •  1 year 4 months ago
    maybe i'm just reading it wrong... but isn't "stuff" a five letter word?. lol
  • jjetrek79  •  1 year 4 months ago
    I agree to most of remarks on here If you have TRUE pupose for this item Even it just once a year. Keep it !! THe other things in life Like clothes do not longer fit you I regret saying this. Get rid of it.
    There are other methods of getting rid of Paper items. Which is Called TASK.
  • Mark  •  1 year 4 months ago
    Do not flush your medications, that just adds to the toxic soup we are already poisoning our waterways with. Even trace amounts are highly toxic to some organisms.
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