The Quiet Tyranny of Meta-Clutter
Meta-declutter: Too Much About Too Much
My name is Anupama, and
I am a decluttering addict.
I began with a noble
intention of decluttering my needlework cupboard stuffed with supplies and
projects including incomplete or abandoned ones for which, somewhere along the
way, I had lost the mojo. A simple, domestic act of sanity and an effort to make
my son’s life easier. But somewhere between ‘simply your life’, and ‘outer
order leads to inner calm’, I fell into a rabbit hole lined with experts,
sub-experts, and sub-sub-experts.
I didn’t reduce my
clutter. I simply upgraded it, into meta-clutter. Suddenly my problem was not
things; it was theories, methods, philosophies, newsletters, and gurus i.e. clutter
about decluttering.
Decluttering (and
overcoming consumerism), has been not just a task for me, but has become a
lifestyle, or rather, a full-time occupation.
For years, I had
gathered information on it and made complete word files, folders, sub-folders,
flow charts and what not. I also read everything- from Buddhist monks who own
two to three sets of clothes and one bowl, to minimalists who photograph their
empty drawers and plaster them on Instagram. And my desktop used to sigh when I
switched it on.
My folders had names
like Declutter-Plan1 to 11, with explanations and bullet points,
Declutter-Plan-Final I to III, with notes in parenthesis. I had copied more
than six lakh words on decluttering, enough to write a PhD thesis titled The
Philosophy of Throwing Things Out (But Never the Notes About It). (And yet
people ask me- “Toh aap din bhar karti kya hain? So, what do you do the whole
day?)
The irony is that my
actual clutter reduced, but my digital clutter achieved gargantuan proportions.
If decluttering is supposed to give you freedom, I must be the freest prisoner
around.
I read and heard gems of wisdom and watched videos on
the subject from advocates of minimalistic living who have become rich
preaching this, and may also have their own Wikipedia pages.
From Joshua Becker,
Joshua Fields Millburn and Ryan Nicodemus to Dana K. White, Renard Lowell,
Taryn Maria, Dawn Madsen and dozens of others talking, discussing, suggesting,
teaching, showing how-tos, I’ve watched them all. I had enough material in my mind to run
a separate blog for a year.
Each newsletter
promised clarity; each paragraph added clutter.
I re-read, recycled,
repurposed, even gifted my decluttering notes, all in
search of inspiration. Somewhere, I
realised that I was spending more time managing my plans than living my life.
The cupboards were slowly getting empty, but my head, and my desktop were
getting packed to the brim with ‘yes, this too can perhaps be helpful.’
I sat down to clearing
it. By the third file, I knew I could teach my own class, or print enough
copies to wallpaper the whole house.
In those giant word
documents, juggling from one to another, trying to read each line, each para,
my eyes turned googly. I skipped, jumped, copy-pasted, deleted, reversed
action, everything, like a headless chicken. The battery of my mouse quit, but
I did not, and that too for several days.
Finally, I managed to
clear out the major part. In that frame of mind, even the gurus’ money advice
couldn’t tempt me to keep more than a line or two.
The real lesson?
Minimalism applies not only to stuff but to information, too. We hoard
newsletters, e-books, 'inspirational' articles, and quotes, (and forward to
those on our Whatsapp contacts list), imagining that accumulation equals wisdom.
But no digital folder, no matter how meticulously organized, can teach you what
a single, thoughtful action teaches: clarity comes from doing, not saving.
So, I am now trying to
follow a new rule: no more perfect methods, no more videos of wise people
folding tee shirts in slow motion, stuffing bags to give away/sell/ throw/keep.
I’m declaring December
31 as my deadline. On that night, I’ll light a scented candle, whisper a prayer
for my hard drive, and delete every file, folder, and note with ‘declutter’ in
the title. You might have other resolutions for the New-Year,
I have meta-declutter.
Because honestly, I’ am
decluttering everything except my obsession with decluttering. And I should now
be ready to retire from the hobby.
Having all this out of
my chest, I sat down, feeling relieved, adjusting my posterior to get
comfortable in the chair. When I looked up after a few seconds, I found that
others were still staring at me as if I was an alien. They had never heard of
such an addiction. Alcoholics, criminals, kleptomaniacs, shopping addicts, narcissists,
but decluttering addicts?
A wave of confusion
engulfed me. I sat quietly, blood rushing to my ears, undecided whether to
claim my place as the first ever in this category or feel ashamed of my
addiction.
I must have made a sound too
because somewhere from the horizon of the world I was in, I heard a familiar
voice, Uthna Nahin hai? Aur chai? (Are you not going to wake up? And
tea?)
I opened my eyes, trying to get
used to the darkness in the room. The clock showed 5.40. It slowly dawned on me
that it was evening, the days have gone shorter. I remembered I was exhausted
after cutting short the six lakh words of my master file on ‘decluttering’ and
decided to lay down for a few minutes to straighten my back.
It was only a divaswapna, a
dream my tired brain produced after the massive ‘operation delete.’ A dream so
convincing, I almost believed it.
Because in the real world, sitting
on my desktop right now, is a 3,149-word file titled Decluttering Plan
(final version, I promise).
I still haven’t deleted it.
But I have renamed it Definitely Delete Soon.
(This post has no images. The search for
one became meta-clutter.)
-Anupama S Mani
🙏🙏
ReplyDeleteOwnership. The need to own things is the first urge that needs to be battled. Once that's overcome, we ll succeed in decluttering. The best example is books. We buy several in the hope of reading them someday thinking we are immortal. :)
ReplyDeleteYes Ma'am, today's problem for many many, more GB required. Gone are the days we saw Phones or memory cards with 4 GB, 8 GB......and now it's only a 128 GB...512 GB....1TB and more, wow. The end is near or is it infinity?
ReplyDeleteImagining where all this goes after delete, delete and delete?This blog I take as a motive to declutter as well, but let me see if I can succeed. I have loads of saved WhatsApp msgs, photos, video and what not; the challenge is on, ok, Dec 24th, but one humongous problem; since festival time is around the corner, I may receive a gift....another phone with 512 GB. Back to Square one. Happy decluttering, but suddenly I wondered, is there a 'de-clutter day'? .....
Good motive Anupama, but are we really able to declutter, starting from our cupboards to data, we keep accumulating but it's the destiny that whenever we clear anything or give away, it's need becomes important for us.
ReplyDeleteOur phone, laptops are heavily loaded, Google keeps reminding to clear heavy files, but it's human nature that we don't want to miss out anything. All the best to you for decluttering deadline 31st December 👍👍
All the best Maam ! Hope you finally succeed . Wonderfully narrated though, I had mixed feelings of amusement and sympathy .
ReplyDeleteRanjanesh
ReplyDeleteSimplicity looks simple from outside, but choosing it every day is a challenge...
but ma'am, I am truly hopeful that you will succeed in this journey in the new year.
ReplyDelete👏👏🤳
ReplyDeleteGood Evening sir
ReplyDeleteI always end up creating more clutter!!
ReplyDeleteDigital decluttering: never thought of that. Must now devise a plan to do that. Probably it will remain just that: a plan. In the meanwhile, wish you all the best in this new venture.
ReplyDeleteMadam, one suggestion, when successfully complete decluttering the system/phone, next Gmail can be taken up, it gives the next best challenge.
ReplyDeleteExcellent
ReplyDelete