Entry tags:
The Exercise
Okay. . . I did it.
I probably didn't do it as deeply as I might have, but on some assignments -- whatever the venue -- sometimes "good enough" is indeed enough.
The point of the exercise was to look at possessions: which ones have positive, energy-lifting associations, and which have negative, energy-depressing associations.
What I found wasn't particularly earth-shattering. . . mostly that the 'things' I have around me, the stuff that is eye-catching, anyway, is almost entirely positive. I should also mention that I didn't even bother to go into my yellow room: what was supposed to have been a spacious area for exercise and creative pursuits which has been nothing but a place for stuff to accumulate.
But I don't have things around me that have bad memories, or which I display just to make someone else feel good, or to impress others. (There are advantages to being territorial: one of them is that my space is my space, and if you don't like it, you don't have to come round.)
I think that for me the value was more in actually using the technique, so I can keep it in my 'toolbox' as I continue to work on my relationship with my house. As I'm de-cluttering, I should be pausing over the various 'things' I'm moving, to really find out how I feel about them. Does a particular object contribute to a good feeling in my house, or does it bring my energy down? Or is it neutral?
I probably didn't do it as deeply as I might have, but on some assignments -- whatever the venue -- sometimes "good enough" is indeed enough.
The point of the exercise was to look at possessions: which ones have positive, energy-lifting associations, and which have negative, energy-depressing associations.
What I found wasn't particularly earth-shattering. . . mostly that the 'things' I have around me, the stuff that is eye-catching, anyway, is almost entirely positive. I should also mention that I didn't even bother to go into my yellow room: what was supposed to have been a spacious area for exercise and creative pursuits which has been nothing but a place for stuff to accumulate.
But I don't have things around me that have bad memories, or which I display just to make someone else feel good, or to impress others. (There are advantages to being territorial: one of them is that my space is my space, and if you don't like it, you don't have to come round.)
I think that for me the value was more in actually using the technique, so I can keep it in my 'toolbox' as I continue to work on my relationship with my house. As I'm de-cluttering, I should be pausing over the various 'things' I'm moving, to really find out how I feel about them. Does a particular object contribute to a good feeling in my house, or does it bring my energy down? Or is it neutral?
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It feels banal to sugest, but i wonder if there's a connection between the clutter in the yellow room and other creative frustrations?
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If only it was that simple. It is so hard to proritize a time to manage the clutter, but you seem to have found a way that works for you. It makes sense to me also and I am pretty sure I could do the exercise... maybe I should teach it to Jae... hmmm...
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