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Do you ever open the garage door, take one long look inside, and quietly close it again? Yeah. Same. The garage has this very specific talent for becoming the place where everything goes when you don't know where else to put it. The sports equipment from the season that ended eight months ago. The boxes from the last move that never quite got unpacked. The thing your neighbour gave you because they were downsizing and you felt too awkward to say no. It builds slowly. And then one day you look up and realize it's become a lot. Here's what I want you to know before we go any further: this doesn't mean you're disorganized. It doesn't mean you've failed. It means you have a space that never had a real system, and stuff has been making its own decisions in there ever since. That's fixable. Why the garage gets away from us The garage door closes. That's the whole problem. When life gets busy — and whose life isn't busy — the garage becomes the path of least resistance. It's out of sight. Nobody's eating dinner in there. So it waits, quietly collecting whatever we don't have time to deal with right now. The trouble is that "right now" adds up. Season after season, the threshold to start gets higher. Not because you don't want to deal with it, but because it starts to feel too big to know where to begin. The trick is to stop trying to tackle it all at once. Before you touch anything: decide what this space is actually for This is the step most people skip, and it's the one that makes everything else easier. What does your garage actually need to do for you? Is it first and foremost vehicle storage? A functional workshop? A home for seasonal gear, sports equipment, and the things that don't belong anywhere else in the house? Some combination? There's no wrong answer — but there is your answer, and that's the one that matters. Your garage doesn't need to look like a showroom. It needs to work for how your family actually lives. Once you're clear on its purpose, everything else becomes a filter. Does this belong here? Does it have a proper home here? If the answer is no — it's time to make a decision. A zone-based approach that's actually manageableForget trying to sort everything by category all at once. Instead, think in zones. Here's a framework to get you started: Zone 1: Active use Things you reach for regularly — the lawnmower, bikes, tools you use weekly, whatever sport is currently in season. These get prime real estate: easy to grab, easy to put back. If you have to move three things to reach something you use every week, it doesn't have a home yet. Zone 2: Seasonal storage Holiday decorations, winter tires, camping gear that comes out twice a summer. These can live higher up, further back, clearly labelled. You don't need them often — you just need to find them immediately when you do. Zone 3: The exit lane This is a temporary zone by design. It's where things land while you make a decision: Is this coming with us? Does someone else need this? Or is it time to let it go? Set a deadline — a week, two weeks — and stick to it. This zone doesn't get to become permanent. Zone 4: The honest pile We all have one. This is the stuff that's been sitting there for two years and you genuinely can't remember why you kept it. Ask the honest question: is it earning its space? It's okay to let it go. That is the permission you've been waiting for. A few things to keep in mind as you go Remember to breathe. You don't have to do this in a day. You don't have to get rid of anything you're not ready to let go of. It's okay to keep things if you have the space and they have a proper home. The goal here isn't minimalism — it's a space that functions without making you feel defeated every time you open the door. And if you hit a wall partway through and it starts to feel like too much? That's normal. It doesn't mean you're doing it wrong. Start with one zone. Just one. See how that feels. It will always feel harder before it becomes easier — and that's not a warning. That's a promise that it gets better. One more thing: if a move is on your horizon The garage is often the last thing families tackle before a move, and the first thing that causes delays. If a summer move is on your radar, the garage is actually a great place to start now. Getting clear on what's coming with you before the pressure of a closing date means less to sort through under stress — and it means your movers aren't loading things you were planning to donate anyway. The families I've worked with who get the garage done early always say the same thing: once that space is sorted, the rest of the move suddenly feels manageable. If you could use a hand — whether you're moving or just ready to reclaim the space — I'd love to talk. You can reach me at [your contact link/email]. Grab the free Garage Reset ChecklistTo help you get started without the overwhelm, I've put together a free, printable Garage Reset Checklist — a zone-by-zone guide built for real garages, not showroom ones. [Download the free Garage Reset Checklist →] Progress over perfection, always. Warmly, Eryn 💜
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Category: Spring Organizing | Estimated read time: 5 minutes Let’s be honest. The garage might be the single most avoided space in the entire house. It starts as a parking spot, becomes a dumping ground, and eventually transforms into a labyrinth of “I’ll deal with this later” that you mentally skip past every single day. Sound familiar? You’re not alone — and you’re not lazy. Life is busy, and the garage is where things go when there’s nowhere else for them to go. But spring is here, the days are getting longer, and your garage deserves a reset just as much as the rest of your home. Here’s how to tackle it without losing your weekend (or your mind). Step 1: Don’t Try to Organize a Messy Garage
Step 2: Group What You’re Keeping by ZoneOnce you know what’s staying, resist the urge to just put it all back. Instead, create zones based on how your family actually uses the garage. Common zones include:
Step 3: Work Vertically
Step 4: Label Everything This is the step that separates a space that stays organized from one that falls apart in three weeks. Label your bins, your shelves, and your zones clearly. If everyone in your family can find the bug spray and the spare batteries without asking you, your system is working. For families with kids, picture labels alongside text labels go a long way. Step 5: Do a Quick Safety CheckWhile everything is out, it’s the perfect time for a quick safety review:
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eryn MoreauThere is nothing I love more than to help others, teaching them how to bring order and develop systems to decrease their stress levels, bringing a sense of calm to their lives. Read More..... Archives
May 2026
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