How To Stay Organized When Life Throws You a Curveball

“Things went downhill when we had three family crises in a year,” said a new client who was explaining how her lovely home had evolved into a cluttered, chaotic mess.

It is very common for people to lose control of the order in their homes during times of crisis. Crisis situations that go on for an extended period of time consume time, energy and the motivation required to maintain an organized home.

It’s not uncommon for people to find that once they’ve gotten past the personal crisis–illness, death in the family, caregiving for aging or sick relatives, recovery from surgery–they have another crisis on their hands, a living space that is such a mess that they have no idea how they will ever get it back to its more orderly state.

Twice in the past year I’ve been thrown into crisis mode, first when my step-father began deteriorating mentally and had to have brain surgery and then when my disabled brother developed a serious infection in his artificial knee joint requiring surgery, weeks of IV antibiotics and another knee replacement. Both events were incredibly energy consuming for me because I was a key decision-maker, the coordinator of communication between family members, a key source of emotional support, and I had my own fears and other feelings to manage.

It was all I could do to get through each day dealing with the crisis at hand, much less tend to my small business and maintain order in my home. Those two crises were an opportunity for me to learn how to get through difficult times without losing control of other parts of my life.

Here are 6 of the important lessons I learned:

1. Identify tasks to be done no matter what.

Then do them! I am the money manager in our house. So, making sure bills got paid and that money was in the right accounts at the right time were two tasks I had to get done so we could avoid consequences like ruining our credit rating. Keeping us afloat financially during those difficult times helped ground me. I liked knowing that no matter what else happened, we were operating on a firm financial foundation.

2. Defer whatever tasks you can to other people.

Instead of trying to keep everything in order by myself, I asked my husband to do many tasks that normally I would have done to maintain our home and our lives together.
Also, people offer help during times of crisis. Let them! Last summer when I had bi-lateral bunion surgery I asked friends to help provide food and walk my dogs. They were happy to have something to do that would help me, and their help provided a type of emotional support I really needed.

3. Lighten your load by eliminating obligations.

It became clear to me pretty quickly that helping my mother and step-father through my step-father’s health crisis and staying healthy myself during that stressful process was more important than writing checks for a professional organization. I actually chose to resign from two volunteer positions because taking care of family and myself were the priority.

4. Control paper flow even if you can’t regularly process it.

You may not have time to do much with paper that flows into your house on a daily basis, but you can make sure that it all flows to the same place. That way, when you need to find something in that pile of paper, you have only one place to look. You might stack it in piles in your home office or get an open box and store it there. Just don’t let it float throughout your space!

If you want to go one step further, pull out bills and magazines/catalogs/newsletters. Put the bills in a highly visible location so you don’t forget about them and so they are easily accessible when you are ready to pay them. Place the magazine, catalogs and other reading materials in a location where you spend time reading. Removing those items from your paper pile will make it shrink and also make it easier to access things to read when you need a source of distraction.

5. Resist the urge to do nothing.

In times of personal crisis it is very normal to shut down because of overwhelm, fatigue, or just not knowing what to do. While it is important to take breaks to rest, recharge, and recover, it is not a good idea to go to ground and let everything go. It takes only a day or two for your space to go from being a peaceful haven to a chaotic nightmare. Then you not only have a crisis going on outside your home, but also inside your home. You have no safe place to retreat. Messy houses scream, “You slob! Why don’t you do something about this mess!” Make yourself do at least the bare minimum to maintain order, like controlling the paper flow, washing the dishes, straightening up daily.

6. Remember that maintaining a basic order will ground you during difficult times.

You may resist doing maintenance activities because you are exhausted, but if you override the urge to stop and plop on the sofa and instead do a few tasks to keep your space neat and organized, you will find that doing those things will help ground and calm you. You will then be better able to go out and deal with whatever challenge is going on. If you are physically incapable of maintaining order yourself, because of illness or disability, ask others to help you do that. Many people want to help in some way. Let them know that their help will ground you and facilitate your recovery.

Image: evelynshire

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  • http://sarahjoyalbrecht Sarah Joy Albrecht

    Great tried-and-true thoughts.

    I would add:

    7. Know yourself. Remember that your crisis may challenge you in excruciating ways, but you are still you. Some curveballs may be medical conditions with the side effects of the cure is to make all of your hair fall out. You are still you, hair or not. Remember your values, your faith, and the things that you hold dear. Keep them in focus and remind yourself of them when you feel like giving up. If the crisis is over a decision, revisit the principles behind why you made the decision in the first place, and why you need to see it through to the end. Crises help to shape us not because they’re a pain to go through, but because they bring our values into focus and help us to tweak, define, and hold fast to who we are at the core. Let the crisis refine you, not define you.

  • http://card.ly/sefcug sefcug

    I have recently had some major back problems. These problems necessitated my cutting back on some of my computer user group activities, to enable me to concentrate on avoiding surgery.

    I resigned as editor, and secretary for one group, to free up time and lessen responsibilities. Also, I have cut back on activities with political groups.

    When, and if, my crisis is under control, I plan to resume my involvement, maybe a little bit at a time at first.

    I agree with all of your points, and have used them at one time, or another.

    Maybe this post will help others currently unfamiliar with crisis situations.

  • http://www.daytimer.com/blog Jeff@Daytimer

    This is a great list of things most people take for granted. Spending the day “putting out fires” is a chaos-mentality that may people assume as normal. In actuality, it’s counterproductive to a balanced and stress-free life.

    I supposed you’ve said it best, find a way to ground yourself, and make a plan when things don’t go as planned.

  • http://motivologymatters.com Kip

    Suprisingly, I have found the opposite. We recently moved into a new home and have found that our need for organization is hampering our ability to get other tasks completed.

    All of the order is there, all of the paperwork is getting done, we are moving right ahead with life. The problem? Doors were pulled to paint and are still not painted and re-hung. One room is half painted. Trim needs to be installed in the kitchen..and so on.

    I think the trick is balance and planning. When you define your task list make sure that you don’t completely block out and/or ignore the curveball itself. If you do, you may just end up striking out.

  • http://www.freeforeclosureblog.com Gwen

    I find that when I get a family problem, I go to pieces. I will try to follow guidelines such as this next time… if I can.

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  • http://my.lettersoflove.net Elizabeth Kaylene (Letters of Love)

    I find a let a lot of things go when I’m depressed, or when I’m really busy. I throw all of my mail and magazines and other papers into a plastic bin and keep the bills in a spot where I can easily see them.

    Another thing that’s really important, though, is to not bottle everything up. Don’t keep everything to yourself — the crisis, the things you have to continue to do even during the crisis — or else you’ll end up in a worse state. Keep talking to the people you are close to, start a journal or a blog, or find a pen pal. I’ve found that, for me, shutting up makes me shut down much quicker.

  • Chris

    I’ve been using GTD for several years and it’s got me through a number of crises. Creating a small number of defined routes for incoming helps manage it, and treating the incoming with the same GTD process helps to unemotionally get it done. As an added benefit I found that I’d been doing it for so long that when a curveball came along I naturally dealt with it as just another incoming. It really helped me to get through it efficiently and practically. There will always be curveballs, they’re just a more intense level of ‘stuff’ coming into your life that needs to be dealt with. Knowing that really does bring a feeling of peace with it.

  • http://www.justorganizeyourstuff.com Cathy

    Control paper flow even if you can’t regularly process it. Amen. Neglecting the responsibilities and deadlines some of those papers represent can cause even more stress.

  • http://www.zerebria.com/ Nacho Jordi

    All these advices look great to me, although, luckily, I have not been thrown so many times into “crisis mode” to prove they are right. :)
    #2 made me remember a sentence I once read: “one must not be cheap in asking”. That is twice as true when dealing with extreme situations; maybe there is a tendency to overlook one’s own condition when we are under pressure.

    I also find #4, simple as it is, a great advice: if you cannot arrange it, at least do not spread it! Brilliant!

  • donna

    Having just been through a major life crisis, I can say that although the temptation to just let everything go is great, don’t give into it. I found that even something as simple as making my bed every morning gave me a much needed sense of control at a time when I had very little control over anything else. The hardest part of dealing with any crisis situation is that lack of control, and maintaining some basic household routines helps mitigate that. I couldn’t control my husband’s horrific midlife crisis, but I could control my household and it really did help.

  • Sherry

    Very timely advice since my mom had hip replacement surgery 3 days after one of our ‘friends’ managed to lose one of our dogs. I am now spending most of my time either at work, visiting my mom or looking for the dog (or activities related to one of these) which has basically done the rest of my life no good. I’m trying to catch up on some stuff tht slid the first week and it’s an uphill battle.

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  • http://mutantsupermodel.wordpress.com Madeline

    I may have to print out #5 in pretty fancy letters and stick it up in parts of my house. I have a really good system in my house but it’s really hard to stay motivated as a single mom sometimes. Thanks for this!

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