At the end of the four-day theoretical class, we were arranged to go to the customer's home for the first field practice. The client's home is a three-story villa. The hostess is about fifty years old and looks very kind. There are about ten people in our party to help her clean the kitchen and bedroom. The kitchen is not small and the surface is relatively clean, but the drawers in the wardrobe are full. There is a big refrigerator in the kitchen and a big refrigerator in the living room. The owner hoarded various items in the kitchen, including precious ingredients, soup, noodles, pots, plates, tableware, and a drawer of garbage bags. Two big refrigerators are full, too. It can be seen that the shopkeeper is very particular about eating, with all kinds of nutrients, health products and ingredients, and even five or six different knives. According to the process, all items should be cleared out and placed in categories. After that, let the host simply break free and throw away those expired ingredients and some useless sundries. The remaining ingredients are arranged in food bags and storage boxes of various sizes, labeled, positioned and then put in. The work is not difficult, and it should be arranged according to the daily use habits and convenience of the owner. Of course, the final presentation must be aesthetic. In the whole process, team members must work together, otherwise the efficiency will be very low. In this way, I was busy all morning and continued to arrange nearly 400 clothes for the host and hostess in the afternoon. Hanging two big wardrobes is not enough. Surrounded by piles of clothes, I began to doubt life. I can't understand why humans need so much. Obviously, there are only four seasons in a year. Ordinary people can basically meet the demand by six to eight sets of clothes a season, and an average of more than 30 sets of clothes per person a year is enough. But many people's clothes at home are far more than these, for many reasons, some have not been worn for many years, some are inappropriate, and some are newly bought and unused. Most people don't have the concept of parting, and think that as long as clothes can still be used, they are reluctant to throw them away. Even if you give it away, you must find the right person. People like it when they see it, but they don't like it once or twice. They always feel that a dress is missing from the closet. Such people can be seen everywhere in life. As a result, clothes have accumulated, but those clothes that have not been used for a long time are occupying your space bit by bit, consuming your energy and even affecting the energy field of a home.
? Judging from the owner's dress style, most of them are mainly casual. The hostess alone has 50 or 60 pairs of jeans, many of which look inappropriate in size, but the owner still keeps them and is reluctant to throw them away. It took about ten hours to complete the layout of all the kitchens and bedrooms. Although the bedroom is spacious, it is not well ventilated, and the air is filled with a strange smell, which may come from some dirty clothes that have not been washed, or from the bitterness of clothes that have not been favored by the owner for a long time, which constitutes the unique taste of this family. Staying all day makes people dizzy.
Perhaps you have learned from other sources that sorting and warehousing is a good new career. It makes the home beautiful and ceremonial by finishing, earning hundreds or even thousands a day, which is not bad compared with the general blue-collar workers. But if you really do it as a career, only you can understand the taste. At present, there are many finishing companies that teach in the name of training, but not many have really landed. A friend who intends to make a career as a teacher in storage suggests that he should be mentally prepared, be able to accept the dirty, messy and poor before finishing, and also regard suffering and fatigue as a kind of practice. First, tidy up his personal mentality, otherwise it will be difficult to stick to it.
? That's how I felt on my first day as an organizer. Do you have any friends in this business? Welcome to comment in the comments section and share your thoughts.