Julie Gumm - Author

  • Blog
    • Adoption
    • Affording Adoption
    • Orphans & Social Justice
    • Financial Freedom
    • Family Matters
  • Book
    • Book Reviews
    • Media
  • Resources
    • Adoption Window Decals
    • Budgeting
    • Adoption Grants
    • Fundraising Affiliates
    • Employer Adoption Benefits
    • Must-Read Books for Adoptive & Foster Parents
    • Links
  • Speaking
    • Adopt Without Debt Workshop
  • About & Contact

When Excess Brings Chaos

03.22.2010 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

We, as Americans, live in a world of excess. The amounts of excess vary from person to person. We may not think we have excess but usually because that’s because we’re looking at what the next door neighbor has. Or the guy in the office across the hall. Or that really popular couple at church.

In the last few years, because of the places we’ve traveled and the experiences we’ve had I, more often than not, find myself thinking of the truly needy in this world.

Growing up I’m sure my mom thought I was a lost cause in the “excess” department. I was the collector – knick knack, clothes, books. But some how when I went away to college it’s like a switched flip. Suddenly on my own, in charge of my own space, I became a model organizer and a regular purger of unnecessary stuff.

I’m not claiming that I am perfect, that I don’t collect anything – just look at my collection of scrapbooking stuff (currently collecting dust in the corner of my bedroom).  But I purge often, and sometimes with reckless abandon. I have probably swung even further to the other side to compensate for my dear, sweet husbands um, well, non-purging tendencies.

This weekend was the semi-annual switching out of the seasonal clothes. We’ve had gorgeous sunny weather with highs in the 70s and it was time to get out the summer wear. For 3 days my living room looked like a textile factory that exploded. As I pulled out the 2 bins of girls clothes and begin to separate them into piles I was struck by the excess.

We do laundry every weekend, at the longest going 8 days in between laundry washing. I counted up Natalie’s shirts – some that fit her from last summer and some that Beza no longer fit in that got added to her pile.

27 shirts…for a 7 year old. One that comes downstairs in mismatched colors half the time.

Noah’s shorts were almost as bad.

As I was pulling the winter shirts off of hangers I realized there were shirts that went unworn the entire season.

So I declared war on the excess clothing and set out to whittle their clothes down to a respectable amount. We found 10 pairs of shorts, 10 matching shirts. We went through the winter stuff and, before we put it away, pulled out the too scratchy, too tight and “ugly” shirts that apparently were NEVER going to get worn.

I ended up with 2 bags of hand me downs for a friend. 2 bags for Goodwill and 1 bin for my nephews.

I supposed I need to tackle my closet next?

Categories // Faith, Family Matters, Featured Articles Tags // organizing, purging clothes

About Me

Writer. Wife. Mother. Traveler. Coffee-addict. Book-lover. Television-Junkie. I love stories. Hearing them, watching them, telling them, living them.

The Book


More Info
Available at these retailers:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Christian Book | Cokesbury

Connect

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Receive Posts Via Email

* indicates required

Categories

  • Adoption
    • 30 Things I Know About Adoption Series
    • Post-Adoption
  • Affording Adoption
    • Adoption Fundraiser Spotlight
    • Fundraising
  • Depression
  • Faith
  • Family Matters
    • Creativity
  • Featured Articles
  • Financial Freedom
  • Orphans & Social Justice
  • The Book

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Studio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in