There was just wayy too much stuff on my desktop earlier this week. Too many shortcuts to programs I've never used, too many docs I've never touched. I wanted to simplify this, but everything just looked terribly important - it was difficult to see where to begin.
I figured that the 80-20 rule(which I so gush about in my work, conversations and elsewhere) would be a good approach to handle this. Put simply, the 80-20 rule says that 80% of your outputs are because of 20% of your inputs. So 20% of a population have 80% of the wealth, you finish 80% of all work in 20% of the time, and so on and so forth.
How does that apply to simplifying and decluttering? Well, the 80-20 rule tells me that I frequently use only 20% of what is present on my desktop. Once I recognized that, I resolved to ruthlessly eliminate everything else(yes, that ruthlessness is important - if you keep hemming-and-hawing about keeping a shortcut to minesweeper which you use 1% of the time, you're going to miss the point).
A couple of minutes, and the desktop looks clean, free, open.
Of course, that same approach works pretty much elsewhere too. My workdesk had too much on it - books, business cards, CDs - it's now simple and prioritized. The music folders on my comp had just too much in them - now they just have the stuff I listen to often. If clutter is getting to you and short of time, you can just work on eliminating the 80% of the less important stuff.
*Eliminate isnt always 'shift-delete'. For instance, while organizing my music I just put the stuff less often listened to under 'Others'. This limits the number of categories and choices I have, and makes everything more manageable.
**As you've guessed, the 80-20 isnt a 'rule' set in stone. It could be 90-10, or 70-30. The point is that there will be diminishing returns to scale, and that's very useful while decluttering life.
Very Nice Post about everything in life.
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