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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Is Organizing Your Stuff the Key to Unlocking More Space?

I was thinking about this question earlier this week. I kept thinking how nice it would be to have a larger home, or more closets, or a basement, or accessible attic space. Our culture encourages us to have far more belongings than our grandparents could have imagined having. My house is crammed with stuff. It was built before big closets, and lots of them, were thought to be needed. Finding a place fore everything is a constant battle.

So I thought that perhaps if I just organized my stuff better I could keep everything tidier and in a dedicated space.

A couple of weeks ago I was particularly annoyed by how crowded my canning jar cupboard had become. To be fair, I also keep used commercial jars on one of the shelves. And those keep rolling in as my daughters buy jarred foods they like and I add instant coffee jars. It's a joke in our house, my epitaph will someday read, "She never met a jar she didn't like."

By the way these shelves look today, you would never guess
that just a couple of weeks ago it seemed there was
no place to put another jar. 


The second shelf is the result of creating more room on the shelf
just below this one.
I used another shallow box to stack smaller jars on top of larger jars,
which meant I could keep almost all of our commercial jars on
that shelf and leave this one free fore more canning jars.


This is the time of year my jar shelves fill up, as we consume what was canned last season. So it should be no surprise to me that the cupboard would become so full. We'd reached a point where there simply wasn't any more space for jars. I wasn't the only one annoyed by the lack of space in this cupboard. Anyone who had the task of putting away a just-washed jar dealt with the quandary of "where can I put this?"

I knew it was just a matter of organizing those shelves. I do this every year and can find places to put every last canning jar that I own by the middle of summer.

I wish I had a before photo, then I could show you what I mean. I didn't think this chore would be photo-worthy. But take my word, there was not a single bit of space for another jar, or so it seemed.

I pulled everything out and began to organize. I could see there was some dead-space in pockets here and there, space that could be used to store additional jars. This wasn't space that was between jars, but in the airspace above some of the jars. To respond to this, I used a couple of shallow boxes to hold smaller jars while the boxes themselves sat on top of medium sized jars, makeshift extra shelves. When I was finished, I not only had plenty of room for the canning and commercial jars, but I had cleared the front half of an entire shelf just below.

My husband even queried where did I put all of the other jars. It was a matter of organization --putting like items together and stacking smaller on top of bigger, with the help of a shallow box turned shelf. I do this with bedroom closet space too. I check for places where open space exists. It's often above the top shelf or below the hanging clothing. If like size clothing items can be grouped, this open space can be maximized and put to use to create additional clothing storage. Sometimes there is hidden open space. For example, when there's about 1/4 of a box of cereal remaining, but the entire box takes up room as if it were full. When the pantry seems to be overflowing with boxes, you can gain space by taking the partially full inner bags out of such boxes and grouping together in a single storage container. This can be true of all manner of consumable products.  I order dental floss in 12-ct cartons. I could see that the cabinet under the bathroom sink was stuffed to the gills, but couldn't see a way to organize out of that situation. That is, until I opened the carton of dental floss to see that I had two individual packages left. The individual flosses could come out of the carton, and the cardboard carton could go into the recycling, yielding free space the equivalent of 2 shampoo bottles. 

Organizing is very helpful, but it isn't the entire answer for all situations. When making space, I have to purge some unnecessary stuff, too. 

But with canning jar cupboard chore, I didn't have to get rid of too many jars. I think I recycled a grand total of 3 coffee jars in a shape I didn't care for and their bulky plastic lids in that purge.

In the canning jar case, organization went a long way. In other organizing projects, decluttering makes the greatest impact. I do have to ask myself if I really need to hang on to some things. I save plastic containers, thinking I may need to use them all for freezing foods. But at some point, my future freezer storage containers have just become excess junk. About once every 6 months the drawer where I store these plastic containers becomes too full to close. That's when I sit myself down on the kitchen floor and ruthlessly edit this accumulation. I think I have proven to myself that we don't need a second drawer of plastic containers to store all of our freezer foods and some leftovers. One drawer will suffice. This is true in other categories of storage. I don't need 20 pairs of shoes. I can "get by" very nicely with half that amount. By keeping fewer pairs of shoes, I have space in a small bedroom closet to hold other clothing. And the fewer pairs of shoes suffice for all of my footwear needs.

There are some categories of belongings that give me great pleasure to own, and I exceed amounts that most folks would consider necessary, because these are the objects that I particularly enjoy collecting. I collect dish ware. It's my "thing." I may not truly need all of the dishes that I have, but they bring me enjoyment to look at them and use them.

So what is the answer to finding space for everything in my already jam-packed home? It isn't just organizing what I have. And it isn't just about decluttering regularly. It's both, together, but also recognizing that some belongings are special to me, off limits to purging, and need space that may or may not fit standard organizational methods.

I love that I can find more space by rearranging the contents of an area. It's so satisfying to look into a cupboard and see open space waiting to hold the next emptied canning jar. I love that I can own some special items in excess of what others think is needed. I really don't need that bigger house, or the extra closets, or a basement or attic storage. I can create order in my surroundings and own all of the things that bring me pleasure through intentional management of my home.

6 comments:

  1. I would have fully appreciated the crammed-full-of-jars picture.😉 I strongly relate to what you have said today. We have a modestly-sized home (we do have a basement) and coming up with ways to store items is a big deal. Last fall, I knew we would need to store some of my son's things. Where to put it all???? I did a purge of our basement shelves which were filled with, you guessed it, lots of jars (among other miscellaneous things). I didn't have your brain wave to make additional "shelves" using boxes, but now you have me thinking! It made such a difference to clean that area out. I donated lots of things, too. Both of my kids have been in living situations where their belongings enter/exit our home at different intervals, and having dedicated space to store it all is helpful on so many levels, including managing my stress.

    Speaking of reorganizing, I need to get to work. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Kris,
      Good job on making space for your kids belongings when it was needed!

      Why do we end up with so many empty jars? Seeing as how a lot of jarred foods now come in plastic containers, I'm surprised by how many glass jars I accumulate. I do prefer the glass jars over plastic, so at least I have plenty of glass storage jars now.

      Delete
  2. I'm with you and Kris on the jars! I keep all of them until I have boxes full and never really use them. We no longer have a recycling center close by to make the drive worthwhile so I just kept all the jars. I can't use even a handful of them. Same with plastic containers (yogurt, sour cream, etc.). I save them all but don't use them and same with no recycling center for those either. Same with metal cans. Monday was my outside pots that I've been saving and using on and off, many of them still full of old potting soil taking up space in one of our outbuildings. I've given up on growing anything due to the animals that eat everthing in a pot. I finally put them by the road FREE for the taking. I will need to do the same with all those jars, plastics and metal cans or they need to be trashed.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Alice,
      That's such a shame that there isn't a recycling center near you. You don't have a lot of options for getting rid of jars, cans, and plastics. I think a free pile is a good idea. Perhaps someone could use some of what you have in surplus. Do you have a buy nothing group on facebook? You might be able to unload the glass jars and maybe some plastic containers that way. I guess in my parents' day all of the stuff that we now recycle was thrown into the trash, except newspapers and glass soda bottles.

      Good luck with getting rid of these items you can't use.

      Delete
  3. I have a basic rule that when a dedicated space for something gets full, nothing else goes in before something else goes out. And I will say that this most often happens with jars. What is it about jars? When we were cleaning out my parents attic, they had hundreds of jars. At one time, most of them were in use, but not for decades. Of course, they were both children of The Depression which meant you didn't get rid of any thing that could have a possible use.
    Alos, any time something is reorganized and neatened up, I find it very satisfying and find myself sneaking looks at the newly organized space.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Live and Learn,
      I like the one in, one out rule. In some areas I do well with that, but not so well in others. Good for you for keeping to it!

      Both of my grandmothers were savers. My father's mother saved just about everything. When I was little, she had a stack of children's magazines that must have been 30 years old that I enjoyed. My mother's mother also saved practically everything useful, the ball of string from packages, every button from worn out clothing, pencils that looked too small to hold to write with, soap scraps in a fabric bag, tin cans for starting flower seeds, etc. My parents moved often enough that they didn't accumulate a lot of stuff that needed storing, and we never had accessible attic space in the homes we lived in. And yet, when my father passed away, we had mountains of papers that he'd saved.

      I can understand why your parents would have saved the canning jars. They might have felt there could be needed at some point, or you or one of your siblings might need them. I hope they found a good home when you cleaned out your parents house.

      Delete

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