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The 100 Things Challenge, or: Getting Rid of My Useless Crap

For some reason or another, my big thing right now is GTD and efficiency/productivity. While I haven't actually read the flagship book yet, it's definitely on my list (there are a few other books in line ahead of that one). In lieu of a physical book, I've busied myself with reading up on all the latest and greatest the vast world wide web has to offer on the subject.

One of the related-slash-included topics I've been following like mad is something called lifehacks – the idea of finding clever and innovative ways to simplify your life. If there were a single guiding principle behind lifehacks, it would be this:

Work smarter, not harder.

(There are some really great resources out there if you're interested in lifehacks – most notably Lifehacker.com, 43 Folders, and Stepcase Lifehack.)

Along the way, I came across something called The 100 Things Challenge. Here's the gist of it, from the source:

I'm going to only keep 100 things. All the rest gets purged. Sold. Given away. Traded ;-) Some how, all the other things will no longer remain in my possession.

Yep. The goal was to streamline his personal possessions to no more than 100 items in order to reduce the amount of clutter and required cleaning. The beauty of this challenge is that there are no rules – you tailor the challenge according to your own need. For instance, basic necessities aren’t included in the purge – the loaf of bread and jug of milk in the fridge don’t need to be thrown out to spare your favorite stuffed animals. For couples, shared items aren't cut, so don’t give away your family car. You don't necessarily even have to make it 100 things. It can just as easily be 500 things, or 38 things. Whatever.

So I’m going to give it a try. I'm going to keep it as simple as possible, and as flexible as possible. I'm going to, over the course of the next two to three months, systematically go through everything I own and decide whether it's worth keeping or should be tossed/recycled/donated. It shouldn’t be that hard – in the course of moving several times over the last several years, I've already streamlined most of it. Excluded from my purge:

  • Consumables like food, juice, etc. I'll be cutting back on soda, but that’s not really part of the challenge.
  • Basic necessities – cleaning supplies like handsoap, paper towels, toilet paper, etc.
  • My computer and its immediate peripherals, power cords, and the like.
  • My car. I may want to drive it off a cliff right now, but that's not really going to happen. It stays.
  • Existing collections. That means my DVD collection stays intact, as does my CD collection, and the vast amount of LEGO pieces I've managed to accumulate since my childhood.
  • Furniture. I don't have much to begin with, so what I have needs to stay.

Pretty much everything else is fair game. One of the other (fairly obvious) rules I'm going to go by is that separate things that act as one will be counted as one – like the DVD player with its power cord and A/V cables; the player isn't much good without the cables, and vice versa.

While I’m going to aim for the 100-thing mark, there’s no guarantee I'm going to hit that, and that’s okay. I haven't even started yet, so I'm not even sure yet how much I own to begin with. I'm going to try to post my progress as I go.

If you're looking to streamline your life and reduce your clutter, you may want to give it a whirl. I'm certainly interested to see how it'll turn out.

{ 5 } Comments

  1. Andimia | June 1, 2008 at 12:45 am | Permalink

    I’d like to do something like the 100 item challenge. I’m going to start with writing down all of the things that I can’t part with (i.e. piano, bed) and the things that I really really want to keep like my computer.

  2. Hiddencat12 | January 13, 2009 at 8:44 am | Permalink

    Im trying to do this with stuff I own in my bedroom and even that is hard. Im 18 so live at home with my parents. but it is still good to get rid of stuff I have got rid of over 300 books so far plus 6 bags of other stuff to charity and 3 to the bin/ recycling

  3. Tigerblade | January 13, 2009 at 9:13 am | Permalink

    @Hiddencat12: it really is hard to do. One of the things I’m realizing as I’ve started trying to catalog everything I own is that I have to be very aware of how I list things out. For example: I have 2 cookie sheets. Is that one thing or two?

    Also, because I live on my own, I have to decide what sort of possessions get included. If I count all my kitchenwares (pots, pans, utensils, etc) I would easily be well over 100 things but in reality can’t get rid of most of it.

    But congratulations on the progress thus far! 300 books? Where did you keep them before, and what did you do with them?

  4. Me&U | December 30, 2009 at 12:22 pm | Permalink

    Books. I use the local library as my storage unit for all books, DVDs, CDs etc. If they don’t have it – I buy it then after watchign it – donate it. If I want to see the movie again or read the book again – I just check-it out.

    We are minimalists. Two adults, living in 800 sq. feet. Modernists in style. Lofts – witht he open concept make clutter an absolute NO WAY. every item must play double duty.

    As for kitchen – we did get rid of most of it. Fact is – you’ll notice you use the same 2-3 knives and about a dozen itmes and nothign more. We don’t even have a microwave and – we don’t miss it. WE counted cable as a thing – that’s gone. The dvd player? gone – we kept the PS3 for that. The junk drawer does not exist …. but the real enemy??

    Paper.

  5. Tigerblade | December 30, 2009 at 12:29 pm | Permalink

    @Me&U: Interesting to hear from someone who’s gone the minimalist route in practice (as opposed to just “oh yeah, we’re minimalists, but ignore that pile of stuff over there). I tend to think of myself as a minimalist but realistically I have too much unnecessary stuff to truly qualify.

    I’m curious about this paper thing you mention. Paper of what kind? Records? Bills? Mail? How do you deal with the influx of paper every day? My printer hasn’t seen the light of day in probably two years, but I still end up with mail, paystubs, etc.

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