I’m actually on the bandwagon of the anti-clutter movement, and after watching Clean House avidly for the last five years, I really do believe that decluttering your home equates with decluttering your life, if for no other reason than because it forces you to make decisions and gets you used to making those decisions. It is easier for me to stick to an exercise schedule when the living room floor is cleaned and kept Roomba-friendly. I do eat better when I can reach my food choices quickly and easily. I do make more money when my home office workspace is more organized. Since I do have a projected moving date of two years from now, I am seeing this as a challenge to my moving skills - I want this place as pared down and portable as possible by the end of 24 months, including having a lot of loose storage conveniently already boxed, stored, and ready to go. This is not to say I have no clutter: that is to say I have target goals concerning my clutter the way many people do with their diet choices. While I do not expect to ever be really svelte again in my life, I do believe my organization skills can become smooth and sexy with sufficient practice.



Apartment Therapy posits the question, Are We Too Lazy? as an explanation to both clutter problems and the obesity epidemic. To me the answer is painfully obvious, even as I cringe at the sheer US-centric-Protestant-guilt-ethic that the NYC blog brings up: the reason we’re fat is that we’re working too hard, all the time, in jobs that force us to choose between getting flabbier butts by working constantly or by looking less than dedicated if we take time for family, exercise, or basic self-care. When I was working full time in corporate, I repeatedly had to explain to European friends that I could only ever hope to get 10 days off a year; they had a hard time understanding that 10 days is actually pretty generous by US standards. Add that with inactive but highly mental activity - mental exhaustion may not be physical exhaustion, but it is still exhaustion. Given the hours that most people in the US work, and especially for those with families, it can come down to a choice between being with and feeding the family, cleaning, or exercising. Since pay is typically too low to hire any outside help with the cleaning (whether or not children pitch in varies from parent to parent), both the calories and the crud can, will, and do pile up.



So even though there is an element of lazy involved - there’s a lot more elements of guilt and inappropriate obligation to corporate employers screwing up our bodies and our management of our own lifestyles. And even then, it depends on the corporation. There’s a lot of health insurance agencies who want their employees in the workout room or with their families; they know the stats!






Comments

This entry was posted on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 at 8:00 am and is filed under Culture. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
3 Comments so far

  1. kathryn on October 3, 2007 9:39 pm

    Ten days off a year! OMG, I’d die :)

    One of the things that drives me mad is that so many companies put an emphasis on being seen to work long hours - it’s not about productivity or what you do at work but who spends the most time there.

  2. JaneC on October 5, 2007 4:43 pm

    Definitely agreed about the work thing. Thankfully I am in the business of university education, meaning there is no one hovering over my shoulder, keeping track of how much time I spend on campus. As long as I am there for classes and occasional meetings, no one cares where else I might be. I have to do a lot of work “on my own time” but what matters is that I get it done, not how much time I spend doing it.

    Yet, I have worked in the past in a place where the emphasis was on how much time you spent at work, not how many things you actually got done in that time, and it was hell. I don’t understand why people equate long hours with productivity, when so often it is not the case. I usually got all my assigned tasks done before lunch, took an hour lunch, and came back and played games on the internet or read fiction at Project Gutenberg. But I could have been home with my family, cleaning my house, walking the dog, cooking something special, generally doing things I like, instead of sitting in a beige cubicle under the depressing fluorescent lights.

  3. Francesca says: Let us de-clutter! » Manolo for the Big Girl! on October 8, 2007 12:35 pm

    [...] week I linked to a post over at Fat Chic in which the writer pondered possible connections between home clutter and body [...]

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