Showing posts with label Clutter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clutter. Show all posts

Thursday, July 08, 2010

Wasting Away

I hate to waste things, anything, especially if it is something I paid for (or something my mom paid for). In fact, I will hold onto something for years that I have not touched in forever because I cannot bear to throw it out. These things I hold onto are not anything special either. They are nothing sentimental, or anything I have hopes of using again. In fact, these are things I know I will never use again.

Like my nail polish for example. I have quite the collection of nail polish, most of the colors I use (or will use when I have nails again), but a few colors that I do not use and have not used in quite awhile. But I cannot seem to throw them out. Or my makeup. I have mascara that I bought a year ago and have only used a handful of times. Yet, it is still sitting in my makeup bag in my drawer, along with four or five other makeup items I no longer use. I also have quite a collection of pens in two of my desk drawers.

And it is not as if I do not go through my things, sorting them, giving some away; I do, quite often in fact. I am not a pack rat. I hate clutter and have no problem giving things away, things I know will be used by someone else (like clothes and shoes). But I cannot throw things away knowing that this is it, that they will never be used again, knowing that they were wasted. I hate it. At the same time though, they are just wasting away in my possession, so there really is no difference, is there?

Thursday, May 20, 2010

My Bad Habit

Admit it: You have a bad habit. We all do. In fact, some of us probably have more than one. And that is fine. It is human nature to have a bad habit or two. Some people crack their knuckles, some chew on ice, some play with or chew their hair, and some bite their nails, like me. Granted, that list is not all-inclusive, but I think you get the idea. We all have bad habits.

As I just mentioned above, I bite my nails, and pick at my toenails at times (it is actually called onychophagia). I have ever since I can remember. There is even a picture of me when I was about nine months old lying on the changing table, with my foot in my mouth, attempting to chew on one of my toenails. Needless to say, I started early. Now, twenty-fours years later, I am still doing it, though sometimes I do not even realize I am doing it. I am no longer lying on a changing table, nor do I stick my feet in my mouth, but I still bite and pick my nails. It drives me absolutely bananas. And it really pisses me off.

I hate looking at my nails, seeing the little nubs of my fingers, with the even smaller nubs of my finger nails. (OK, that is not true. My nails are not that short, but they are not long and beautiful either.) Over the past ten years I have tried everything, really, everything, to stop biting my nails. You name it, I have (in all probability) tried it. Nothing has worked. Or maybe it worked temporarily, but in the end, I always go back to the tried and true--biting my nails.

I have read quite a bit on this over the years, and everything I have read so far says that nail biting is a reaction to stress, anxiety, excitement, boredom, inactivity, even hunger, and can be a learned behavior from family members. It is also very common (which really does not make me feel any better about it). Over the years, I have also discovered why I bite my nails. I bite due to all the reasons I just mentioned (except for hungry and learned behavior). If I am stressed or anxious, I bite. If I am sitting idly, doing nothing, I bite. If I am watching TV or relaxing, I bite. I bite. Apparently, I do not need a reason. What I have realized though, is that the reason I bite when I am not stressed or anxious, just bored, watching TV, or relaxing, is that I need something to do with my hands. They have to be kept busy. For me, that is the hardest part of not biting my nails. I can resist the urge to bite, I can stop myself if I realize I am doing it, but if I am sitting doing nothing, and my hands are free, I find it very hard to give my hands something to do to keep them occupied.

The last five to six months have been my best, though. I really stuck to it. Granted, I spent quite a bit of money on manicures, but they really helped. I did not bite my nails. Ok, maybe I picked at them, but it was much easier to stop when I saw a manicure on them (or to begin picking at the manicure instead--whatever works, right?). It was also much easier to stop once I actually saw that I had nails. Seeing the actual, real nails on my hands and fingers went a long way for me. Why? Simple really: Because I saw that I had nails, that I could, in fact, grow and have (semi) beautiful nails. I saw the results of not biting them, and I loved it. Not only that, but I was able to use my nails. I absolutely loved it.

I worked very hard at maintaining those nails. I got manicures, gave myself manicures, I made myself stop biting them, resisted the urges I had to do so, and continued to grow nails. And I did it. No, it was not perfect, and yes, I will admit that I did bite some off at times (especially the weaker ones which are so much easier to pick off and therefore so much harder to resist), but I did it. I had nails.

Then, there was a stressor. And off they came. That was about three weeks ago now. You would think that since then I have started to grow my nails again, right? Wrong. Now that they are gone, it is much easier to just continue picking and biting them off. I have nothing to look at, to see what it would look like if I let them grow. All I have are stubs, and the memory of what they used to look like. But I cannot go on a memory. It is very difficult to do this based only on a memory. I need to see it in front of me. I need proof. I need a nail, preferably three or four, to see that I can do it. But I know I can do this. I know. I have done it before, I can do it again. But I just need that one nail, that one starting point, yet I know I will never get it if I keep on picking and biting at what I have left.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Toot Your Horn Tuesday: Clearing the Clutter


For other Toot Your Horn Tuesday gossip, visit Leah's blog, My Little Sparrow. If you would like to participate (it's fun, especially after all the Not Me! Mondays where we feel inadequate), click here to view the rules (and the first edition!).

This Toot Your Horn Tuesday is going to be dedicated to the decluttering of my life. Yes, that's right. My life. I am in the process of trying to simplify my life, reorganize it, and make it a little more sensible. For someone like me, that involves quite a bit of sorting, organizing, tossing out/getting rid of, and more organizing. It's something I've wanted to do for quite some time, but never got around to it. Now that I don't have a job, I have the time.

On my list:
1. The files in and on my desk.
2. My desk.
3. The bin in my closet.
4. My closet. (See where this is going?)
5. My shoes. (Yes, I do have that many.)
6. Selling books.
7. Selling beanie babies. (I do still have them.)

I think that's all that is on my list. At least, I really hope so. I'm sure I'll find more items to add as I go along and try to clear up and declutter my room and my life. However, so far I have gotten my files organized (for the most part). I still have a bit to do there, but not much. My actual desk is about as organized as it's going get. Actually, it's an ongoing process as my desk tends to be the place where I dump everything. Don't know what to do with it, desk. Needs to be put away at some point, desk. Purse, desk. Receipts, desk. Miscellanious papers, pens, chapstick, etc., desk. You get the picture. Strangely enough though, I know exactly where everything is.

As for the rest of my list, I'm currently working on selling the beanie babies and the books, trying to find out what they're worth and what I can actually sell them for. (Anyone here interested? The books are Calvin and Hobbes collections, and the beanie babies are assorted. Ask if interested.) The bin, closet, and shoes are on the waiting list. In the meantime though, I'm actually getting things done and it feels great. Yay me!