Sample for Audio book - the life changing magic of tidying up

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Description

Sample for Audio book - the life changing magic of tidying up by Marie Condo

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Young Adult (18-35)

Accents

Indian (General) North American (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
the life changing magic of tidying up the Japanese art of decluttering and organising by Marie Condo. Chapter one. Why can't I keep my house in order? You can't tide if you have never learned how. When I told people that my profession is teaching others how to tidy, I am usually met with looks of astonishment. Can you actually make money? Doing that is their first question. This is almost always followed by Do people need lessons in tiring? It's true that while instructors and schools offer courses in everything from cooking and how to wear a kimono to yoga and send meditation, you will be hard pressed to find classes on how to Tiley. The general assumption in Japan, at least, is that tiding doesn't need to be taught, but rather has picked up naturally. Cooking skills and recipes are passed down as family traditions, from grand mother to mother to daughter. Yet one never hears of anyone passing on the family secrets of tiding. Even within the same household, think back to your own childhood. I am sure most of us have been scolded for not tiding up our rooms. But how many of a parent's consciously Doris how to tidy as part of our A bringing a parents demanded that we clean up our rooms, but they, too, have never been trained in how to do that. When it comes to tiding, we are all self dot instruction in tiding is neglected not only in the home but also at school. When we think back to our home economics classes, most of us remember making hamburgers or learning how to use a sewing machine to make an aspirin, but not compared to cooking and suing. Surprisingly, listen. Time is devoted to the subject of tiding, even if it is included in a text book. That section is either just read in class or worse, a signed for reading at home, so that students can skip ahead to more popular topics such as food and health. Consequently, even the extremely rare home economics graduates who have formally study studied tiding can do it. Food, clothing and shelter are the most basic human needs, so you would think that where we live would be considered justice, important as what we eat and what we wear. Yet in most of side days, tiding the job that keeps a home livable is completely disregarded because of the misconception that the ability to tidy is acquired through experience and therefore doesn't require training to people who have been tiring for more years than other study. Better, the answer is no. 25% of my students of women in their fifties, and the majority of them have been homemakers for close to 30 years, which makes them veterans at this shop. Do they tidy better than women in their twenties? The opposite is shoe. Many of them have spent so many years applying. Ebony is conventional math approaches that their homes overflow with unnecessary items and the struggle to keep clutter under control with ineffective storage myth methods. How can they be expected to know how to tidy when they have never studied it properly? If you two don't know how to tidy, don't be discouraged. Now is the time to learn by studying in applying the Con Mari method presented in this book, you can skip the vicious cycle a flutter