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Writer's pictureElena Harris

New Years Resolution Midyear Check-In

Updated: Jun 20

It's the middle of the year. How far have you made it towards your New Year's Resolutions or annual goals? Halfway? A Quarter? Forgot what your goals even were?


Now's the time to check-in and reset.


  1. What were those things you wrote down around January 1st? Rewrite them.

  2. How far have you made it towards each goal?

  3. If there is a goal or two that you haven't made ANY progress on...

    1. Decide if you are going to let it go and work towards something else because it simply isn't important to you or relevant anymore, OR

    2. Figure out what about that goal isn't working for you and made adjustments so you can make the progress you desire.


If one of your goals was centered around your home organization or decluttering and you haven't made much progress, keep reading.


It's time to set up a clear plan.


Decluttering (or any goal really) is so much easier with a clearly laid out schedule/plan. Rather than picking at random what space to work on when you have some spare time, wouldn't it be nice if you had a list to work through from top to bottom? And instead of procrastinating for weeks and months between your decluttering sessions, wouldn't it be nice to already have it on your calendar?


That's what this Decluttering Plan will give you: an order to tackle things in & a schedule to help you keep to your goals.


So with no further procrastination (I'm sure you've done enough of that already):


The Step-by-Step Process for How to Make Your

Custom Decluttering Plan:


1. Figure Out Your Goals

Before you can make a useful plan you will actually stick to, you have to figure out what you want. Get out a notebook or a new doc on your computer and write the answers to the following questions:

  • What are your big home and life goals for the next 1-3 years? Moving? Remodeling? Kids off to college? New job? Baby on the way? Really think through what will be happening soon in your life that you may need to prep your house for.

  • What needs to change about your house to adjust for the upcoming changes?

  • What are your major clutter issues?

  • What areas of your house are underutilized?

  • What areas of your house are not functional anymore?

  • What areas of your home stress you out?

  • Want to park your car in the garage?

  • Want to use X room for a new purpose? E.g. Want your guest room crammed with clutter to become your new office or workout space?

  • Not inviting guests over? What parts of your home are causing that?

  • What does your ideal home look like?

  • How do you want to feel in your home?

Now that you've brainstormed a bit, write out the goals for decluttering your home. This list can be long or short. The idea is just to write out ALL you want to change and accomplish. Be specific with each goal but don't cut out any goals yet.


Here's an example of 3 goals:

"My decluttering goals are to (1) clear the garage so I can park the car and easily find yard equipment, tools, & outdoor gear; (2) purge and reorganize the dining room so I feel good inviting people over for dinner; and (3) declutter my closet so I know anything I pull out is something I love and will fit."


2. Discover Your Why

You will be much more successful in accomplishing your goals if you know WHY you want to accomplish them. You can come up with some specific why's for specific goals (like "I want to declutter the garage and park my car in it because I'm tired of worrying about someone side swiping my car.), but I encourage you to also come up with an overall why that ties those specific why's together such as, "I want to feel at peace in my home so I can stop spreading stress to those around me."


Write your overall why somewhere you will see it often. Use this as a mantra to encourage you to stick to your Decluttering Plan throughout the rest of this year.


3. Pick Goals for this Year

If you have more than 6 easy goals (1 each month, e.g. wardrobe or small room) or 3 big goals (one every 2-4 months, e.g. garage or big rooms/categories), then you'll need to narrow your list down for this year. Think about your why and what's most important to you and narrow down your list to your top goals that are doable in the next 6 months.

Keep the list of goals you are NOT prioritizing somewhere safe so you can revisit it next year or this year if you get through everything.


4. Give Yourself Deadlines

Now that you know what you want to accomplish this year, it's time to figure out by when you will get these done and in what order. For clearing the garage, perhaps you want to get your car inside by winter. Make your deadline something like November 1st to give yourself extra cushion before the snow comes.


As you come up with deadlines, make sure to spread them out over the year so you are completing one project at a time. Consider the "6 easy goals" and "3 big goals" timelines I mentioned in step 3. Make sure your deadlines are realistic and give you buffer room to take breaks, vacations, holidays, hectic weeks, etc. However also make sure you aren't spreading them out way too much so that you aren't pushing yourself to accomplish your goals.


Write out your goals for this year in chronological order with their deadlines. It may also make sense at this stage to split some of your big goals into smaller ones.


Here's an example based on the 3 goals mentioned in step 1:

1. Declutter my closet so I know anything I pull out is something I love and will fit by September 1st.

2. Finish purging and reorganizing the dining room by October 16 and have a my birthday party with guests at my place on October 19.

3. Clear the main part of the garage and park the car inside by Thanksgiving.

4. Finish organizing the garage so I can easily find yard equipment, tools, & outdoor gear in Q1 of next year.


5. Put Decluttering Blocks on the Calendar

Now that your goals have deadlines, it's time to make your goals happen! Look at the first goal and think about how much total time it will take to accomplish it. How many hours? Then figure out where you can fit those hours into your schedule between now and the deadline. Block off those times for decluttering on your calendar.


I recommend you over estimate how long it will take, and then on top of that add an extra 2 hour session in somewhere in case you do have to cancel on yourself.


6. Keep Your Decluttering Blocks

Now that they're on your calendar, make sure to keep them. Set yourself reminders on your phone or in your planner. Ask someone to keep you accountable or even declutter with you. Do whatever you need to do to stick to your plan.


7. Review & Adjust

You are bound to have over or underestimated your ability to get these goals done on this time frame, so every month or quarter, revisit your decluttering goals and calendar and make adjustments. Miss a deadline? Set a new, more realistic one. Finish early? Start tackling the next project.


This is not a one and done. You have to keep this plan working for you.


A few caveats:

- You can create this plan ANY TIME during the year. No need to wait for January 1st or June 1st.

- This specific process is for decluttering and organizing your home. However you can use the general framework to declutter your business / office, declutter your digital life, or accomplish any other project based goal you have.

- If you live with multiple people, this is a great activity to do together. Involve your significant other, kids, and/or roommates, even if they won't be doing a lot of the decluttering work with you, it's good to get everyone on the same page and share your goals. And who knows, you might even get someone on board for helping declutter who wasn't interested before.


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Feel overwhelmed by this planning process and just want to know where to start? Read my blog series on what order to declutter your house in!


Want one-on-one help with creating your declutter plan? Not sure your plan is realistic? Unsure of your why? Contact me and we can schedule a coaching session to optimize your Decluttering Plan. Even if you don't want to commit to coaching long term, I would LOVE to help you get you started on the path to conquering your clutter with this planning process.


Comment below the goal/space you are going to conquer first!

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