WULOLIFE
"Datsu-shari" Author: Eiko Yamashita Original title: New Katazukejutsu "Datsu-shari"
"Datsu-shari" Author: Eiko Yamashita Original title: New Katazukejutsu "Datsu-shari"
Description
Introduction · · · · · ·
"Dan-Sha-Ri" is a life tidying concept proposed by Japanese clutter management consultant Eiko Yamashita. The so-called Dan-Sha-Ri is a technique to understand yourself through tidying up things, sort out the chaos in your heart, and make your life comfortable. In other words, it is a method to use the clutter at home to sort out the waste in your heart and make your life happy. Among them, "Dan" = cut off unnecessary things, "She" = discard excess waste, and "Li" = let go of the obsession with things.
It is very simple to let go of things. You just need to think about yourself instead of the things and what is the most suitable for you now. If something does not meet these two criteria, you should immediately discard it or give it away.
By learning and practicing the concept of "Datsu-shō-ri", people will re-examine their relationship with objects, shifting their focus from objects to themselves - do I need them? Once they start thinking and are committed to replacing all the "unnecessary, unsuitable, and uncomfortable" things around them with "necessary, suitable, and comfortable" things, they will make the environment refreshing and improve their spiritual environment, completely refreshing from the outside to the inside.
About the Author · · · · · ·
Yamashita Eiko
Born in Tokyo, he graduated from the Faculty of Letters of Waseda University in Japan. He began to learn yoga during college, and through yoga he comprehended the practice philosophy of letting go of obsessions in one's heart, "Duan She Li". He then devoted himself to promoting a new tidying technique based on this concept, "Dan She Li", which anyone can practice personally. By tidying up the daily home environment, one can change consciousness, break away from material desires and obsessions, and live a free and comfortable life.
Since 2000, as a clutter management consultant, he has held lectures on the concept of "De-Maria-Maintenance" in various parts of Japan, which attracted interviews from major media such as NHK, TBS, Tokyo TV, Mainichi Shimbun, and Nihon Keizai Shimbun. Lectures on the concept of "De-Maria-Maintenance" have become a popular social topic, setting off a nationwide craze for the concept of "De-Maria-Maintenance", and the number of students participating in the lectures has increased day by day.
Table of contents · · · · · ·
Start with clothes you don’t wear and remove your obsessions. While filtering out items, you also change the process of interpersonal relationships from practice to consciousness. Become good friends with items and sharpen your inner sensitivity. Things are valuable only when they are used. Column 1: Mongolians and the Lifestyle of Letting Go. Chapter 2: Why we can’t tidy up - reasons that cannot be discarded. A society with excessive material abundance. The bargain-hunting mentality and the trap of discounts. The entrance is the gate of “breaking” and the exit is the gate of “giving up”. Has the sweetfish turned into a catfish? Three types of people who “can’t throw things away” “Anyway, I just don’t want to stay at home!” - Escapist type “Those happy times that can’t go back” - Clinging to the past type “I’ll feel uneasy if they’re gone” - Worrying about the future type The definition of “now” varies from person to person. If you can’t throw it away, you just don’t want to throw it away. When debris takes up space, an uncluttered house is like “constipation”
Dust and debris represent stagnation and decay. Trash can also be divided into three categories. Recognize the relationship between yourself and the objects. The timeline should be locked in the "now".
Don't focus on "non-daily" things. Regain your trust in yourself. Change the method of subtraction to the method of addition. The energy from neglect and denial makes the room messy. Rethink the meaning of residence. Take "living education" as the goal to improve the awareness of living environment and make home the best place to relax. Column 2 of "Drop and Leave" Nightingale's living environment and health. Chapter 3 Start with tidying up your mind - the thinking rules of "Drop and Leave" take the self as the axis and put the time axis on the "present"
Tips for the "self-axis" - pay attention to the subject when asking questions. Compare items to interpersonal relationships and understand the meaning of "now". Clarify the overall concept of "cleaning". Pay attention to the losses caused by not throwing things away. Are other people's things garbage? Draw people around you into the "vortex of letting go"
From too much information to unity of knowledge and action The world of "appearance" and the world of consciousness Practice diligently to achieve unity of knowledge and action The two meanings of "what a pity" Life is a process of continuous selection For you who still feel that you "can't throw it away" or "can't give it away" Column 3 of "Datsu-shō-ri" Komatsu Laopu House Promotion Plan - Old House Resurrected from the Dead Chapter 4 The body starts to act - the practice of "Datsu-shō-ri" Methods to improve motivation for tidying up Only focus on one point and make it perfect to improve motivation Choose different places according to the purpose Everything starts with throwing things away Start with things that "look like garbage no matter how you look at them" The wall of garbage classification The three major categories of garbage Say "sorry" and "thank you" when throwing away
When giving something to someone, say "Please accept this"
Apply the "rule of three" of large, medium and small to organize and store things in the kitchen
Why is it divided into three categories? It just makes use of the total quantity restriction principle of seven, five, and one to create ample space. Limit the number of items in the space. The "replacement principle" accompanying the total quantity restriction principle
Two major principles for creating the appearance of an object. Only one action is needed. The principle of independence, freedom, and ease. The law of "every time" is good. The Column 4 of the Column ...