Organizing for Your Legacy – Professional Organizers Blog Carnival
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I’m very excited to bring you the latest edition of the Professional Organizers Blog Carnival! This month’s theme of Organizing for Your Legacy. In case you’re wondering exactly what that means, here’s a definition supplied by our sponsor, Hazel Thornton.
A legacy is anything left behind when you die. It can be a gift of money or property left to someone in a will. It can be a body of wisdom captured in a published book, or the ongoing good deeds of a non-profit organization that you founded. It could be the wonderful warm memories of friendship and family that never die.
A legacy can also be the consequences of neglect. It could be a house full of clutter that no one knows what to do with. Or the lack of a will and a designated executor, leading to confusion and more money and time being spent on your estate than it is worth.
Hazel is quite a regular around here! She’s not only a Professional Organizers Blog Carnival Superstar Blogger; she’s written several guest posts for Your Organizing Business and has sponsored two previous editions of the Professional Organizers Blog Carnival. She’s also the creator of the Clutter Flow Charts, including the Keepsake Clutter Flow Chart shown above.
Be sure to bookmark or pin this post, because you won’t want to miss any of my readers’ submissions! We’ve got tips for handling everything from fun stuff like photos and memorabilia to serious matters like making your final wishes known to your loved ones. There are even reviews of the latest hot organizing book, The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning: How to Free Yourself and Your Family from a Lifetime of Clutter by Margareta Magnusson.
Please show the bloggers your appreciation by leaving comments and sharing their blog posts (or this one) with your network, using the hashtag #POBC in your social media posts.
Kim Eagles | Seriously, Your Kids Don't Want All Your Stuff |
Julie Stobbe | Organizing your paper photos |
Linda Samuels | What Treasures Will Be Discovered When You Are Organizing? |
Hazel Thornton | A Valentine for Your Family: Planning Your Legacy |
Cathy Bates | Clearing Sentimental Clutter |
Lisa Tonjes Moritz | Organizing a Legacy: keeping the past in the present through organizing |
Offir Gutelzon | 5 Ways To Organize Your Family History |
Janet Barclay | Letting Go through Story Telling |
Sabrina Quairoli | What memorabilia to keep to honor loved ones |
Hellen Buttigieg | How to Help Your Elderly Parents Declutter |
Thank you to everyone who contributed!
Next month’s Blog Carnival is all about Paper Management. You may make your submission any time from now until Wednesday, March 20 at 7:00 PM EST. If you’re interested in being a sponsor, please let me know!
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I love the Keepsake Clutter Flow Chart! Thank you for including me in this round-up of helpful articles.
Me too – I just love the way Hazel’s brain works!
I love this roundup, and not just because I am getting compliments. 🙂 I wanted to sponsor because it’s a topic close to my heart, and now Janet has collected even more resources for me!
Well, I guess that makes it a win-win situation!
What a great round-up of legacy posts! I’m looking forward to reading them and appreciate being included in the group. I agree with you and Nancy- I love Hazel’s chart and how her mind works!
Janet, thanks for including this topic! Thanks for including my book review, even though there was also another one on the same book. I certainly enjoyed learning so much from my professional organizer friends!!
It was actually the popularity of that book that inspired this topic, so I was very happy that a couple of you shared your reviews.