top of page
Search
Writer's pictureMarni Jameson

Get Organized Before Not After the Holidays — 10 Tips


Here they come again. The holidays are here along with the gift buying, home decorating, present wrapping, card sending, cookie baking, guest hosting, year-end tipping, party going, and all else that accompanies the holiday hustle. As I have learned the hard way, if you’re not on top of the season, falalala quickly becomes bah-humbug.


See, I have this fantasy of performing these festive tasks with grace, taste, and a smile, while the Nutcracker’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” plays in the background. More typically the soundtrack is “Flight of the Bumblebee,” and I’m harried, grumpy and sleep deprived.


However, this year, I am inviting you to join me in adding one more task to the to-do the list, one that will make all the other jobs easier. Ready? Get organized.


I hear you groaning but trust me. Although many think January is the month to get organized, I say we declare November as organizing month. Afterall, the holiday season is when you most need your home to look, feel and function its best. You need maximum efficiency and decluttered spaces. You need your kitchen to run like a pit stop on race day. And, because company is coming — and you know they’ll be looking in your drawers and cabinets and judging — you need your home to be its orderly best. That means getting the People magazines and Preparation H out of the guest bath.


November is also the best month to thin closets and cupboards to make room for the gifts, goodies, and guests, and to make your donations in time to get the tax deduction. So, let’s do this. Here are 10 holiday organizing tips we can do right now to make the best of the season before it gets the best of us:

1. Make a list. Write down the holiday tasks you need to tackle (and those you don’t) to help you get a scope of the project and eliminate surprises: Oh, (expletive), teachers’ gifts! Note, many items on this master list (gift buying, menu planning) will spawn their own lists. Take a deep breath, then prioritize, create deadlines, and start doing what you can do now.

2. Decorate early. I am in favor of putting up holiday decorations the day after Thanksgiving, or as soon as possible. The time between Thanksgiving and New Year’s gets tight as tasks double. Getting your holiday decorations up early will buy you time and put you in the holiday spirit.

3. Purge the pantry. Take everything out. Toss what’s old or icky. Wipe down the shelves so you have a clean slate. Do the same for the refrigerator. Outside the pantry, consolidate like items into groups — canned goods, condiments, snacks, dog treats. Put batched items in clear acrylic labeled bins, which pull out like drawers. This will help you and whoever is helping you cook find items fast and put them back in the right place. It also lets you see you have three bottles of Italian dressing, and no mayonnaise.

4. Take inventory and meal plan. Now that you know what you have, fill the gaps. List all the non-perishables you’ll need for holiday meals and stock up on items like canned pumpkin, chicken stock, evaporated milk, stuffing mix, olives, nuts, and fixings for a spur-of-the-moment appetizer like smoked fish and crackers. Buy before stores run out.

5. Bake and freeze. Spend more time with guests and less time steaming in the kitchen by making holiday cookies and breakfast casseroles now and freezing them so they’re ready to go.

6. Tee up your tips. So you’re not rifling through your spouse’s wallet or dashing to the ATM when the gardener shows up Christmas Eve, have cash tips in greeting cards ready to go for all those who make your house go around. As a rule, Kiplinger’s suggests tipping the gardener, the housekeeper, the pool service person, and the dogwalker the equivalent of one week’s pay. If helpers work in pairs or groups, a year-end tip of $20 to $50 per worker is appropriate.

7. Buy in bulk. Although buying a unique gift for everyone on your list may be ideal, it’s not always realistic. Find a well-priced generic gift, like a favorite scented candle or a handsome cheese knife, and buy a bunch. Make this your go-to hostess or teacher gift.

8. Print your labels. If you send more than 20 holiday greeting cards, consider printing labels in advance. Have a document of mailing addresses set up to print in a festive color and font. Update the list with new addresses and new friends, then print the labels so they’re ready to go (along with holiday stamps) when you get your cards.

9. Wrangle the wrapping. Anyone who has wrapped presents on Christmas Eve with the newspaper knows gift wrapping can be a pain point when you run out of key supplies. Have a bin dedicated for holiday wrapping. Weeks before Christmas make sure it is well stocked with paper, boxes, bows, ribbons, gift bags, tape, tissue, tags, and scissors. Make bins easy to access and slide away when not in use.

10. Ready the guest room. If family or friends will be staying with you, have the guest room ready well in advance. If your belongings have started to creep into the guest space, clear them out to make room in the closet and dresser. Then run through the checklist: clean sheets, extra blanket, towels, toiletries. Pull out bathroom drawers to make sure they are clean, appropriately stocked and not embarrassing. Medicine cabinets, too. Think nice B&B. Then, when guests show up, all you have to add is their luggage.


Now, cue “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy.”


Join me next week for easy ways to streamline your holiday decorating and still get a great look.


CAPTION Season starter — To getting a handle on the holidays, sit down with your favorite hot beverage, make your holiday to-do list, and make getting organized part of the plan. Photo Julia Sudnitskaya forDreamstime.com.

597 views2 comments

2 Comments


rd.everson
Dec 04, 2023

Here's my tip for teacher gifts--Just Don't. Chances are, they have enough scented candles. Instead, with your child, write a note to the teacher, and also one of commendation to the principal, superintendent, school board to be included in the teacher's file. Praise, this is NOT the time to air differences. Or, ask the teacher what the classroom needs--more tissues for the coming flu season, for instance.

Like
penumbra7
Dec 04, 2023
Replying to

This column, though well intentioned, just left me cold. Those of us working through grief or financial issues are just trying to find a tiny piece of Christmas spirit and not the circus you describe.

Like
bottom of page