The Great Summer Declutter: Why Tidying Up Can Be an Environmental Act
The Great Summer Declutter: Why Tidying Up Can Be an Environmental Act Hook: Decluttering is only green if the clutter does not simply migrate from your house to landfill. Summer has a dangerous effect on the British householder. The sun comes out, the garage door is opened, and suddenly we discover that our home has been quietly breeding cardboard boxes, mystery cables, half-used paint tins, old tools, garden equipment, broken chargers and things that “might come in useful one day”. The traditional response is simple: hire a skip, throw everything into it, feel virtuous for three hours, and then quietly start buying replacements for half the things we have just thrown away. That is not really decluttering. That is environmental relocation. A genuinely green declutter is different. It is slower, more thoughtful and, occasionally, more annoying. It asks not simply, “Do I want this?” but also, “Could this be repaired, reused, shared, sold, donated, repurposed or used before I buy a...