1. Walk away from bargains 
Just  because you can buy a cashmere sweater for $20 or three bottles of  ketchup for the price of one doesn't mean you should. "Ask, 'Do I have  something similar?' and 'Where am I going to store it?' before making a  purchase," advises New York City professional organizer Julie  Morgenstern, author of Shed Your Stuff, Change Your Life. 
2. Make peace with imperfection 
Efficient  people give "A-level effort" to the most important projects (say, work  assignments or a kitchen redesign), and for the rest they do just enough  to get the job done, says Renae Reinardy, PsyD, a psychologist who  specializes in hoarding disorders. Maybe you give yourself permission to  bring store-bought cookies to a school bake sale or donate a bag of  stuff—unsorted!—to Goodwill. "Trying to do every task perfectly is the  easiest way to get bogged down," says Reinardy. 
3. Never label anything "miscellaneous" 
You  put a bunch of things into a file or box and write this catchall across  the front. "But within a week you've forgotten what's in there," says  Morgenstern. Instead, sort items into specific groups—"electric bills,"  "lightbulbs," and so on. 
4. Schedule regular decluttering sessions 
Rather  than wait until an industrious mood strikes (we all know where that  leads), have a decluttering routine in place—whether it's spending 15  minutes sorting mail after work or tackling a new project every Sunday  afternoon. 
5. Stick with what works 
"I  have clients who will try every line of makeup, every cell phone—it's  exhausting," says Dorothy Breininger, president of the Delphi Center for  Organization. Don't waste time (and money) obsessively seeking out the  best thing.
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