Survey #255 results
| Name (click to view full survey response and comments) | Is there a room or space in your home that you don’t love or that you tend to avoid using—or even entering? What factors contribute to your distaste for or lack of enjoyment of this space? | Do you have regrets about anything that you’ve discarded or given away in your decluttering process? If you answered yes, how do you manage negative feelings about your choice? If you answered no, to what do you credit your satisfaction with the choices you’ve made? | Here’s your chance to ask Gayle and Ed any question you’re curious about. It need not be related to this survey’s topic(s). If we think that your question—and our answer—might be useful or instructive to The Clutter Fairy Weekly audience, we’ll share them in an upcoming episode. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anonymous user | My sewing - office room | No | |
| Brienne | N/A- I'm not really sure what you mean, tbh. Maybe it will make more sense when I hear what other people say when I listen to the show. | Yes- I talk to my therapist about it; I remind myself that I still have the memories of the items; I remember that, collectively, the number of things I regret decluttering would be a lot to manage and take up a lot of space; Thinking carefully about what I regret decluttering and why I regret it, allows me to be more careful about deciding what to declutter going forward Though I try my best, regret is still very difficult to deal with sometimes | How come I can walk into someone else's space and think (but never say) "Look at all this clutter. I bet most of this won't be used again," but I can't get myself to see my own clutter in the same way? Is it a lack of objectivity? Is there a way to get myself to see my own clutter in the same way I see other people's clutter? (I hope this question makes sense) |
| Anonymous user | Gym on first floor — often stinky from sewer gas | A rosary I really liked — but I pray just fine without it | |
| Anonymous user | It is the room where my husband lay. I smoothed the covers when they took him on a gurney, not knowing he would be dead in days. His wish, which I did not know at that time , was to have no funeral or memorial service, and no gravesite. This was devastated to me. He said the hardest part about dying was leaving me. It felt comforting, in the following days, to pile stuff where he had lain. I remember thinking,"Stuff, at least, will not leave me." Soon, with the ever expanding piles, the door to that room could barely be opened. The rest of the house filled up as well. I realized later that I'd used the piles of stuff to symbolically bury him, and that the comfort in burying him this way also contributed to building what felt like a safe cushion between me and the unfriendly world I now have to face alone. With the decluttering process, I am now, in a sense, carving out a life for myself. To clear out his room, however, I think I will have to have an image of what I would like to use it for, because going through it item by item for no reason other than to clear it out is still just too painful. | Yes, however, I was forced by others to give away those things. Ever since then, I began holding onto everything, "just in case." It would have been better had I made those mistakes myself, because I may have learned to make decisions about getting rid of stuff. | |
| Anja | The storage room where tools are and seldom used items. It's okay but I would like it less cluttered better. I don't do that because of lack of energy and because of still grieving having been left by my husband in January. | No, not really. | Thank you for all your great work and for being so kind and encouraging! I love you both! |
| A.G. | My spare room. It was going to be out baby room but we lost the baby. It's also not currently clean and tidy and organized enough. I want to get it straightened out and be able to use it to exercise when not in use by guests. There's things stored in there currently that need to go before the space can be used optimally. | Yes, some crafting supplies that ended up not being easily replaceable and some decorative items and books. I moved on and tried to focus on what I kept and why I got rid of them, and the fact that certain things went to people who will really enjoy them and that I made space for other things instead. | |
| Lela | My adult daughter's old bedroom because it still has her stuff in it. All I have in there is a couple of houseplants to keep them save and alive away from my cats. | I have been decluttering for over a decade. I have regretted a handful of things over the years & chalked it up to "nobody's perfect" and "I didn't know circumstances would change to where I needed that." By now I've forgotten what all the items were, so it's rarely life-altering to discard the "wrong" thing. | |
| Saskatchewan Jane | Absolutely! My husbands now office, that used to be a relaxing guest room. A retreat for sleep on those hot summer nights. Now it doubles as his office and what I call a junk room. Filled with projects that will not be.done. books, hobbies and so much more. The bed can no longer be used due to stuff being placed on it. Augh. | Yes. I manage by telling myself someone else is using and enjoying it. | |
| Ginger | 🔲 I don’t think of any space as a No Go Zone. There are a few decluttering projects to do. 🔲 Every 6 months - I do a status review of all the spaces in our home. My 3 status levels are: 🟢 MM = Maint Mode. Thoroughly decluttered. Gets regular clutter checks. 🟣 NW = Needs Work. Mostly decluttered. Has an area or 2 that need work. 🔴 DP = Declutter Project. Each space needs a major declutter. ◼️ Indoor: 1. Our Bedroom. ▪️MM. Except for husband’s wardrobe. 🟢 2. Living Room Upstairs.▪️MM. 3 tables w/4 bottom shelves, 8 drawers. 🟢 3. Living Room Downstairs. ▪️NW. Entryway. Hub’s Nest. 🟣 4. Bathroom #1. ▪️MM. Linen closet, Med Cab, Under-sink, 2 drawers.🟢 5. Bathroom #2. ▪️MM. Linen Closet, Med Cab, Under-sink, 2 drawers.🟣 6. Kitchen. ▪️NW. 13 Cabinets, 8 Drawers, 14 Shelves in Pantry. 🟣 7. Mom's Bedroom. ▪️DP. 🔴 8. Mom’s Sewing Room. ▪️DP. 🔴 9. Laundry Closet. ▪️MM. 2 shelves, 2 pedestal drawers.🟢 10. Utility Closet. ▪️MM. 2 shelves. 🟢 11. Craft Supply Closet ▪️DP. Lots of shelves. Mostly organized. 🔴 ◼️ Outdoor 1. Front Porch Deck. ▪️MM 🟢 2. Back Porch Deck. ▪️MM 🟢 3. Garage/Wood Shop. ▪️DP - started.🔴 4. My Studio. Includes parents things.▪️DP. 🔴 5. Barn. ▪️MM 🟢 6. Pump House. ▪️MM. 🟢 7. Under Deck Storage ▪️NW. 🟣 8. Barn Porch. ▪️MM 🟢 9. Animal pens & coops. ▪️MM 🟢 🔲 Summary ◼️11 inside spaces. 🟢MM=6. 🟣NW=2 🔴DP=3. ◼️9 outdoor spaces.🟢MM=6. 🟣NW=1 🔴DP=2. | No. I don’t regret anything decluttered because I used rational thought and gave myself time to let certain things go. ◼️ My rational thoughts: ▪️Remember your vision for your home. Does this item support the vision? ▪️Don’t keep items simply because they’re “still good” or “still useful”. Most things have expiration dates. At some point they’re no longer good or useful. Fabric rots. Ink pens dry up. Quit doing the annual testing of the pens and putting them back on death row. Let them go to live out their useful life with someone who will use them. ▪️Get real. You’re never going to use or wear or eat XYZ. Don’t kid yourself. Let it go. ▪️Sentimental items. I’ve made a list. I revisit the list periodically. Items fall off the list & get decluttered. If everything is special - you’ve diluted the definition. I’ve taken a picture of each item and wrote the story about the item. This helps me process my feelings about it. I’ve found it easier to let go of items. | |
| Celina | my bed linens/sleeping robes cabinet - bc it's hidden by the TV im trying to sell (it's listed but moving slow lol). Also, I have three boxes of craft supplies... hard to get to what i need. I want to use it up rather than buy new contianers bc I want to downsize on it anyway. SO it's not just about organizing but simply using it up! 🙂 Also I dont craft that often anyway. | I only remember there was something I regretted several years ago when i jumped on the Minimalism bandwagon but I now don't even remember. I survived it apparently 😀 Gnerally I'm happy with having just the stuff I love even it's it's too much. | n/a |
| Noreen | It was my guest room which had turned into the cat room with no decor and not the best furniture. I have painted, decorated and restored some thrifted furniture and now it looks nice again. The cats can visit, but it is not their constant hangout. | No regrets on clothing, books, kitchen items as its nice to have room in cabinets and closets now. | |
| Cee | I love to be in kitchen cooking and creating. Lately counters and my island have become a drop-off and leave station for extra stuff ex: water bottles saved carry out containers, bags half eaten chips or candy carry out receipts | Only one thing about 4 years ago. Old bicycle that may have had some value | Please tell me it's not being to harsh to give deadlines for clearing shared space with expectations that I will be completing if not done. Some things may be done away with and some may be returned to the owners personal space depending on what it is no matter how inconvenient in their space |
| Leslie | Desk in dining room, also medicine cabinet and toiletries, extra personal care products. | No, because I try not to force myself to get rid of an item if I don't feel at peace about letting it leave my life. Also, I declutter small spaces at a time and also try to hit all areas of my home over the course of a year, instead of trying to do a lot of decluttering at once. | I'm struggling with recipe books and many pieces of paper with handwritten recipes from watching cooking shows. It is so tedious and time consuming. I wish I could have someone else do it for me. |
| Peggy | The only area I currently avoid in my home is the attic. It is not full, just hard to get to (pull-down stairs with "lid" overhead to manage as you get to the top). The guys who put in attic insulation for us said not to store things up there because it can damage the house frame. I did want to leave a few things, so they built me an approximately 3'X3' platform for those items. | I'm sitting here wondering about regretting so probably "no" is my answer | I struggle with items that aren't "in the way" but maybe aren't technically needed. I mean, I don't care to spend time deciding about them since they aren't in the way. Thoughts? |
| Gabriella | No no-go zones in my home! | I regretted having given away a blazer that I liked a lot. I just accepted that it was gone and didn't get too upset about it though. Then I found it again and was glad. Something similar happened to me with a big stack of old precious linens that my great grandmother had acquired for her daughters 100 years ago. I had mixed feelings about the loss: On the one hand I regretted having lost some pieces I would have liked to use and also some items my great grandmother had delicately crocheted. On the other hand I felt somewhat relieved that I didn't need to deal with a lot of items I have no need for, as for example a huge, very beautiful damask tablecloth with 12 matching napkins. Well, this morning, as I was cleaning out a corner of my basement, I found a box that contained all the linens. Mirrored mixed feelings :o) | |
| Anonymous user | I like a talk show comment that Cher said from her mother: If it doesn't matter in 5 years, it doesn't matter, My approach varies.. 1) Have I used it in the last year (harder if it's sentimental) When sentimental, I try to limit myself to a 'container determined space. 2) Can it be replaced if I regret decluttering it. Consider replacement cost. | ||
| Anonymous user | Shelving in the garage. In the past the garage has been a dumping place for unhoused items. I have been gradually condensing, organizing, and finding a home for items. My mom decluttered items that were not needed. I found it helpful when I have zoned the garage based on what’s there. Seeing the garage as zones has stopped me from being stuck in overwhelm. My vision for the garage is to open the door see exactly what’s there, walk up to the item I need, and easily put it back when I’m done. Listening to your podcast encourages me along my way to get the garage to where I hope to see it one day. | I have a few times bought something again after decluttering. I understood that this was a possibility. | Suggestions on decluttering the backyard of weeds and plants not wanted? I have a hill in my backyard, which makes it harder to declutter. I have envisioned it as a xeriscaping landscape. The hot weather slows me down. Thank you. |
| Anonymous user | Giving away my grandmother's antique bed and dishes because no one wanted or didn't have room for them downsizing. It was the memories attached to them. | I have a small pantry and have difficulty rotating stock and keeping track of items in and out. Same with the upright freezer. I have tried various containers and racks but still struggle. | |
| Michelle | Hallway closets. Everything has to be pulled out and basics returned- a 3 day weekend project. | A few beloved books and jackets. I rebought used versions of the 3 novels. I hope the jackets blessed someone. | Do you accept volunteers to work with you? |
| Amy | Disorganized. Old furniture not matching and with dings - mostly all hand me downs or cheap purchases or street finds. Feels ugly and not together | I’m always torn about family mementos or memories tied to things. I get guilt tripped by my family to take these things | How do you stop feeling guilty about getting rid of or not taking family mementoes and old items? My mom is moving from her home of 40 years (didn’t want to but person they bought house with and split with decided they wanted to sell home so both had to sell) and my mom is guilt tripping me to take my grandmothers old sewing machine and table. It’s old, not antique but old laminate table and I live in a studio apartment but she has been guilt tripping me for several years and now I said I’m gonna take it but I don’t want it. I have no room. I don’t think the machine works. I can’t sew really. How do I tell her I don’t want it without feeling like I’m killing my grandmother by refusing to take it? |
| Kit | Garage: Large pieces of clutter make it hard to maneuver and function. (We are planning to rent a truck to haul stuff away within the next 2-3 weeks. I'm so looking forward to that!) | Dana K White talks about how people whose houses are always under control choose to live with the possibility of regret instead of clutter. She also advises to *not* start with the hard stuff, the sentimental stuff. That's a mistake that I made. When I was graduating high school back in the 1980s, my mom took me to a factory seconds store to select formal tableware for the cedar hope chest that my great-uncle made for me. It was delicate white with a white filigree border and silver rim. I loved that set so much! I envisioned many dinner parties with our college friends, business colleagues, and children's friends' parents, as well as holiday dinners over the decades. That didn't happen. Our college friends moved across the country, we got close to no coworkers, and our kids were as introverted as we were. We had one set of parents over once and didn't really mesh with them. Also, my mother-in-law gave me all the formal dinnerware and serving dishes that her ancestors had been collecting! I used my own dishes when my extended family was over for holidays (virtually never), and the heirloom dishes when the in-laws came for holidays (all the time). Then my family moved away, we moved house, and my dishes never left the garage. Almost 3 years ago, I started decluttering. Not having heard Dana yet, I decided to tackle the thing that was giving me the most angst. Sobbing, I donated my formal dishes. Six months later, I realized that I could have alternated the sets of dishes seasonally - heirloom for spring/summer and mine for fall/winter. But they were gone! I kicked myself about once a month over it. But I kept decluttering less emotional things. After another year, I started thinking about replacing my dishes for fall/winter special occasions. I looked for something very similar, but those are expensive – way out of my price range! So I shifted to looking for anything I might like now that fit the fall/winter vibe and found lots that I liked. Eventually settling on Pfaltzgraff Winterberry, I bought 6 table settings and requested 1 covered serving bowl as a gift. I also got a matching set of vintage coasters from eBay. My mother-in-law was so thrilled to give me that serving bowl, and so enthusiastic about the new dishes and coasters! She never once said a thing about how we weren't using the heirloom dishes. Later, I donated several boxes of heirloom dishes that we never used, keeping a couple of boxes of the ones we do use and like for spring and summer. This year, I'm doing an entire year of nostalgic decor and dishes for the in-laws, who are getting on in years. I've been pulling out all the things that I've been thinking about decluttering, but haven't made up my mind about yet. I've also pulled out childhood photos which feature some of those items, as well as other seasonal nostalgic photos. My in-laws loved seeing my husband and myself as little tykes at Easter, as well as our own bitty ones with their basket and stuffy! This season, I also donated 3 more boxes of heirloom dishes which I would never have bought in the first place. Hutch is still full of ones we're trying out this spring and summer, to see what makes the cut for next year. After this, we'll have a much better sense of which sentimental, heirloom things my adult children and I like to have around and are willing to manage, and which we're not. That should make it much easier to make progress on the garage without feeling either fear or regret! | For one who is laid off and trying to balance decluttering and not knowing if they'll have money for the just right replacement in future, do you have any strategies or mindsets that can help one move forward in a flexible, dynamic, problem-solving way? I'm doing my best here, but would love any advice. |
| Brenda | My guest room became a storage room when I ended up storing stuff for a friend | An old adjustable bed. However, years later I ended up buying a new and improved version. | |
| Cee | I love to be in kitchen cooking and creating. Lately counters and my island have become a drop-off and leave station for extra stuff ex: water bottles saved carry out containers, bags half eaten chips or candy carry out receipts | Only one thing about 4 years ago. Old bicycle that may have had some value | Please tell me it's not being to harsh to give deadlines for clearing shared space with expectations that I will be completing if not done. Some things may be done away with and some may be returned to the owners personal space depending on what it is no matter how inconvenient in their space |
| Kathy | Basement since son has returned home. | The jeans that were too small... They got To go/ had to go/ okay to go but the regret the knowledge my body won't be that small again. | Your new spaces How toos Positive and negative changes. |
| Christy | Not really. I have a pretty small house and need to use all the space. | There are pieces that I kind of wish I still had but having a small house, I value the space more than anything. If I truly miss something, I can purchase it again. | Do you have any regrets about something you’ve declutterred? |
| C | Our so-called X room. I used to call it our doom room but was encouraged to find a more neutral name. It used to be our DDs room. It used to be a guest room until we donated her furniture to refugees, now it's our storage room, and in winter the balcony flowers get crammed in. | Yes, only for objects that have a monetery value, but the feeling of regret is temporary ! Sometimes it lasts a day, maximum a week. I now know this and it gets easier with every additional object. I've come to realize I don't have the time nor energy to try to sell things to recoup the "sunk" money | I have a lot of plants. I love them, but it's getting to be a burden. Some are valuable (I've seen what's charged in shops). I'd like to give some, if not most of them, away, but I really want them to go to a "good home" . They are after all, living things. How do I get over this quandary? |
| Danetta | My office, my workshop. Small desk in office is always covered up with things to put away and there are a couple of boxes or paperwork I have looked at but just don’t know what to do with or how to file. My workshop has bookcases for books and yarn, but no comfy chair or table to work on. | No regrets. I have so much extra stuff. I don’t use it now and I’ll never miss it. | |
| L | The garage and workshop area in the basement. It is cluttered, disorganized and feels dirty. I feel like I put on blinders to enter this space and I'm embarrassed if anyone besides me and my husband sees it. | Not really. Some things I've had to go through the mourning process over. | When you know something needs to go, do you go through a mourning process in order to deal with the loss? |
| Michelle | I dislike my shoe room, my husband took it over as a uniform room because he often gets up at silly hours to start work early, but it has become a bit of a dumping ground for random stuff | Never, decluttering makes me feel calm in a life of utter chaos. My work life is unpredictable, I am a Criminal lawyer, so most of my clients are at crisis point in their life, I can start my day with a full to do list, only to find a client is suddenly in custody, or in a crisis situation, which can take hours to sort out, and then my to do list begins at 4pm, not 9am, or I end up out all night attending on a "looked after" child (in care). I find that I can't function at work, and maintain my home if I have excess possessions, and the more I declutter, the less my tolerance is for junk getting in my way. Some of my relatives suffer with volume, and their homes make me feel anxious. I think I use decluttering as a coping mechanism, to bring order to chaos. | |
| Lise | The garage. It is better but it still has too much to use effectively. It has become a woodworking shop for my better half and storage for the rest of the space. | Yes, I do regret a few things that I donated. I try to imagine they are used and loved by a new family. | Is there something you donated or given away that you had a hard time parting with? |
| Christine | Yes, our extra bedroom. Finally , it is ALMOST cleared out thanks to your advice and encouragement over the last year or so. It is so close to being ready to move back in as our family office/quiet room/reading room. Until recently it was not fun to be in there due to piles of papers and various craft supplies that were just waiting to be organized. | Mostly no. I feel pretty good about everything I have decluttered over the past 7 years or so. There was one of my dresses and a pair of my husband’s shoes that were mistakenly donated to charity, and every once in a while I feel a bit nostalgic over them, but I quickly remind myself that life is too short to focus on regret over those particular items. Instead, I imagine someone else who ended up with them finding joy from the items, and then I try to turn my attention to a topic that has nothing to do with material things. Such topics include the beauty of nature, puppies, baby horses, a clear flowing river running through a forest….you get the idea 🙂 That usually helps! | |
| Brenda B. | No. Not really. I have done so much work so I do not have those types of areas. | Yes I have some regrets with things I have decluttered. I used to dwell on the things I gave away but have since realized that I just can’t keep everything. I can keep anything but can’t keep everything. | |
| Kim | Not anymore. I did feel this way about the second bedroom but recently staged it for sale and now the flow is better. | Sometimes I regret giving away some items, but I tell myself that the items went to a good home and someone is enjoying them. If I need to replace the items, I buy new ones. | |
| Jane | The den and garage are the no-go zones. They are the least orderly and where things not used go to quarantine before they are trashed, recycled, or donated. | Rarely if ever do I regret letting things go. I think the reason is my mindset that if I'm not using something at the time and don't know that I will it's better that someone else can use my donations now. | |
| Anonymous user | My husband is a pack rat. He also snores. We have a five bedroom house for just two of us. I sleep upstairs and he sleeps down. He uses two bedrooms downstairs and a huge full bath. I stay out of these three rooms as much as possible because they area so messy. He boxes stuff up but then just stacks the boxes all around the bedroom. | I don’t regret anything I have given away. I try to give away in batches that make a difference but aren’t huge. I also pack up my stuff and leave it sitting either in my SUV or bedroom for a few days (not too many days). If I think I will regret decluttering it I take it out of the give away pile and think about it some more. | None |
| Millie | My utility room which houses the washer/dryer, boiler, water heater, old wooden shelving, and lots of low hanging pipes. It's located in the basement, scary looking, and gets lots of spider webs. Unfortunately I have to enter it to do laundry. But we recently made the room more presentable. My husband and I took apart the ugly wooden shelving so painters could repair the wall and paint it. I replaced the ugly wooden shelving with an inexpensive, plastic shelving unit from Home Depot. The new shelving is smaller (which means I had to declutter). It can also be easily moved so I can keep the wall behind it in better condition. I also ordered a feather duster to get rid of the spider webs off the low hanging pipes. The room doesn't look fancy, but it looks less cluttered, by far. | Only a few regrets. I did throw away some professional materials I authored (40 years ago) that I sometimes think was a mistake. But I remind myself I never looked at it, don't need it for resume purposes (I'm retired), and my kids sure as heck would zero interest in it. | |
| Aline | I am so proud that I have just finished emptying our storage space that we kept… no that we paid for 20 years !! I called it Alibaba. I have been working emptying our garage from all that Stuff. Work in progress. This Friday, May 16th we have Bulk Trash Day. The garage will be empty !! It is truly physical work that no one realizes. | NO!!! It is basically all Stuff! (Old Stuff !) Things that you thought important at the time and we should have taken the energy every year to reevaluate the content. But you get so busy with life that you don’t have time to do it. On a smaller scale I noticed that even a small drawer in my kitchen or my bathroom needs a yearly reevaluation !! That will now be my yearly goal ! | I don’t know how to deal with photos. Should I scan the « best of »?? Keep them ? I already took a long time to sort them by year. Interestingly the physical photos stopped around 2004/2005 when we started with memory cards. Those do not take any space ! |
| Allison | No. I'm in a relatively small home. All rooms and spaces are used for the intended purposes. | No current regrets. I downsized substantially and for a while regretted letting go of exactly one item. Have used a workaround for that item and can replace it if desired so regret was short lived. It helps that I'm not someone who tends to look back with "coulda, shoulda, woulda." | |
| Granny | My study! I come here a lot, but leave at the least opportunity. It represents all the unfinished tasks on my list... | No regrets - I get into decluttering moods where I decide on an area that needs thinning and then get on with it. I think the main reason that there are no regrets is that we have oodles of storage space and don't need to do much decluttering. I sometimes have regrets that I have the items in the first place - i.e. I was guilted into buying something or didn't take the time to stop a monthly delivery. | |
| Jeanne | Third bedroom which is all craft/xmas/excess furniture No one is allowed to see it upstairs. No room to decluttering or organize or see what is in there | Absolutely My wedding reception dress given to neighbor teen and she cut up for album covers for garage sale Lots of craft supplies and fabric Toys that I had as a kid Hobby supplies Lots of negative feelings, not well managed | Why rage decluttering is useful for me Swedish death cleaning useful for everything except craft supplies. Lol |
| Claire | I don’t use my balcony very often. I only seem to go there when it’s raining really hard or there’s a thunderstorm. I wish I used it more, but I don’t really have a purpose for it. | There are lots of clothes that I miss that I didn’t have room for because I fell in love with new clothes. | |
| Amanda | My basement - it's full of old stuff I need to deal with, mainly things that belonged to people I've lost. It's also very hard to clean because of all the stuff, so it's not exactly an enjoyable place to visit. | I regretted getting rid of my Sylvan Families evergreen bear family (childhood toys), so I bought them back on eBay. Well worth it... For all the stuff I've gotten rid of, I can deal with one buy-back. They now live on my office bookshelf and I'm happy to see them every day. | |
| Jeanne | My son s bath | Yes, It is Was hard to let go of a king sized four poster bed. P. it Iwas way too big and fancy for life in the Rockies | Designing your garage space. Suggestions on a modest budget please. |
| Name (click to view full survey response and comments) | Is there a room or space in your home that you don’t love or that you tend to avoid using—or even entering? What factors contribute to your distaste for or lack of enjoyment of this space? | Do you have regrets about anything that you’ve discarded or given away in your decluttering process? If you answered yes, how do you manage negative feelings about your choice? If you answered no, to what do you credit your satisfaction with the choices you’ve made? | Here’s your chance to ask Gayle and Ed any question you’re curious about. It need not be related to this survey’s topic(s). If we think that your question—and our answer—might be useful or instructive to The Clutter Fairy Weekly audience, we’ll share them in an upcoming episode. |





