Truly hentie Food ummer Pleasure • °pan 7 Days for Liptrielv i& 'Dinner , • Drank *t Noocits APO' Sci 6d, yegoic ► pelight Conquering Clutter Organizing tips that may save your life. BY LORI WEISS I ...always ill good taste Interesting articles, current events, politics—Plus art, literature, kosher cooking and more. What a great idea for any gift giving occasion. Call to give a gift subscription today! 248.539.3001 Summer Pleasures/2002 pink, correctly labeled file in front of have to admit, when the Jewish News called and asked if I'd me, I introduce myself She's charm- ing, hardly the drill sergeant I'd imag- cover a seminar on organiza- ined I was about to meet, someone I tion, I was sure someone had snitched. Having left the world of tel- could actually see myself being friends with, until she utters those awful evision, I'd moved my writing and words. "Are you disorganized?" production company into my home. There are no worse words one can Once a sanctuary away from hun- utter to someone who makes her liv- dreds of tapes, press kits and books that piled in weekly, now my dining room — all right, I'll be honest here — every room has a striking similarity to the clut- tered office setting I left behind. So while I laughed at the invita- tion, I was a willing student. If there was someone out there who could give me my sanctuary back, but still allow me to keep all the bits of information creative types need, I'd be the first to sign on. The assignment was to show up at 9 a.m. at the Michigan Design Center in Troy and try to take in this new way of thinking. Given the locale, I wasn't really surprised to find myself surrounded by designers, but I couldn't help but wonder what they were doing at a seminar like this. Aren't designers the ones you hire to make your house a home? But Birmingham's tie Cletter rwir/ Cleo Nike Bradley set me straight. "Oh please, we're cre- ative, we don't want to spend the time ing being creative. Well, I suppose there are, but fortunately no one has putting our own things in place. We said them to me yet. I calmly caught save everything, especially magazines my breath and explained I knew — Architectural Digest, Elle Decor — we might want to go back and look at exactly which pile everything was in. Seeing my sensitivity on this issue, them; we're emotionally tied to them. she tried a new word. "Cluttered, And anyway, one look at the pile and maybe?" That much I was willing to I'm exhausted!" Suddenly I'm feeling concede. right at home. The good news was, Debbie lights As we continue to talk, Debi up in the presence of people like me. Weinstein, the owner of "I've Got To I watched her come alive as she asked Get Organized" is passing out neatly the audience to raise their hands if organized files. And while it's always they had a similar situation. The good to have take-home information, more hands that went up, the wider I can't help but picture the 30 files I her grin. "My favorite kind of people! already have sitting on the floor and My goal today for all of you is that wonder whether I really need to add you'll all walk away with just one another. As she puts down the light organizing tip that will change your life!" Having come with the hope of simply seeing my floor again, I was about to become a follower. She started off slow, knowing that she was dealing with an audience that didn't frequent stores like Organized Living. "What is the one part of your life that is stressing you out the most?" she asked. For me, the answer was obvi- ous. The files and piles that now fill my home. But for others, like many of you at home, it's your closet or your kitchen cupboards. It doesn't matter what your quandary is, Debi's solutions apply across the board. "Take it slow, one shelf, one drawer, your files, but whatever you do, don't zig-zag!" Zig-zagging, she explained, was moving from room to room. Come on, you've all done it. You start cleaning out your closet and you come across something that belongs some- where else. As you walk into another room, thinking you'll put it in it's rightful place, you're feeling ambitious, so you start straightening up that area. Lo and behold, you come across that book you were looking for and suddenly, you're on the couch reading. "Tape the floor!" Debi says with a knowing smile. "Give yourself a 10- by-10 area and tape yourself in, then use black garbage bags." I'm guessing she specifies black, so you can't look - in and change your mind. "Then tie one with a pretty bow and leave the other hanging. The one with the bow you'll be donating, the other goes in the trash!" I can sense the woman next to me shaking. Next she introduces us to a game called Friends, Acquaintances and Strangers, and says we can play no matter what our clutter issues are. "You love your friends. They fit you; they have information you need. You