![]() ![]() ![]() Messiness is universal, and Marie Kondo loves it no matter where it's found. Messiness is universal, and Marie Kondo loves it no matter where it's found (the repeated scene during the show's opening montage, in which Kondo expresses a charming affection for domestic chaos, has already become a meme). Netflix, however, picked up the series, and the show proves that a communication barrier isn't exactly present. That's when the notion of our personal items "sparking joy" was first introduced as a concept (and as a now oft-used joke), as Kondo guides her reader through the process of cutting through their clutter by separating the vital clothes, housewares, and sentimental objects from the unnecessary ones by holding each piece in their hands and determining if the item sparks joy within them.Ĭonsidering the overwhelming popularity of Kondo's book, it seems like a natural fit for television-although putting such a bet on a Japanese host, who communicates primarily though an interpreter, is the kind of wager most American television executives would never make. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing first introduced Americans to Kondo's celebrated KonMari method, a step-by-step guide to tidying that aims to make one of life's most challenging tasks-that of organizing one's stuff-more approachable, not just from a practical standpoint but also from an emotional one. It's been a little over four years since Marie Kondo's bestselling guide to de-cluttering was first published in the United States, after its initial publication in Japan in 2011. ![]()
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