banner
Issue: #67

September/October 2012

 

 

Room to Breathe Home Organizing & Staging 

 

 

 Simplifying Life and Home Selling.

 

In This Issue
As Years Pass, It Gets Harder to Simplify Our LIves
Before and After Photos

Rewards

Do you dread going home?
 
Do you feel tense prior to entering your own home?
 
Do you fear friends or family surprising you with a visit to your home?
 
If you answered 'yes' to one or more of these questions you'll want to check out theReward Zone at the bottom of this page!

Join Our List

Join Our Mailing List

We Love Our Clients and They Love Us Too!

  

Jessica,

This is a letter Emily wrote to "run" for student council. She wrote it all on her own. :) Oh, and she won! :) 

Here is my student council letter! 

 

Student Council Paragraph

Ms Evans,

I believe you should elect me as our 6th Grade Student Council Representative because of my creativity, experience with public speaking, my organization, and my good leadership. I am creative because I love to think up new ideas, but I am also open to other student's ideas. I have a lot of experience with social speaking from my background with theatre productions and piano recitals. I was also the first 5th grade M.C. last year. I am organized because

I have worked with organizer Jessica Dolan from Room to Breathe on my room, and desk cubical, and I learned many new and helpful ways to organize.

Lastly, I have good leadership from my experience as Captain of the Science Section of the Elementary  S.L.A.M. fair. I would love representing room 201 in helping make this the best year possible for them! I hope you will choose me as our class representative for Student Council!

 

Sincerely,

 Emily

 
Simply.

It's how we do things.
Where is Room to Breathe Speaking?

  

Risk Taking and Leadership Panel Participant    October 14
2:30 pm
Bennett Pierce Living Center/PSU
  110 Henderson Building.  

 

EWE
October 2, 2013
8:30-4pm

 

Greetings!        
 
If you've ever owned a business, you know and understand how challenging some days (or even weeks) can be.  You also know how great the reward can be. 
 
It's important to remind ourselves that we need challenges.  Or at least this is what I keep telling myself.  ;)  Seriously though, we do need some struggles in order to appreciate the great times.  There is a lesson to be learned in just about every daily transaction we have whether it's with people or our stuff.
 
Walt Mills had a great lil' article in the CDT that sort of sums this up.  Please read on....enjoy!
 
Simply,
Jessica Dolan
 
PA Lic #PA081856
As Years Pass, It Gets Harder to Simplify Our LIves
   
 
*Written by Walt Moody for the Centre Daily Times*
 
My wife is getting ready for the annual townwide yard sale, which means mooching around in a hot attic where we collect all the things that we don't have room for in the rest of the house. 
 

They are possessions with some usefulness left in them but not quite enough to keep around and too much to just throw away. But I think if we could build a bonfire in the attic, she would be happy to throw all of our clutter into it.

"Simplify, simplify," Thoreau advised us, and, "It is preoccupation with possessions, more than anything else, that prevents us from living freely and nobly."

 

When I was in my twenties, I thought nothing of loading all of my possessions into the back of my second-hand Mercury Montego and setting off into the West. I had some books and a duffel bag of clothes, and if I was not living nobly, at least I was living freely.

 

Somewhere out on the plains of Texas on a long highway under the moon, I drifted into a reverie imagining my life as I should live it. I dreamed I would live in a little cabin near the water where I could sail a small skiff every morning on the flat Gulf of Mexico before going off to some job that paid enough to get by on. Or I would go back to the home where I had grown up in south Florida and plant orange trees like my grandfather had done when I was a young boy.

 

In those days I wanted to simplify my life and complicate my mind. The two things seemed to go together. A rich interior life was the complement of a monastic stripping away of nonessentials, and especially of all the nonessential possessions. Like the young Burmese dissident, who released from 10 years in a prison cell into the workaday world felt nostalgic for his life of reading and contemplation, the more I had the less free I felt.

It must be 20 years now since we moved into this old house and began to slowly fill the attic with our debris. Old picture frames and baby clothes, the child's gate and the bookcase with a wobbly base. Old computers and the manuals we once needed to make them operate. Books, some of them rain damaged, in boxes against the wall. Once it has gone to the attic, there is little chance it will ever come down again.

 

Oh, my wife found a few things with a useful second life for someone, and we carried them down to the church for their sale. Someone is always coming along who could use a child's gate to keep their toddler from tumbling down the stairs. And there is always someone handier than I, who can take the wobble out of a bookcase and put it to good use. But if a tornado were to come along and suck the rest of the stuff out into oblivion, we would be none the sadder.

 

Those are probably not the kinds of possessions Thoreau was going on about. Since his days, the amount of distracting stuff we all own has grown by exponential leaps and bounds.

 

We are tethered by electronic chains to our distractions, including the one on which I'm typing these words.

Simply, simplify, he cried, and took off to the woods and the pond. How rich we would be if we could follow him there.


Read more here: http://www.centredaily.com/2012/09/02/3318330/as-years-pass-it-gets-harder-to.html#storylink=cpy
Before and After Photos!

Many of you have been asking for Before and After photos...Thank you valued clients for giving permission for your spaces to be shared in hopes of helping someone else live simply organized!

 

Before: Ewwww, this master bedroom was anything, but peaceful and relaxing.  Dark, mismatched color and window treatment blocked natural light.
After: Some simple painting, and removing the dated mirror portion of the bed made this room feel grander and more adult friendly.

 

 

 

 

 

Before: We call this carpet color 'Grimace'. Good in your Happy Meal, not good on your floors.
After: We wish we had an even better photo of this room so you could see the beautiful textured carpet and soothing, monotone colors. Removing the dated mirrored bed ceiling makes room feel much larger.

    

REWARD ZONE

 

Save $65

If you have thought about asking for help to get organized or simplify your life use this coupon to give it a try! 

Get 5 hours for the price of 4 and save $65.

Buy Now
Offer Expires:-session must be scheduled and used prior to October 31, 2012