Category: Feng Shui

  • Money Frogs!

    Hi there!

    When I first came across this article, I was quite confused….not quite sure what a money frog was. Those of you more familiar with Feng Shui probably do! I did find this article quite interesting! Enjoy, Love, Sister Bridget

     

    Feng Shui Money Frog

    The Money Frog, also known as the three legged toad or “Chan Chu” in Chinese is probably the most auspicious symbol of money-making. This mythical creature is said to appear every full moon near homes that will receive good news of increased wealth or monetary gain. The Money Frog is used for attracting wealth and abundance and can often be seen near cash registers, receptions, managers' desk and offices in Oriental countries.

    Often portrayed sitting on a bed of treasure made up of gold ingots, coins and jewels and bearing a coin in its mouth, the Money Frog is a wonderful symbol for wealth and career luck and for the patriarch of the family. The Money Frog is also always seen biting on two strings of coins and with 7 dots on its back, depicting the Ursa Major (Great North Pole 7 Stars). A must for those who wish to multiply their wealth!

    Here is how you can use the Money Frogs to Feng Shui your way to a better life.

    1. Place this wonderful creature it in the wealth sector (South East) of your living room or office to magnify your windfall luck and enhance the income of the residents.

    2. Place two Money Frogs: One inside your front door facing inwards symbolizes money coming in to your home of business and the other facing outward to collect the money.

    3. For those involved in jobs where there is the opportunity to earn commission or side income, display a money frog next to your desk or diagonally opposite the front door to your home.

    4. The best number of Money Frogs to have in your living room or garden is nine because it represents bringing in money from all directions of the compass. Place them randomly and discreetly under your table, behind the sofa, below the coffee table etc. Ensure that each Money Frog faces a different direction of the compass in the living room and one near your front door hopping inward to bring in lots of wealth and money. If nine is not possible, three or six are good numbers too.

    Note: NEVER keep money frogs in the bedroom, toilets or kitchen.

  • How’s it going???

    Hey there!

    How is it going? Are you all still busy taking out the trash – both physically and energetically? So far, I have totally cleaned out my kitchen, all the cupboards and drawers have new shelf paper, all my cups and dishes and pots and pans are in nice neat rows. The floor is sparkly clean. I have also cleaned out the dining room, which was in pretty good shape — just got some new curtains made and cleaned the rugs 🙂 So, my downstairs is nearly done! Yippeeee!

    So, whats next?  I mean, once we have all cleaned up our enviornments physically, what can we do magickally to complete the cleansing? We have quite a few options:

    Marie Laveau House Blessing Kit is a one time use kit which takes a few hours but will give you a really thorough cleansing and blessing of your home space. It can also be used at an office or workspace (so long as no one is around 🙂 ) or just in one room (like the room you sleep in or spend the most time in)

    Do you have any leftover incense cones from your candle magick kits? Either the Black Banishing Incense or the Chango’s Mystic Chrysalis Incense would be very good for removing negativity from a space or cleansing. The Black Banishing is the obvious one. But the Chango’s is for change – so you would focus on releasing the old and icky stuff and getting ready for new and wonderful stuff (this is the change). Burn a cone or two in each room, in just the room that you spend the most time in. As Always — Never leave burning incense unattended!

    Marie Laveau House Blessing  Solution can be purchased seperatley. It can be used to clean your voodoo workspace, or use it as a *touch up* around the house to clean up spots that might feel funky or are just dirty.

    So, please please please let me know how you are doing with the takin out of the trash!

    Stay tuned, because soon we start the inviting in or the totally wonderful!

    Light and Love

    Sister Bridget

    Heart1

  • Feng Shui Tips for Your Dining Room

    We’re getting there , folks! How are you doing? Let me know!

    Light and Love

    Sister Bridget

    Dining

    Feng Shui Tips for Your Dining Room
    by Stephanie Roberts

    In ancient cultures, "breaking bread" together, whether as a family or with strangers, was a honored way to build community. More recently, potluck dinners, pancake breakfasts, and company picnics have continued this tradition. We haven’t done so well at maintaining this important ritual in our homes, however.

    Today, the dining room is often one of the most neglected rooms in the house; either it is a formal space that is rarely used, or it has been taken over for use as a home office or projects space. Busy schedules and multiple-careers can make it almost impossible for families to share dinner together on a regular basis. From a feng shui perspective, we are missing out on an important and once-sacred aspect of life. Paying attention to the feng shui of your dining space can help to remedy that.

    A cramped dining room can create a feeling of pressure in family relationships and interfere with good digestion. Too much heavy, dark, old furniture – especially when it is squeezed into too small a space – also creates a heavy, dark feeling and blocks the flow of chi. Boxes and bags of clutter have a similar effect. The older the clutter, the more stuck the energy will feel. De-cluttering your dining room is an important first step in improving the feng shui of this space.

    The dining room is an exception to the feng shui guideline of aiming to leave some open space in the center of every room. Here the dining table itself should occupy the center position, with equal space on all sides (if possible), and plenty of room for each person to sit down at and get up from the table.

    The flow of energy through the dining room should be gentle but not stagnant. It’s good to have two doors to the dining room to allow chi to circulate, but if doorways on opposite walls are directly in line with each other chi will move straight through the room too quickly. A faceted crystal ball or crystal chandelier over the center of the dining table will help to balance chi in the room, and also helps people with eating disorders embrace healthier habits.

    A mirror is also helpful for improving chi flow in the dining room. Make sure that the mirror reflects something attractive: a nice piece of furniture, a view out a window, or painting or other artwork. A mirror that reflects what’s on the table visually doubles your food, and symbolically doubles your money. Keep in mind, though, that if your dining table is covered with clutter or unfinished projects the mirror will doubling the mess and workload.

    If your family is managing to dine together but the conversations tend to focus on the past rather than sharing current issues, try clearing all old objects from the dining room. Boxes of old papers and photographs especially will contribute to holding the energy of this room in the past. Getting rid of them will encourage your family to open up about what’s happening in their lives right now. If you want to keep a few ancestral treasures or portraits in the dining room, place them together in the Family sector of the room rather than distributing them throughout the space.

    EATING IN PEACE

    The dining room should be a calm and peaceful place. Warm, soothing earth tones such as soft yellow, peach, and beige are good colors for this room. Curtains soften the cutting chi of mini-blinds, and a thick rug or carpet adds a soothing texture that helps to absorb sound and keeps the atmosphere of this room tranquil. If you don’t have a formal dining room, do what you can to make the area where you have your meals as separate and quiet as possible.

    Lighting is an important element in creating a good dining atmosphere. Use candles, lower wattage bulbs, or a dimmer switch to bring the energy level down a little, especially at the end of a hectic day.

    If your evening meals often feel rushed or if time pressures from the day carry over into the dinner hour, try removing all clocks and calendars from the dining room and reposition those in other rooms so they can’t be seen from the table. This will help you slow down and enjoy a calmer dining experience.

    At least once a week turn off the TV and allow yourself to enjoy the process of physical nourishment without any distractions other than conversation with your family. Good manners dictate turning your cell phone off when you dine at a restaurant; why not apply this rule at home, too? Treating the dinner hour as a special time for relaxation and nurturing is a good feng shui practice, and will help both your mood and your digestion.

    Your beautiful table linens and good silverware should be used from time to time, so you can enjoy them in the present instead of always waiting for some future date. Plan a special sit-down-together dinner with your partner or family one night a month (or more often, if you can). Making this a regular event reinforces how special your loved ones are to you. Using a tablecloth, rather than individual placemats, encourages closeness among family members.

    Take a moment before beginning the meal to give thanks for the abundance on your table and for the family and friends who are sharing the meal with you. Saying grace before the meal – in whatever form you choose – fills the dining room with the energy of love and appreciation.

    Excerpted from “The Pocket Idiot’s Guide to Feng Shui” by Stephanie Roberts (Alpha Books, 2004)

    Copyright © 2004 Stephanie Roberts

  • Feng Shui for the Heart of Your Home

    Great Tips for your kitchen! Hope you all are doing well!

    Light and Love

    Sister BridgetHearth

    Feng Shui for the Heart of Your Home
    by Stephanie Roberts

    The kitchen is sometimes called "the heart of the home," and with good reason; in ancient cultures the hearth was a sacred place representing the life-giving sustenance of Earth’s bounty. Feng shui recognizes the kitchen as one of the most important rooms in the house because it is where we connect with the energies that nourish us physically (food), financially (money), and emotionally (family). It reminds us to see the kitchen not just as where we put the groceries away and dish up dinner, but also as a place where we receive blessings and express gratitude for the gifts of life, health, and prosperity.

    The kitchen should be bright and sunny in feeling, evoking the warmth of the sun and hearth. Reds and earth tones are good here, while green accents add wood energy to feed the stove’s fire, and touches of purple help to support prosperity. Dark, cramped kitchens can be transformed with warm white or pale yellow paint, brighter light fixtures, and cheerful accessories that bring reds and yellows into the room. A kitchen with lots of black and chrome appliances and fixtures will benefit from touches of green, purple, and red to support health and prosperity.

    When you come home from the store and put your groceries away, think about the health and vitality these foods will bring to you and your family. As you reach for a snack or prepare a meal, take a moment to focus on how fortunate you are to have this nourishment at your fingertips. Visualize your kitchen always filled with nature’s bounty, and say a quiet "thank you" for the food that sustains you and your family. This moment of awareness and gratitude will help to keep the chi of your kitchen supportive and strong.

    One easy way to improve the chi of the kitchen is to make sure that everything involved in food preparation and serving is attractive and pleasant to work with. If you are cooking with pots that you don’t like, eating from dishes that you do not love, or using paper towels for napkins because the good ones are put away in the back of a closet, each seemingly minor incident is detracting from your ability to enjoy and benefit from your meals.

    Get rid of the stuff you never use, start using the things you love, and fill your kitchen with accessories that you really enjoy. This is feng shui in action, and it’s a wonderful way to transform the energy of your kitchen so you can receive the support and comfort that the heart of your home should provide.

    Feng shui reminds us that in order to prosper, we need to be healthy. The feng shui of your kitchen – especially the stove – can have a big influence on your financial situation, even if you rarely or never cook.

    In feng shui, the stove is your "wealth generator." It is the most important symbolic factor in your ability to prosper financially, so make sure it works the way it should. Any problems with the stove can indicate problems with money or limitations to your ability to bring home a good income. A burner that doesn’t heat could be a sign of fruitless effort, and an oven that runs too hot could be burning up your money. Dirt and grime are also signs of negative energy, so be sure to keep your stovetop and oven clean.

    One easy way to activate money chi is to use your stovetop at least once a day, rather than always relying on the microwave to boil water for tea or heat up a cup of soup. Vary which burner you use, so that all are used regularly. If you don’t use your stove, or use the same one burner all the time, symbolically you are limiting your ability to benefit from financial resources.

    When the stovetop is not in use, put all pots and pans away. Unused pots stored on top of the stove can squash prosperity chi, especially when they cover the rear left burner; if you visualize the ba gua over the stovetop, with career in the center front, the rear left burner is in the Wealth position.

    To support prosperity, place something that symbolizes wealth or abundance in the Wealth area of your kitchen [the back left corner of the room if you are standing in the doorway], such as a basket or bowl of fresh fruit. Purple and green grapes are especially good abundance symbols for the wealth area.

    Another good feng shui tactic is to keep kitchen canisters and other containers more than half-full as much as possible. Every time you see these containers, your subconscious mind will register plenty rather than the implied lack created by an almost empty jar. Get in the habit of restocking your food supplies before you run low, and you will fill your kitchen with the energy of abundance.

    Excerpted from “The Pocket Idiot’s Guide to Feng Shui” by Stephanie Roberts (Alpha Books, 2004) 

    Copyright © 2004 Stephanie Roberts

  • Feng Shui Money Tips

    Here we are! Finally at some Feng Shui tips to help us help ourselves. Hope you all are doing well!

    Light and Love

    Sister BridgetMoneytree

    Feng Shui Money Tips
    by Stephanie Roberts

    Do you know where your financial "power spots" are? The contemporary methods of feng shui associate prosperity issues with the back left corner of any space. Stand at your front door facing into the house; your wealth area is at the back of the house on the left-hand side. There’s also a wealth area within each room: facing in from the doorway, it’s the corner area in the back of the room on the left-hand side. Where are the wealth areas within your office, living room, kitchen, and bedroom? Now that you’ve identified your money power spots, here are some quick and easy ways to apply feng shui to these spaces:

    1. Clear out any clutter from these important areas. Clutter is a sign of stagnant energy, and clutter in your money power spots can clog up your cash flow. Getting rid of clutter is one of the most powerful ways to shift the energy of your power spots into high gear.

    2. Fix things that are broken. Anything that doesn’t work as it should is a sign of something wrong in the area of your life that corresponds to that part of your space. Examine each of your money power spots to look for anything that needs repair. It’s time to do something about that loose doorknob, non-working light switch, stuck file drawer, or clock that doesn’t keep correct time, to name just a few possible examples. Remove items like these from your power spots or fix them so they work properly.

    3. Enhance your power spots with symbols of prosperity, such as a bowl of coins (add your loose change to it every day), a "lucky bamboo" plant, or anything that symbolizes success and prosperity to you. There are lots of Chinese luck symbols available, but you don’t have to use them unless you want to. A picture of your dream house, or a model of that luxury car you long for, is an effective money symbol because it has personal meaning for you.

    4. Accent your money areas with the colors green and purple. Green symbolizes vitality and growth, and purple is the color of wealth. Place a bowl of green and purple grapes (real or artificial) in the wealth area of your kitchen, to symbolize abundance filling your home. If you use real grapes, it’s okay to eat them, just add more from time to time so the grapes remain fresh and the bowl is always more than half full.

    5. Pay attention to how you handle money every day. Do you keep paper money neatly sorted in your wallet or money clip, or is it jammed in there any old way, or crumpled up at the bottom of your pocket? Clean the clutter out of your purse and wallet, and start handling your money as though you value it.

    6. If you neglect your money, it will neglect you, so be sure to balance your checkbook regularly and pay your bills on time. Put your checkbook in an attractive cover (choose green, purple, red, blue, or black) and keep it in the wealth area of your desk – that’s the rear left corner again — or in the wealth area of your office.

    7. Live generously. Money is a form of energy, and it needs to flow through your life, not just into it. Hoarding and scrimping work against more coming in, while giving generously within your means makes space for even greater abundance. If you don’t yet have ample money to share, give as generously as you can of your time, energy, compassion, and appreciation.

    8. Take a few moments every evening to think about all the good things that happened to you today and to express your gratitude for what you have received. Small things count, too, so it’s okay if there’s little of the spectacular on your list most of the time. It’s not what happened that’s important; it’s getting in the habit of focusing on the positive side of things every day that matters. The more you notice, appreciate, and express gratitude for blessings received, no matter how small, the more good things will come your way, including money.

    A true experience of prosperity is determined not by how much money you have, but by how well you notice and enjoy what is already present in your life. The formal name for the wealth area is "fortunate blessings" – as you de-clutter, repair, and accessorize your money power spots keep this broader meaning in mind. When you celebrate being rich in friends and family, or rich with laughter, or the richness of your spiritual life, or even being rich in air and sunshine if nothing else seems to be going well for you today, material blessings will come to you more readily as well.

    Copyright © 2005 Stephanie Roberts

  • Conquering the Clutter “Yeah, Buts”

    So, I hope you all are doing well with this little endeavor! I am! Every day I thow out or rehome one grocery sized bag of stuff 🙂 I am doing really really well with it. Know a quick and easy way to rehome that stack of romance novels you have on a shelf? The local public library or nursing home just love used paperbacks! Nursing homes, especially the Activities Department, are always looking for donations and are really grateful for whatever they get!  And dont forget the Salvation Army for those clothes that just dont fit right anymore. Keep plugging!

    Light and Love

    Sister Bridget

    Books

    Conquering the Clutter "Yeah, Buts"
    by Stephanie Roberts

    Is your home filled with a lot of stuff that you don’t really use or need, but that you just can’t seem to part with? Do you make quick progress in the first stages of clutter-clearing, only to hit a wall when the easy stuff is gone and you’re faced with difficult decisions about what really counts as a "treasure"?

    If you are challenged by clutter it’s likely that your inner voice is saying "yeah, but…" a lot as you try to make your keep-or-toss decisions.

    For example, you might pick something out of box or a closet and say to yourself, "I guess I don’t really need to keep this," but before you can get it into a things-to-give-away bag, your inner voice pipes up with "Yeah, but…"
    – "…it’s pretty"
    – "…it was my grandmother’s"
    – "…it was a gift from so-and-so"
    – "…I paid a lot for it"
    – "…I haven’t used it yet"
    – "…I might wear it again someday"
    – "…it will fit after I lose some weight," or
    – "…I’ll feel guilty if I throw/give it away.".

    Every time you pick something up and can’t decide what to do with it, stop and listen for a "yeah but" comment from your inner voice.

    Once you start listening to your "yeah buts", you’ll get a clearer idea of the particular language of concern that stops you from letting go of things. Probably you will find that certain clutter decisions are much more difficult for you than others. For example, I have no qualms whatsoever about tossing out old letters and greeting cards, but getting rid of clothes that I haven’t worn in five years because they are a size too small is very difficult for me. What this really means is that I am secure in knowing that the people who love me love me, but I am not at peace with the changes that middle age has brought to my body and don’t want to accept that I’m not as slim as I used to be.

    Someone else, however, might make quick work of cleaning out their clothes closets, only to come to a dead stop when faced with a 20-year collection of postcards and greeting cards. Their rational mind says, "this is a box of paper clutter, I ought to just toss it out." Their heart cries out, "I can’t throw away my friends! I can’t throw away my relatives! What kind of an unloving, ungrateful person would that make me?!" So back the box goes, into storage, and another would-be declutter is left feeing guilty and confused – guilty for holding on to clutter, guilty for wanting to throw it out, and confused by why it’s so hard to get rid of things they’d rather part with.

    With postcards and greeting cards, it really is the thought that counts. A greeting card is just that: a greeting, a paper "hello there." It deserves to be appreciated, but appreciating the gesture doesn’t mean you need to keep the card forever. The same is true of gift items that don’t suit you or your home. Ask yourself what your friends and relatives intended by sending you those cards and gifts; did they want you to know they were thinking of you, or did they intend to fill your home with clutter? Anyone who cares for you enough to send you a card or gift also wants you live comfortably and happily in a well-kept home that suits and supports you – and that means getting rid of your clutter.

    So many of our "yeah, buts" have to do with past memories or potential future usefulness. Holding on to this stuff fills our heads and hearts with "what if" and "if only" messages, which make it harder to live fully in the present. When your closet is full of "skinny" clothes, for example, every time you open it to look for something to wear you are reminded that you used to be slimmer, that you’re not happy with the size you are now, and that you’re still hoping to lose some weight "some day." As a result, each time you reach for a "not-skinny" garment, you feel like a failure. What an unpleasant emotional message to burden yourself with every day! When your closets contain only clothes that are the right size and that fit your lifestyle and personality as well as your body, choosing an outfit becomes self-affirming and empowering instead of belittling.

    Consciously remind yourself that you need to make a choice: are you going to go on living with clutter, or are you going to choose to move closer to your clutter-free goal? The clearer your vision of how you want your life to be without clutter, the easier it will be for you to make those difficult decisions.

    By paying close attention to the "yeah but" messages that are keeping you from making clutter-clearing decisions, you gain insight into the emotions that contributed to all this stuff piling up in the first place. The key to conquering the "yeah, buts" is to remember that these are the second thoughts that pop up in response to your first thought, which was, "I guess I don’t really need to keep this." That’s the voice you should be listening to.

    © 2005 Stephanie Roberts

  • Remove and Replace…..

    Hey there —

    So, the emails are coming in, asking me if my cheese has finally slipped off my cracker for good! What is the deal with all this cleaning? Well….it seems like now is a good time to let you all in on part 2 of my plan (insert evil laugh here!)

    Those of you who have done work with Spellmaker before, know that the first step in some of the work that we do is elimination. To get rid of obstacles, negative patterns or thought processes, baggage from past experiences. In love work, the Leave My Man/Woman Alone spell is to address such things, and is the initial spell done in many love cases. Anyone who has done the Mind Body Spirit candle magick kits  know that in the petitioning for them, we often recommend to first state what it is to be removed, and then what it is you wish to replace that icky stuff with.  So, see the pattern here..remove and replace, remove and replace, remove and replace.

    So, by cleaning up our living space around us, by decluttering, by breaking up the stagnant energy, by taking out the trash and opening up space, we will then be ready in a bit to do some heavy duty inviting in of some wonderful stuff!

    February isnt far off now — just a few weeks. The wonderful month of Erzulie Freda and all the pink, romantic, warm , loving feelings that go along with her 🙂 See where we are going here??? There are lots of things that we can do to invite the lovely energy of Erzulie into our homes and into our spaces. The Feng Shui articles about romance and such will give you a good starting place about how to arrange things in the physical to help open up that kind of energy. Then we have products that can facilitate things on a spiritual level and much more specifically for inviting Ezulie’s blessings as well. I will get to more of the how next week. But, for now, keep removing what you can, cleaning and refreshing the  space around you and be ready to invite in some new, wonderful vibrations in February!

    Light and Love

    Sister Bridget

    Moving

  • Clutter-Clearing Tips that Work

    Overwhelmed? I was when I first looked around 🙂 Where do I start? What do I save? What do I toss? Where do I put stuff in the meantime? Truthfully, I almost have up and stopped de-cluttering because things were actually looking worse when I first started — (does that sound familiar to any of you????) but I stuck with it and I have a real sense of accomplishment and a neat and tidy place and lots more room, too! So, hang in there, chunk it down and keep on keepin on! You will be glad you did!
    Light and Love, Sister Bridget

    Noclutter

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Clutter-Clearing Tips that Work
    by Stephanie Roberts

    Coping with clutter is rarely easy. There’s more involved than just catching up on overdue housework, and staying focused and motivated over the weeks or months it may take to get the job done can be one of the biggest challenges. Here are some tips to help you stick with it until it’s done:

    1. "How do you eat an elephant?… One bite at a time!" That’s a good way to approach clutter clearing: one "bite-sized" task at a time. An entire house, or even a room, of clutter can be overwhelming. Instead, focus on a single small area – one shelf in a bookcase or one drawer in the kitchen, for example – before moving on to the next.

    2. Don’t expect to get it done in a weekend. It probably took a long time for all that stuff to pile up, so make peace up front with the fact that getting rid of it is going to take some time, too. Plan to do a little bit every day over a longer period of time, rather than waiting until you have a large chunk of free time available to devote to clutter-clearing (which may never happen!).

    3. Set time goals, not task goals. If you’ve decided to declutter the kitchen cabinets on Saturday morning, for example, but it’s really an all-day job, you’ve set yourself up for failure. Instead, set a goal to work on the kitchen for three hours on Saturday. That way, when the time it up, you’ll have met your goal even if the task itself is not entirely completed.

    4. Use a timer to get over the "don’t-wannas." Tell yourself you only have to focus on clutter for 5 minutes. Pick your bite-sized target (one drawer, one shelf, or one pile of paper) set your timer, and go go go for five minutes. When the timer chimes, you can stop… or keep going, now that you’ve established some momentum.

    5. If you just can’t make a "keep or toss" decision about something, put it in a "for now" box and plan to return to it later when you are feeling more decisive. Items that you do wish to keep, but that have no "home" in your home, go in a separate box with other things you need to make space for. This way you end up with pre-sorted boxes of stuff you still need to deal with, rather than leaving things where you found them (which is not where they belong, or you wouldn’t have a clutter problem).

    6. Be prepared to make more of a mess before things look better. You can’t do a thorough job of clearing out a closet, for example, unless you begin by removing everything that’s in there. That means you’re going to create a big heap o’stuff while you are sorting and purging. Don’t mistake the temporary mess for lack of progress; just keep doing a little bit at a time until you’ve gone through it all and made decisions about what to keep and where to keep it.

    7. Get rid of the excess first, before you think about organizing and storage. One of the most common mistakes people make is to buy more storage containers before they’ve decluttered. Eventually, they end up with a home cluttered with boxes and bags and bins of other clutter. Sort and purge first, then tackle storage.

    8. Reward your accomplishments, both great and small. Finished the hall closet today? Good for you; now make an appointment for that manicure you promised yourself. Plan in advance what treats you will earn as you reach your clutter-clearing milestones; knowing you have a specific reward coming will help you stay motivated to stick with the process until it is done.

    Of course, the biggest reward of all is the joy and convenience of living in a home that is free of clutter. Don’t wait another day to get started!

    © 2005 Stephanie Roberts

  • Coping with the Emotional Aspects of Clutter Clearing

    Having trouble getting started? Here is an article to help you get going! And please post a comment or two and let me know how this is going !
    Light and Love, Sister Bridget

    Donkey

    When ‘Just Do It’ Isn’t Enough:
    Coping with the Emotional Aspects of Clutter Clearing
    by Stephanie Roberts

    One reason so many clutter-clearing efforts fail or remain uncompleted is that we have this idea that all that it takes to get rid of clutter is a little effort and determination. While a "just do it" attitude does help you get started and persevere, clutter-clearing is not quite so simple as that. Running unprepared into the not-so-simple aspects of clutter can bring all of our good intentions to a halt.

    For every piece of clutter that has piled up because we’ve been too busy or too distracted to deal with it, there’s probably at least one piece that you have avoided dealing with for emotional reasons. The underlying problem is not procrastination, it’s that dealing with clutter means dealing with our own difficult emotions:

    • Getting rid of clothes we’ll never fit into again      means accepting our current shape and level (or lack) of fitness.
    • Getting rid of an expensive item we never use      means admitting that we made a poor decision when we bought it.
    • Getting rid of books and magazines we don’t have      time to read means accepting that we will never have enough time or      attention to explore every topic that’s of interest to us.
    • Getting rid of possessions remaining after a loved      one has died means coming to terms with our loss and grief.

    Acknowledge to yourself that clearing out your clutter will involve some emotional risk. Start by exploring why keeping certain kinds of clutter feels comforting to you. For example:

    • If you grew up with very frugal parents who taught      you not to be wasteful, getting rid of items that are still useful may      trigger feelings of guilt. (This is very common among the "Baby      Boomer" generation, whose parents may have experienced hardship and      deprivation during the Great Depression and/or World War II years.)
    • If you grew up poor and hungry, surrounding      yourself with material goods may feel reassuring that you will always have      enough.
    • If you suffer from low self-esteem or come from an      abusive environment, you may unconsciously feel that you don’t deserve      beautiful surroundings, or that you will be punished for trying to create      them for yourself.
    • If you have experienced a difficult loss through      the death of a loved one or the end of a marriage, getting rid of that      person’s things can feel like a betrayal of your love.
    • If you have an attic or basement full of supplies      for a hobby you hoped would become a career, clearing it out may feel like      giving up on your dreams, or it may force a confrontation with the fact      that you are getting older.
    • If you lack confidence in pursuing a long-held      dream, keeping your clutter can keep you from having to go out and      actually do it.

    Healing and growth come from recognizing your feelings, no matter what they are. If your enthusiasm for clutter clearing suddenly turns into feelings of anger, resentment at the task itself, or a vague sense of anxiety, that’s a sign to pause and reflect on what deeper feelings are being triggered.

    Many of our reasons for hanging on to clutter are, at their core, about fear: fear that we won’t be equal to the challenges of the future, and fear of confronting our regrets about the past. Clutter can be comforting; it acts as a buffer between us and reality.

    Here are some points to help you maintain a perspective of clarity as you work on your clutter:

    • Living clutter-free does not mean living in a      sterile environment; it means getting rid of the excess so that everything      around you is there for a reason.
    • The past is over and the future isn’t here yet.      Confronting the emotions raised by clutter will make living in the present      less threatening.
    • In the course of clutter clearing, you may get rid      of something that you later wish you’d kept. Emotionally healthy people do      feel regret; but then they let it go, trusting that an equal or better      item will be available if they need it.
    • Letting go of regrets about your present clutter      will help free you from the fear of regret that drives the accumulation of      future clutter
    • People who are able to live without clutter trust      themselves to make good choices. As you become more conscious of what you      allow into and keep in your home, you will develop a higher level of trust      your own decisions.
    • Hoarding against an uncertain future reveals a      lack of faith in the ability of the Universe to provide what you need at      the time you need it. The antidote is to focus on gratitude for all that      you now have, and for all the ways in which you are already being provided      for.

    If difficult feelings come up for you as you work through your clutter, acknowledge them. You may discover that you just aren’t ready to confront some tasks or part with some things yet. It is self-defeating to push yourself all at once through changes that are too large for you today. Be gentle with yourself, take baby steps, and work at your own pace.

    Remember that the space you create by releasing clutter will allow all kinds of gifts to flow into your life, on the physical, spiritual, and emotional levels. Letting go of excess makes room for blessings.

    © 2003 Stephanie Roberts

  • How Clutter Affects your Love Life!

    Well, you all knew this was coming, didn’t you? SO, for those of you who are on the fence about taking out the trash – here you go! The suggestions below don’t conflict with any of the work you might be doing with spellmaker, so don’t worry about that J Everything below can only help!
    Light and Love

    Sister Bridget

    Trashcan

    How Clutter Affects Your Love Life
    by Stephanie Roberts

    Clutter in any area of your home is a sign of stuck, stagnant energy. The more clutter you have, the more sluggish the energy becomes. When the areas of your home associated with romance are cluttered and untidy, your love life is affected as well. From a feng shui perspective, the three places in your home that have the strongest impact on your love life are your bedroom, the Relationship Area (I’ll tell you how to find that in a moment), and the space around your front door. Here’s why:

    Clutter in the Bedroom
    Your bedroom is strongly associated with the intimacy of a romantic relationship. Clutter in the bedroom can contribute to fatigue, irritability, lack of focus, and difficulty sleeping. When you and your partner are tired, cranky, and distracted much of the time, your relationship is probably not getting the quality attention it needs and deserves. If you are single, a cluttered bedroom will make it more difficult for a new relationship to get started; all that stuck energy literally makes it hard for you to meet someone new. And that’s before a potential partner gets a good look at the mess you are living in! Decluttering your bedroom is an excellent way to shake all that stuck energy loose and make room for a new relationship.

    Clutter in the Relationship Area
    The feng shui "ba gua" is a map of the energetic influences of a space. Some people use the ba gua according to the compass directions; with this method, the Relationship Area is the southwest sector of your home or of a specific room. Western feng shui orients the ba gua to the entry to a space; with this method, the Relationship area is the back right corner of the home or of a room. Instead of wondering which method to use, why not check out them both? Look around the SW sector of your home, and in the SW part of your bedroom. Now check the room(s) in the right-rear corner of the house, and look at the far right corner of your bedroom. Like a wet blanket thrown over a fire, clutter in any of these areas can smother the passion and intensity in your romance. You aren’t much fun to be around when you feel depressed, indecisive, ineffective, creatively blocked, overly emotional, or too lethargic to care – which is how you are likely to feel about your love life if your Relationship areas are filled with clutter! Find these areas within your home and bedroom, and make them your top priority for clutter-clearing attention.

    Clutter Around the Front Door
    The third major factor is the area around your front door. The main entrance is called "the Mouth of Chi" in feng shui, because it has the strongest influence on how chi (energy) flows into your home. You can’t nourish your body without opening your mouth to eat. Similarly, your home can’t benefit from fresh, vital chi if the front door is blocked with clutter or rarely used. Go take a look at your front door. Does it open all the way, or have you stored things behind it? Is your foyer or front hall clean and welcoming, or is it filled with stuff you haven’t gotten around to putting away or getting rid of? When was the last time you used your front door?

    The front door is associated with opportunities. If you’ve been trying to meet someone new without success, getting rid of clutter around the front door and using that entry more often are a good way to shift that stuck energy. You may find that opportunities to connect with someone new come to your attention more often, and that you are more likely to take advantage of them instead of feeling so tired you’d rather stay home. If you are in a relationship, a cluttered front entry can contribute to feelings of boredom and being stuck in a rut with each other. Opening the front door more widely and frequently is a good way to breathe new life into a less-than-exciting romantic connection.

    When you have cleared the clutter from important areas of your home, you should see a shift for the better in your love life. For those who are single and looking for love, making space in your home literally creates space for a new relationship to come in. That new partner may manifest for you right away, or it may take time for the energy shifts to result in a new connection. Either way, the space you create by getting rid of clutter will help to lift your spirits, improve your mood, and increase your energy — which will make you more enjoyable and attractive to everyone you meet, old friends and new.

    If you are in a partnership that has not been going well, clutter-clearing alone is unlikely to solve all of your relationship problems. However, by clearing out key spaces you create mental and emotional space for greater clarity about the issues and behavior patterns that contribute to difficulties in your marriage or partnership. With greater clarity comes a greater capacity for wise decisions and appropriate action. You may even find that releasing clutter results in releasing a foundering relationship as well. Accept that it’s all for the best, and focus on the new space you have created – in your heart as well as in your home – for a new and better love to come along.

    © 2005 Stephanie Roberts