Images: Instagram.
Earlier this year, Kate Hudson shared an Instagram photo of a pastel-coloured book bearing the title The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up. Now that’s a big promise, but it seems the contents of the book had indeed changed Hudson’s life.
“This takes spring cleaning to a whole new level! Love this book and the process is liberating!” the actress captioned the image.
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The book, authored by organising consultant Marie Kondo, introduces readers to the “Japanese art of decluttering and organising”.
It was published last October, shot to the top of best-seller lists, and in less than a year has won a cult following — fans are uploading their Kondo efforts to social media with feverish enthusiasm, while the wait-list for a consultation with Kondo herself is several months long. So how exactly is a decluttering book the source of such excitement?
So what is the "kondo" method?
Kondo's approach, often referred to as the KonMari Method or Kondo-ing, works on the principle that if you simplify, organise and store your worldly belongings once — and you do it properly — you'll never have to do it again. Rather than going room-by-room, it advocates sorting out your junk through a category-by-category system.
“In this book, I have summed up how to put your space in order in a way that will change your life forever," Kondo, 30, writes in her preface. She claims to have helped clients dispose of more than one million possessions, so she's quite ruthless.