Japanese tidying guru sparks joy with cluttered Americans

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WASHINGTON, Jan 21, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – After experiencing homelessness in
2011, Sarah Eby found herself constantly collecting things so she would never
again feel she had nothing to call her own.

“When I moved into my apartment, it just felt empty,” the mother-of-one
from Arvada, Colorado told AFP. “I got everything I could to try and make it
feel like I had a home.”

But as Eby moved house over the years, the clutter built up. Now, inspired
by the Japanese home organizing guru Marie Kondo, the 27-year-old says she
has banished the chaos for good.

And she’s hardly the only one.

Kondo is small in stature, but her tidying philosophy has reached
stratospheric heights.

Her book, “The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” has earned a cult
following since its publication in the United States in 2014, with millions
adopting her suggestions for a neater, happier existence.

But it is the 34-year-old’s new Netflix show, “Tidying up with Marie
Kondo” — released on New Year’s Day, when everyone is keen to reinvent
themselves and motivated by their resolutions — that has everyone talking.

“I love mess,” Kondo proclaims in the show, which sees her visit American
homes — flanked by her interpreter — to implement her trademarked “KonMari”
method.

The idea is simple: gather your things one Kondo-defined category at a
time and go through them one by one, keeping only those that “spark joy,” and
giving them a place in your home.

As for the rest, a KonMari convert thanks his or her used items and tags
them for donation or the garbage pail.

At the end, most converts find they have far fewer possessions, and a
happier outlook.

“I think it plays an integral role with my relationship to things,” said
Eby, who watched one episode of the show before diving into the book.

“I was never messy or unclean or untidy — I just had too many things. And
so the part that I connected with most would be the letting go of the things
that don’t bring me joy.”

– Overnight icon –

Almost overnight, Kondo has emerged as a cultural icon — she is the
subject of countless viral tweets and memes, and a flurry of think pieces
unpacking the show in surprising, somewhat disconcerting depth.

Her method however is not without controversy: advice to donate old books
has infuriated bibliophiles on social media.

But for Den Kovacs, a video games journalist and KonMari disciple, Kondo –
– with her gentle, judgment-free encouragement — is a welcome antidote to
harsh reality TV, not to mention American chaos.

“People really do feel … chaotic, they feel overwhelmed,” said the 23-
year-old from Livonia, Michigan.

“So when they see someone who comes in, and she’s like, ‘I can fix this!
We got this!’ … people are like ‘Yes, I need this in my life.'”

Social media users have already reported a “Kondo effect” at local thrift
stores, with more goods pouring in for resale — although a national
spokesperson for Goodwill told AFP it is “too soon to tell.”

And as viral trends go, KonMari-mania is one that could actually be good
for people: according to a 2016 study, too much clutter can be bad news for
wellbeing.

“The more clutter you have … the less your sense of home, the less your
sense of life satisfaction,” explained DePaul University psychologist Joseph
Ferrari, a co-author of the study.

“That’s contrary to what people might think. They think that you have to
have more, and people with abundance are happier people. No.”

– ‘It feels really good’ –

Kondo’s fans are earnestly reporting the benefits of going clutter-free.

“It feels really good,” says Kovacs, who explored other tidying
approaches, but found KonMari to be the most effective.

“I really decluttered my mind. It felt like I had less stress, less to
focus on … I could focus on myself.”

Meanwhile, for Olguyne Fernandez-Fraga, a 27-year-old nutritionist from
Miami, Kondo has boosted her social life.

“Before it would be like ‘Oh, can we invite so and so over?’, and it was
like ‘No, look at the house’,” Fernandez-Fraga explained.

“Whereas now, it’s like yeah, they could come in the next 10 minutes if
they want to.”

And in the digital age, it turns out even email inboxes and social media
friends can be “KonMaried.”

“I just went down the (Facebook) list and asked myself, ‘Does this person
spark joy?'” Kovacs explained.

“As soon as you start to ask that about someone, you suddenly realize the
people that add value to you,” he said.

“You certainly appreciate them a lot more than you did before.”