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- Consumerism and Planet 15
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- Folders & Filing 46
- How Tos 49
- Minimalism 27
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- Uncategorized 19
- Videos 38
- Year in Review Posts 13
A world-renowned author validates paper organizing
A month ago I posted two sentences author Suketu Mehta wrote at the end of his book on Bombay “Maximum City,” anticipating his return to the US:
“Surviving in a modern country involves dealing with an immense amount of paper. He who can stay on top of the paper wins.”
How I use Evernote to keep track of everywhere I’ve eaten in Portland, OR
Tomorrow I’ll return to Portland, OR for work - one of my favorite American cities. Being one of America’s best food towns, I’m already thinking about where I want to eat. Luckily, I’ve recorded every single restaurant I’ve eaten at starting with my 3 trips to Portland last year.
Ask yourself this one question when decluttering clothing.
Gretchen Rubin, author of Outer Order, Inner calm: Declutter and Organize to Make More Room for Happiness, was recently interviewed on Good Morning America. It’s a short interview that barely scratches the surface of her new book (of which I’ve only started), but there is a very helpful self-interview question in the accompanying article. On wether or not to keep a piece of clothing Rubin says:
Do we expect too much from our purchases? (Yes.)
I really enjoy reading author/blogger Joshua Becker’s insightful Becoming Minimalist newsletters. He recently shared a post, A new planner won’t change your life. The first line stuck with me:
“One reason, I am convinced, we overspend and overbuy is because we expect too much from our purchases.”
Late summer reading list
I’m a little late to the party with putting out a summer reading list, but I’ve heard that people read year-round...
Here are my favorite books of the year with my two sentence reviews. Enjoy.
The unlikeliest place for insight on paper organizing
There it was - further validation of my career path buried in the last couple pages of a sweeping paean to Bombay, India (Maybe you know it as Mumbai.) Even with a few summer afternoons with reading as the only agenda item, it still took me 5 weeks to read Suketu Mehta’s book Maximum City, about his rediscovery of Bombay decades after having left for the United States as a child.