>>1454171I have a 500 page book about this but my mum hid it in the basement in one of the boxes that make no sense so i can't tell you the title of it. You'll have to check your local library.
I am writing my own book on the subject and my tips are:
1. Cap the amount of stuff you have as much as possible.
2. Any time you get something new something of equal size/weight (if you live in an RV) must leave
3.If you have too much stuff to begin with you have to realize you have to get rid of more stuff than you take in each month.
4. Have 1 day a week where you put in a couple hours into cleaning up main areas that get awful.
5. Try putting baskets on your desk for pencil sharpener/calculator/cds/small electronics
6. If your cable management is bad put screws in the side of the desk and behind your laptop so the cables don't get in the way
7. A simple coat hook in the wall works to keep headphones on and you can loop the end of the cord around it so it doesn't fall on the floor.
8. Medium small objects like nail polishes can be put in an orange box once winter rolls around.
9. Make a stack of notebooks below the desk so you never lose your notebooks. Use a binder for anything really important. Do the same with books you have halfway read.
10. A roll of duct tape placed on the desk makes a great ring for pens/pencils but make sure to have nail polish remover if the pens leak on the desk.
11. Only have 1 set of speakers on the desk or a table at a time.
12. A coaster can be made for free by going to the forest and finding small trees that have been chopped down and they've left a piece.
13. Anything like paintbrushes and stitchrippers/crochet/wighooks can go in the duct tape ring.
14. Staple a chip bag to the underside of the desk as a garbage can and have a burn bin under it for the wood stove
15. Keep all your DVDs/USBs within reach so you can't say you don't know how much space you have to save things to
16. Keep a cd player within reach