![]() I have been through the phases of childhood, and accumulation, and I am firmly in the survival phase of my life. Everything in my home has a place and I focus on function over beauty. I am an organized person, but not a minimalist. I am a member of Generation X with two teenage kids who are 15 and 16. I am an almost 45-year-old middle-class American woman. Marie has been through the phase of childhood and she is moving through the phase of accumulation. I have defined the 4 phases of life that a woman goes through as Childhood (7-21), Accumulation (21-40), Survival (40-55), and Downsizing & Legacy (55+). When Marie wrote the book The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, she was a millennial woman without children living in Japan with a minimalist mindset. Marie and I approach organizing differently based on our ages and countries of origin. Talk about a controversial statement, I know, but I think The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up does not work for the majority of American women. I’m sharing what I like, don’t like, and why I think that this book doesn’t work for American women. Today on the podcast, I am reviewing the book The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo. Subscribe: Amazon | Audible | Apple Podcasts | Blubrry | Google Podcasts | Libsyn | MixCloud | Pandora | Podbay | Podbean | Podcast Addict | RSS | SoundCloud | Spotify | Yandex | YouTube | iHeartRadio | iTunes Why The Magic Art of Tidying Up Doesn’t Work For American Women Friday Workbox® Free Productivity Mini Courseĭownload file | Play in new window | Recorded on December 16, 2016.The Productive Home Solution™ Planning Day. ![]() Free Week of The Productive Home Solution™. ![]()
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