4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 16 December 2016
⏱️ 40 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
I’m sharing what I like, don't like and why I think that this book doesn't work for American women.
Talk about a controversial statement, I know, but I think "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" does not work for the majority of American women. Marie and I approach organizing differently based on our ages and countries of origin./p>
There a few things that I do like about Marie's book.
Yes, yes, YES! That is what I have been saying for years, that it doesn't matter if you're not organized now, you can learn to be organized.
{To really understand why this book doesn’t work for American women read the whole post or listen to the podcast where I dive deep into the differences between an American house and a Japanese house and our cultural differences.}
Immediately that rubbed me the wrong way, which is why I had such a hard time with her book. Having helped so many women organize their whole homes and organized my own I know, it took me three years to get organized. Knowing how hard American women try to be organized and the quantity of items to be organized I knew it was not that easy. You can't just wave a magic wand, do it once and it's all done.
#2 Marie consistently brings up this idea of perfectionism, the perfect system and that you can reach perfection.
I do not think that you can reach perfection. I'm not there, I actually get bored when I get anywhere close to being super productive. I create all these alternative projects I can do to make my life a little bit more cluttered. I don't want to live in a perfect minimalistic, 100% efficient life. I don't agree that you can actually even achieve a perfect life.
#3 Is the topic of paper organization.
This is the hot button that originally rubbed me the wrong way when reading Marie’s book. The first time I read her book, I stopped reading after the one and a half pages about how to organize paper, which basically said just get rid of all of it.
I about had a heart failure.
So when I re-read the book last week, and I read all the way through I realized that towards the end of the book she does tell you how to organize paper, a little bit. But she still sticks with the idea that almost all paper should be thrown away and that there are only three files that you should have.
Files.
#4 Marie glosses over photos and memories.
Her suggestion to go through your photos one by one and make decisions, would take at least a year for most of the Americans that I know. It is definitely not something you can tidy all at once and be done in a day or two. Furthermore, most Americans have a hard time deciding which photos are good to keep and which ones can be let go.
Don’t believe me? What do you do with your school pictures after you put one in a family frame and hand them out to friends and family members? If you are like most Americans you store the rest in the school envelope and “save” them. Who know, we might “need” them. And they cost good money. See – we need help.
And lastly, #5 Marie explains how she empties her purse every single day.
Her wallet, train ticket, etc all come out of her purse and are stored in different places in her home. Then she puts the purse in a bag and puts it up on the shelf of her closet. There is no way that I could empty out my purse and refill my purse every day.
I am so grateful that the "Magic Art of Tidying Up" has become such a popular book and has brought this whole idea of organizing and decluttering to the forefront of the media. It has opened up the discussion for people around the world to really take a look at the stuff that they have saved and think about the kind of a life that they want to live.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Welcome to the Organized 365 Podcast. My name is Lisa Woodruff and I'm a professional |
0:07.2 | organizer and blogger in Cincinnati, Ohio. I want to help you get your home |
0:11.9 | organized and help you organize life stages and |
0:15.6 | unexpected events. So sit back, relax, and let's get organized. Today on the podcast I'm reviewing the book The Life Changing Magic of |
0:27.2 | Tidying Up by Marie Condo. I'm sharing what I like, what I don't like, and why I think that this book doesn't work for American women. Talk about a controversial statement, I know, but I think the life-changing magic of tidying up does not work for the majority of American women. |
0:49.0 | Marie and I approach organizing differently based on our ages and countries of origin. |
0:56.5 | Let's start with our ages. |
0:58.6 | When Marie wrote the book, The Magic Art of Tidying Up, she was a millennial woman without children living in Japan with a minimalist mindset. |
1:09.2 | I define the four phases of life that a woman goes through as childhood 7 to 21, accumulation |
1:16.8 | 21 to 40, survival 40 to 55, and downs sizing in legacy 55 plus. Marie has been in the phases of |
1:27.2 | childhood and she is moving into the phase of accumulation. I am an almost 45 year old American middle-class woman. I am a |
1:38.6 | member of the Generation X generation with two teenage kids who are 15 and 16. I am an organized person but I am not a |
1:48.1 | minimalist. Everything in my home has a place and I focus on function over beauty. I call myself a functional |
1:57.0 | organizer. I've been through the phases of childhood accumulation and I am firmly in the survival phase of my life. |
2:07.0 | So let's start first with what I absolutely love about Marie's Marie's book. |
2:14.0 | Number one, I love that she has brought the discussion of clutter and |
2:19.0 | organizing to the attention of the media and people around the world. |
2:23.8 | Six million books is a lot of books sold. |
2:28.3 | Marie has been on major media and quoted in so many news outlets that when I did my research about the amount of |
2:35.7 | clutter in Japanese homes, I couldn't find anything that did not lead to an article about |
2:41.3 | Marie or her own website. Number two, I like that the idea |
2:47.9 | behind her method of sparking joy, if it doesn't spark joy, then you should get rid of it. |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Lisa Woodruff, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Lisa Woodruff and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.