Keeping Order: How to Maintain Your Organized Spaces with Intentional Resets

Diane Quintana
4 min readOct 13, 2024

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One of my favorite things to organize in my house is my desk and the space surrounding it. I love keeping order here in my office. Filing my papers, making new folders for new projects, and putting things exactly where I want them brings me a special kind of joy. But it is also the one place in my home that is frequently messy. I know, I know — I’m a professional organizer and one would think I would be able to keep my office organized, especially because I like it best when it is tidy. The truth is, just like you, I’m busy and involved in numerous activities. Instead of beating myself up when it becomes a mess, I intentionally set aside time to reset this space.

The Power of the Reset

Give yourself grace and permission to reset the space when it becomes messy. Resetting means that you actively return the room, area, or small space to an organized state.

My clients sometimes take a photo of an area after we have organized a room or space. Having that photograph as reference helps when they are ready to reset the space.

In my experience most homes have “hot spots”. These are the areas that tend to get messy the fastest. Just like my office is a “hot spot” in my home. This is because these are the places that are most lived in.

Keeping order requires regular space resets. This helps prevent clutter from building up to the point where it is overwhelming.

Recognizing the Signs of Clutter

Have you ever seen a horse wearing blinders on either side of his face? I’ve seen blinders on horses drawing carriages in Charleston and on horses on the racetrack in Saratoga Springs, New York. The horses wear blinders to keep them focused on what’s directly in front of them.

Sometimes we wear blinders. We become so accustomed to seeing piles of clothes on a chair in a bedroom, laundry piled in a laundry basket, and stacks of papers on a desk or kitchen counter that we don’t pay attention to them.

Help yourself by recognizing that piles do not diminish, instead they grow. It’s easy to add something else to a pile.

Make notes about your hot spots and notice when they begin to attract clutter.

The 5-Minute Rule: Daily Mini-Resets

You can avoid hot spots all together if you embrace the idea of mini resets. Keeping order isn’t difficult or time consuming when you consistently put things away.

It takes less than 5 minutes to hang up or put away a couple of clothing items. This prevents them from turning into a pile on your bedroom chair.

If your bathroom vanity tends to collect clutter, take 5 minutes every morning to reset that space.

Incorporating a few daily mini resets into your daily routine will help you maintain the organization in your home.

Handling Life’s Piles: They Don’t Have to Be Permanent

I know that piles happen. Sometimes we create them on purpose. Just yesterday I created several piles of books. Yes! I did this on purpose. Jonda Beattie and I will have a booth at a local holiday market: The Elegant Elf. November 1st is the load-in day, and I have many things to put together for our booth. These piles of books and decorations will stay in my office for a little while and then they will disappear.

Maybe piles happen in your home because you put something down with the intention of coming back and attending to it later.

“Later” is one of those words that is deceiving. When we tell ourselves “Later” often what we really mean is that we don’t want to do the task.

If you don’t want to put something away now, try assigning a specific time frame for when you will do it. Maybe tell yourself “After lunch, I will …”.

Another strategy is to build routine maintenance into your schedule.

My strategy for dealing with the clutter that accumulates in my office is to have a monthly reset of the space. Once a month, I tackle every pile, do the filing, and create a beautiful space. This strategy works for me.

Adjust Your Organizational Strategies as Needed

Your maintenance routines must work for you. If keeping order in your home is your goal, acknowledge that sometimes you will need to adjust your organizational strategies, so they work for you.

We know that life changes. Sometimes these changes are outside of our control. When that happens the best thing to do is step back and think about which routines to keep and which ones to adjust.

Conclusion

Keeping order in your home requires conscious effort. I know that sounds harsh and like a lot of work, but it doesn’t need to be.

When you take the blinders off and pay attention to the little things that tend to accumulate in your home, you will consistently keep clutter at bay.

The only homes that are permanently and perfectly organized are ones that are not lived in. Life is messy at times. It’s what you do when you notice the mess that matters.

Reach out to me to schedule a free 30-minute phone consultation if you want to create better organizing strategies for your home.

Diane N. Quintana is the owner of DNQ Solutions, LLC. She is an ADHD Organizing Specialist, a Hoarding Specialist, and a Chronic Disorganization Specialist. Diane is also an ICD Master Trainer, Certified Professional Organizer in Chronic Disorganization, Certified Professional Organizer and co-owner of Release Repurpose Reorganize LLC based in Atlanta, Georgia. She specializes in residential and home-office organizing.

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Diane Quintana
Diane Quintana

Written by Diane Quintana

Diane N. Quintana is a Certified Professional Organizer®, Certified Professional Organizer in Chronic Disorganization®, Master Trainer & owner of DNQ Solutions

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