There is a box somewhere in your life that you've been moving to one side.
You know the one. You've tried the systems. Done the weekend clear-out. Watched the documentary, donated four bags of clothes, felt incredible for two weeks. And then, quietly, without quite deciding to, you accumulated it all back again. Different shape. Same weight.
Uncluttered is not another decluttering book. It isn't interested in the aesthetics of a minimalist life, the staged photographs, the capsule wardrobes, the homes that look like nobody actually lives in them. It's interested in something quieter: why the clutter keeps coming back, and what to do instead.
You'll meet three people. Daniel, who is up at 5:47 a.m. and has not done a single thing he actually wanted to do by 6:10. Margaret, who said yes to fourteen things before the first one was finished and hasn't stopped paying for it since. And Lucy, who looks like she's figured it out; clean flat, manageable inbox, life apparently in order, sitting in her perfectly tidy flat on a Saturday morning feeling, specifically and unexpectedly, wrong about it.
None of them have a clutter problem in the conventional sense. Or rather, all of them do, but it isn't the kind you can solve with labelled storage boxes and a free weekend.
What you'll find inside:
This is a book for people who are tired of optimising. Who already know, somewhere underneath everything, that the problem isn't what's missing, it's what's in the way. Who want a Saturday morning that belongs to nobody but them, and keep not quite getting there.
The weight you've been carrying; the stuff, the obligations, and the story about who you need to become. You are allowed to put it down. Not all at once. Drawer by drawer. Decision by decision. That's what this book is for.
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Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
Zustand: New. In. Artikel-Nr. ria9798306852867_new
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar