Tidy Up Your Life: Rethinking How to Organize and Declutter and Make Space for What Matters Most - Hardcover

Moore, Tyler

 
9780593797839: Tidy Up Your Life: Rethinking How to Organize and Declutter and Make Space for What Matters Most

Inhaltsangabe

Bring order to your home and focus to your busy life with the guiding principles and practical routines for organizing, cleaning, and determining what’s “just enough"—both physically and emotionally—by the social media sensation known as Tidy Dad.

A father of three with a stressful job, Tyler Moore felt his life resembled an overstuffed closet: disorganized and overly busy behind the tidy, closed doors. When it all became too much—for their 750-square-foot apartment and his nerves—he set out to unpack the physical and emotional mess around him.

Chronicling his progress as “Tidy Dad” on Instagram, he learned that tidying is about so much more than the aesthetics and decluttering of a physical space. When he stepped back, analyzed, and named what was just enough, he was able to devise systems and hacks that brought order to his whole life. Drawing on his experience with the everyday highs and lows of parenting, home management, and work/life balance, and filled with his signature warmth and wit, Tidy Up Your Life includes:

  • Tidy Dad’s process for tackling Big Picture overwhelm—how to identify what really matters both emotionally and physically to you and the people who share your space.
  • How to arrive at your own definition of "enough" as well as thought experiments for appreciating what you already have.
  • The goal is not "always tidy" but "easily tidied" and other principles for lifting some of the mental and physical burdens we feel when managing our homes.
  • Tips for making a “one-area-a-weekday” cleaning schedule and other simple routines that compliment household rhythms and eliminate intensive weekend cleaning.
  • Helpful illustrations of Tidy Dad's innovative organizing concepts.

A vital book for overwhelmed parents as well as overworked, stressed-out professionals, Tidy Up Your Life will help readers organize, prioritize, and live a more joyful, tidied-up life.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Tyler Moore is the creator of the hugely popular “Tidy Dad” Instagram, TikTok, and website. A public school teacher in New York City, husband, and father of three young daughters, he has been featured on Good Morning America and in The Washington Post, The New York Times, New York Post, Better Homes & Gardens Secrets of Getting Organized magazine, Apartment Therapy, and many podcasts including HGTV and Minimalist Moms. During the school year, he lives with his wife, Emily, a pediatric occupational therapist, and daughters in Queens, New York. In the summer, they spend as much time as possible in their small but well-organized cottage in the Poconos.

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Unpack What s Behind Your Mess (Decluttering 101)

Physical clutter is often a manifestation of mental clutter.

Whether you re trying to figure out the next step in your career or trying to figure out how to solve the mess that is your kitchen cabinet, probing what got you into the mess is the first step of the tidying process. It s difficult to make a path forward until you come to terms with what caused that mess in the first place.

Dean of Academics. What a fancy title, especially for a young former classroom teacher. It sounded impressive, particularly in NYC education circles, but don t be fooled. My job title should have been Dean of Mess, because that s really what I was. The dean title meant I was no longer a classroom teacher, no longer had summers off, and now had a lot of teacher management and student disciplinary responsibilities. That was difficult enough, but we d also upsized our personal life. We had two kids under the age of two, and I was overwhelmed and exhausted.

So how did I get here?

Well, for years, everything moved along pretty much as I had planned. I checked off all the boxes on how I thought you re supposed to transition from your twenties to your thirties. Years earlier Emily and I had announced in Frank Sinatra style, If I can make it there, I m gonna make it anywhere. It s up to you, New York! We d made NYC our home, and now I was successful. But this was all a façade. The only thing I d really become successful at was crying in secret.

It always started as a burning sensation behind my eyes. Then my breathing became labored. My chin started to quiver as I held back tears. I d wait until I d kissed Emily and the girls goodbye and made it a few blocks from home on my two-­mile walk to school. Then, as the tears threatened to spill out, I d start to repeat a mantra that I d taught to my former students: I am kind, I am smart, I am going to have a great day no matter what! Trouble was, for nearly three school years my days weren t that great. How bad? I d characterize them as a dumpster fire.

Male elementary school teachers seem to have a shelf life of about five years in the classroom before people begin to ask questions, like Why isn t he more ambitious? and Shouldn t he be an administrator by now? My dad had been a teacher and followed an administrative track. He d been an incredibly successful and well-­respected elementary school principal and was able to balance his work with being a father to three kids. He was my role model. So, when I was offered a promotion to that fancy three-­word title, I jumped at the opportunity.

Unfortunately, with my new position and two young children at home, my life had become like an overstuffed closet ­with way too many things precariously teetering behind closed doors, waiting for me to sort through them. In addition to navigating early parenthood and all the physical stuff that came with it, I d also basically shoved all my stress, anxiety, and emotional baggage into the back of the closet (aka my mind) for that someday when I could process it all. Fatherhood had rewired my head and my heart, yet I felt like an impostor at work and at home. I would spend mornings, nights, and weekends trying to catch up on work, but could never seem to get ahead. I thought the logical way to solve problems at school was by working more, but it was just taking time away from my family. I felt like I wasn t good enough, strong enough, or competent enough to handle the stresses. But I dressed the part. While things may have looked tidy to others, I was experiencing a mental and emotional downward spir

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9781529951561: Tidy Up Your Life: Make Space for What Matters Most

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ISBN 10:  1529951569 ISBN 13:  9781529951561
Verlag: Ebury Press, 2025
Hardcover