Designate something as an in-box. It can be a basket, a storage box, a drawer — anything big enough to hold a week’s worth of mail and no more. Find a place for it that’s convenient and not so out of the way that it’s out of sight
and mind.
Post a large trash can or recycling bin near the in-box to hold all the junk mail that you’ll be purging. “Treat your wastebaskets like babies: Keep them in close reach at all times and feed and change them often,” suggests Harriet Schechter, owner of Miracle Worker Organizing Service (
www.miracleorganizing.com) and the author of
Let Go of Clutter (McGraw-Hill, $17). Helpful hint: Pitch junk mail the second you reach your in-box each day. Your ruthlessness will be rewarded with a significantly smaller pile of mail to contend with when you sit down to sift through it.
Consider buying a paper shredder. It will let you dispose of do***ents containing personal information and account numbers without having to worry about identity theft.
Decide on a regular time to sort through your in-box and distribute its contents to the organizational systems you’re about to create. You might allot a few minutes each day or an hour once a week, whatever works for you. What’s important is that you make it a habit.
Systems for Managing Your Mail | Getting Organized for Fall | Organizing : RealSimple.com