Flack wrote:It's the middle of August so I doubt I'll be able to hit 2,000 things by the end of the year, but I'm upping the ante a bit by not stopping at 5.5 things a day. I think today I got 9 or 10 things in the ol' "donate" box.
Just use "least dump averaging." If you
average 5 a day, that's hundreds. It's like "least cost averaging" where you buy a stock on a regular basis, you can buy more when its cheap and less when it's dear, and average it. So dump more when its easy and less when its hard.
#1. Do you love it / #2. Do you use it? / #3 Would you buy it again?
Let's forget #1. I hate all the prescriptions I have to take to keep me from going out and committing more sociopathic antisocial acts, but I prefer to stay out of prison so I do use them. Does
not mean I love having them or even
like them.
You may not
love you hammer, mop or vacuum cleaner, but you use them and would probably replace them if they broke.
You can also ask the question whether it might be worth it to just buy it again vs. the effort and trouble of keeping it around when you don't use it very often. If you have a $7 item you only need twice a year and it is difficult or dangerous to have around, and when you don't have it you can wait to go get it, in some cases it might be worth it to buy it, throw it away, then buy it again when you need it as opposed to acquiring more clutter.
[quote="Flack"]It's the middle of August so I doubt I'll be able to hit 2,000 things by the end of the year, but I'm upping the ante a bit by not stopping at 5.5 things a day. I think today I got 9 or 10 things in the ol' "donate" box.[/quote]Just use "least dump averaging." If you [i]average[/i] 5 a day, that's hundreds. It's like "least cost averaging" where you buy a stock on a regular basis, you can buy more when its cheap and less when it's dear, and average it. So dump more when its easy and less when its hard.
[quote]#1. Do you love it / #2. Do you use it? / #3 Would you buy it again?[/quote]Let's forget #1. I hate all the prescriptions I have to take to keep me from going out and committing more sociopathic antisocial acts, but I prefer to stay out of prison so I do use them. Does [i]not[/i] mean I love having them or even [i]like[/i] them.
You may not [i]love[/i] you hammer, mop or vacuum cleaner, but you use them and would probably replace them if they broke.
You can also ask the question whether it might be worth it to just buy it again vs. the effort and trouble of keeping it around when you don't use it very often. If you have a $7 item you only need twice a year and it is difficult or dangerous to have around, and when you don't have it you can wait to go get it, in some cases it might be worth it to buy it, throw it away, then buy it again when you need it as opposed to acquiring more clutter.