Skip to main content

Get a Head Start on Spring Cleaning and Get Rid of 100 Things This Weekend

Support Provided By
Clean out your junk drawer | Photo by Linda Ly
Clean out your junk drawer | Photo by Linda Ly

Spring is just around the corner ... which means spring cleaning is too. If you never hit the reset button on your house in January like many people do, March is sort of like your second chance at getting organized and getting a fresh start for the year. While we typically hunker down for winter, spring is a time to throw open the doors, air out the drawers, and welcome the longer days into our home. (And if you're reading this from anywhere outside California, it makes snow days feel much more productive.)

Your challenge this weekend: Find and get rid of 100 things from your house. It's easier than it sounds! You can throw them out, dump them in recycling, give them to a friend, donate them to charity, or even finally use them... as long as you clear out 100 things that were just sitting in a dark and dusty corner.

If you have a junk drawer (or you're like me and have several junk drawers — in the kitchen, office, laundry room, living room), you might even find all 100 things in the same spot. You can count that stack of unread magazines as 1 thing or 10 things; we won't judge. But as long as you keep the end goal in sight, this is an easy way to motivate yourself if you're the type that hates to clean. You can even turn it into a family activity and make each member responsible for clearing their share of the chaos.

Here are 25 things that might be cluttering up your closets and drawers right now... you'll be surprised at how quickly the other 75 surface once you get the ball rolling!

  1. Catalogs you'll never order from
  2. Magazines and newspapers you'll never read
  3. Take-out menus for restaurants you rarely eat at
  4. Take-out utensils and napkins
  5. Fast-food condiment packets
  6. Random keys you no longer remember what they're for
  7. Padlocks with missing keys
  8. Old batteries and chargers
  9. All those Allen keys from IKEA
  10. Pens that don't work and mystery pen caps
  11. Dried-out markers and ink cartridges
  12. Old receipts you don't need for taxes or insurance
  13. Expired warranty papers
  14. Scraps of paper with notes or numbers written on them
  15. Business cards
  16. Brochures and flyers
  17. Product manuals
  18. Rubberbands and paper clips
  19. Zip ties and twisty ties
  20. Tapes, CDs, and DVDs
  21. Obsolete software discs
  22. Matchbooks and lighters
  23. Haircare and skincare samples
  24. Unused mini toiletries snagged from hotels
  25. Solo socks that never found their pair again
Support Provided By
Read More
A black and white photo of an adult dressed as the easter bunny with a giant costumed head, holding a little girl on their left who gives it a kiss on the cheek and, with his right arm, holding a little boy who brings his hands to his eyes as though wiping away tears.

Behold the Bunnies and Bonnets of L.A.'s Past Easter Celebrations

The onset of the spring season heralds the arrival of fragrant flowers in bloom — and all the critters that enjoy them, including the Easter bunny and families who anticipate his arrival with egg hunts, parades and questionable fashion choices.
A black and white image of an elephant holding a broom with its trunk. A man is seen near the elephant, walking towards the animal.

Lions and Tigers and Cameras! How the Movies Gave Los Angeles a Zoo

The early days of the movies in Los Angeles inadvertently allowed visitors to experience the largest collection of animals in the western United States. When animals weren't appearing in a movie, they were rented out to other film companies, performed for studio visitors, or in the case of filmmaker William Selig's collection — an opportunity to create one of Los Angeles' first zoos.
A vertical, black and white portrait of a blonde woman wearing a sparkly four-leaf clover costume as she holds her arms out and extends a leg as though in a curtsy.

Irish for a Day: L.A.'s History of 'Going Green' on St. Patrick's Day

Whether it was a parade, dance, tea party, home celebration or just enjoying a good ol' wee dram of whisky, here's a photo essay of how Los Angeles donned its green apparel to celebrate St. Patrick's Day and embrace the luck o' the Irish over the years.