Making order in half-second steps
Do you remember the last time you took a walk in the woods?
Maybe you can recall the quality of the light, the views and scenes that passed you, the kinds of plants and trees along the way, or the companions who accompanied you. There’s something meditative about the woods.
Practically speaking, most people find that a walk in the woods is fairly easy to do. You simply choose a place to begin and then start walking. It’s so obvious how to take a walk in the woods that it hardly seems worthwhile to explain it.
You just start.
You don’t worry about step 247 or bridge number 2 or the fourth squirrel. You just walk.
Organizing is like that too.
Organizing is just like a walk in the woods. You begin. You take a single step forward – and another – and another, pausing occasionally to take in the sights.
Except when it isn’t.
Unlike walking in the woods, people do get stressed about where to put things (step 247) or how to deal with email (bridge number 2) or dealing with time management (the fourth squirrel). When you worry about these things, it’s as though you’re standing stock still in the middle of the path with your eyes closed.
You can’t get there any faster by thinking so hard.
Just take a step.
Depending on the length of your legs, a single step happens in about a half-second. Is there something you can you do in your space today that would take a half-second?
The idea isn’t to get to the end of the trail in one fell swoop. Your legs aren’t that long – and neither is your attention span.
Maybe, just maybe, you’d be willing to take a “walk” through your workspace today, taking half-second actions to move what you can.
That fourth squirrel will appear when it’s supposed to and no amount of thinking will make it come faster.
Enjoy your walk.
Organized under Creating order, Making peace with piles. Labeled as clutter, compassion, home office, mindfulness, organize, organizing, self-employment.


