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Christine Summerfield – Declutter, Simplify, Organize

Boulder, CO

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“Where Does This Live?”

January 23, 2021 By Christine Summerfield

Recently, I was asked by a local freelance writer “what is your biggest tip on organizing spaces in the home?” My first thought was “think in categories.” Arrange things together, “like with like”. Just as in a department store, there are all kinds of categories. We can do the same thing in our homes. Things are easier to find and to put away. Makes good, logical sense, right?

Tea cups in my kitchen.

But there is more to it than logic.

When you add heart to logic, something changes. A thing is no longer an inanimate object. When we love something and treat it with care, it becomes alive. It has anima, or soul.

Then, the question no longer is “where do I put this?” but…”where does this live?” All of a sudden, we treat that same object with more intention. As a result, a thing may not simply get tossed into a drawer, but placed there with care.

This may sound sentimental to some, but there is wisdom behind it.

When I worked as a kindergarten teacher, I would prepare the class room in late summer for the new school year ahead. I would arrange things and spaces according to the activities we would do each day. The forethought and the planning provided a sense of predictability, resulting in a feeling of overall calm and security for the children.

The cubby room was a space for transitions, taking off coats, hats and boots and putting them on again. Inside, there was an open space for circle time and big movement. This was also a place for building mighty forts and castles. A quiet corner with soft blankets was a safe place to snuggle with a bear or bunny and look up to the dreamy, silky blue sky overhead. There was a place to cook and have tea parties. A place for crayons, paper and paints. And of course there were places at the big, community table to sew, knead bread, grind grains and eat together as a family.

Wood toys in their homes.

The toys were also arranged in kinds of categories. There were places for soft toys, wood toys and blocks of all shapes and sizes. A place for dress up clothes and a basket of books. During play time, the toys would “wake up” and come out to play. Those toys were everywhere, and while it could appear chaotic to an outsider, the children were deep at work, doing what they were designed to do: “serious play”.

Then, it was time for the toys to go back to sleep. At clean up, we all worked together to put the toys away. Everyone had a job to do. If a child did not know where a toy would go, they would ask me “where does this live, Miss Christine?”

Not “where do I put this?” but “where does this live“?

In our little world, those toys were special. We played with them, we learned to share them, and each one had a story behind them. We even sang a song while we put them away. When they were broken, we repaired them.

We didn’t use words like ‘categories’, but you can rest assured everything had a home. And at the end of clean up, Grandfather Gnome would come out and talk to us about the toys and smile at us, seeing all the toys tucked away with care. All was well in our world.

Babies asleep and cozy in their beds.

I wonder what it would be like in our adult world, if, in addition to thinking in categories with our logical left-brain way of thinking, we crossed over to our right brains and added a little heart to the way we treat our things. Perhaps we would handle them with more care, putting them away in their proper home. A place for everything and everything in its place.

Perhaps then, other simple words from Robert Fulgham will come to life from long ago…an essay titled “All I Really Learned to Know, I Learned in Kindergarten”.

Robert Fulgham, 1986

Filed Under: Blog, Children, Reflections, Simplicity, Stories

Reflections on Tea Time

January 9, 2021 By Christine Summerfield

“Make tea, not war.” Monty Python

Behind these humorous words from Monty Python lie a hint of truth. What would our world be like if we did slow down and take up the practice of tea time? The image invites us to partake in this seemingly simple practice…two cups and two friends having tea together.

It’s more than just the tea. That’s only a vehicle for the coming together of friends in the spirit of connection and taking a pause in our day.

I love having a friend over for tea. Actually, I’m more of a coffee aficionado. I spark up the Pavoni and the kettle and get out the china cups. Our phones are closed and the Bistro is open. We sit and talk, laugh and share stories. The clock seems to stop and timelessness begins.

In the winter we sit at the table. In the summer, we sit in the garden. The tea can be hot on cold days and cool on warm days, but what matters is the union and the conversation. Together, we humanize the word ‘communion’.

A few years ago, I had a friend over for coffee and a visit. We sat at the table for two hours and talked about the stuff of life; kids, aging parents, home, meals, bikes, hobbies, work, play, joys and struggles. Which of course, opened the door to the deeper questions of life. To me, this was a normal occurrence, until at one point in the conversation, he put down his cup, looked me in the eye and said “I can’t remember the last time I sat down at a table like this and talked with a friend. My life is too full and busy, this is so healing. I want more of this. And then with a twinkle in his eye, he declared “the world needs more of this.”

My mother is now 95 years old and still lives in the house my father built in 1947. She lives in a small town with a population of around one thousand. There is no WIFI in the house. When I go there to visit, it’s kind of like going back in time. Life slows down and so do I. Neighbors drop in for a visit unannounced. No one schedules times to come over, they just come in and put the kettle on for tea. That is still a normal thing in her world.

But in our modern world, it seems radical.

I think about these Covid times, when humanity is asked to be on a Great Pause. I wonder if it is also an opportunity to slow down and re-discover simple ways to take a pause in daily life. Perhaps our tea time is solitary for now. I invite you to take this time to reflect on the essentials of life and create your own daily tea time practice. And when we all emerge from the Great Pause into outer activity, open up your tea shop and invite a friend over. Call it what you want- the bistro, the café, lotsa Matcha. Put the kettle on, leave the phones at the door, and create a sacred space for connection. No single clicks or pushing LIKE buttons. Time will stand still while two friends gather over two cups of tea. Wrap your hands around the cup and open the door to real live conversation.

Here’s to changing the world, two tea cups at a time.

Two cups and two hearts.

Filed Under: Blog, Simplicity Tagged With: home, simplicity

Contact Christine Summerfield • info@christinesummerfield.com • 720-231-4947