Tidy Enough is

The antiperfectionist guide to getting organized ENOUGH for you. Because the only reward for being the MOST organized is exhaustion and (more) anxiety. Save being the most for being more of you, and give perfectionism the middle finger. Your untidy house is morally neutral!

Here's what you'll get:

A bullsh*t-free, self-paced guide to solving your own organization problems, so that you can get organized for GOOD - and find more ways to feel alive beneath all of that clutter.

  • Bite-sized video series to walk you through each lesson in 3 to 6 minute chunks.

  • Accompanying worksheets to put your "aha" moments into real practice, and come into alignment with your values by creating your own rules.

  • Three comprehensive modules to THINK, ACT, and BE organized so you can stop wasting your time, energy, and money on empty Pinterest promises that weren't designed for you.

  • Ongoing support for your specific questions as you complete each snack sized lesson.

Watch a free preview here (3 minutes)

Want a lil taste before you buy? Click here to watch a free preview lesson, and see if Tidy Enough is for you!

YOU CAN WASTE YOUR WHOLE LIFE TIDYING (yawn)

OR you can learn to say "hell no" to all of the stuff in your environment that drains your energy and wastes your time. Click each arrow for a sneak peek of the guide:

    1. Welcome!

    2. Pre-Guide Questions (I highly recommended answering these before you begin)

    1. Let's get started!

    2. You weren't born organized? Join the club!

    3. Anti-Perfectionism: The Art of "Good Enough" (instead of DONE)

    4. Understanding the Problem...before throwing solutions at it!

    5. Understanding the Goal (organized is not the goal)

    6. Revealing Your Values (from under that pile of stuuuuff)

    7. Do Less, Be More of You

    8. Download: Worksheet #1 Better Questions To Ask Yourself

    9. Download: Worksheet #2 Define Your Values

    1. How to ACT Like an Organized Person

    2. What is Clutter...for YOU?

    3. DECLUTTERING: Where to start and how to get started!

    4. NOW WHAT? Post-Decluttering

    5. EMBRACE THE JOURNEY, Ignore the Finish Line

    6. Download: Clutter Rescue Kit

    7. Download: Worksheet #3 Where to Start

    1. Keeping It All Organized

    2. Planning for Self-Sabotage!

    3. Planning for OUTSIDE Sabotage! (aka life happens)

    4. Systems: The Key to Running on Autopilot

    5. Download: Worksheet #4 Make a Working System

    1. Wrap-Up Questions (I'd love to hear your reflections and aha's!!!)

    1. Welcome!

    2. Part 1: THINK Organized

    3. You weren't born organized? Join the club!

    4. Anti-Perfectionism: The Art of "Good Enough" (instead of DONE)

    5. Understanding the Problem...before throwing solutions at it!

    6. Understanding the Goal

    7. Revealing Your Values (from under that pile of stuuuuff)

    8. Do Less, Be More

    9. Part 2: ACT Organized

    10. What is Clutter...for YOU?

    11. DECLUTTERING: Where to start and how to get started!

    12. NOW WHAT? Post-Decluttering

    13. EMBRACE THE JOURNEY, Ignore the Finish Line

    14. Part 3: BE Organized

    15. Planning for Self-Sabotage!

    16. Planning for OUTSIDE Sabotage! (aka life happens)

    17. Systems: The Key to Running on Autopilot

  • Free
  • No diet-pill fixes, no fake urgency
  • Learn how to get organized for GOOD, and not for perfect
  • Then you can take a nap and go do awesome sh*t with your newfound energy and focus

Here's the DL:

Why be perfect when you can be well-rested, happy, and free?


If you long for that feeling of peace that Marie Kondo seems to shazam into people’s homes, but groan at the idea of rolling your underwear into perfect little burritos…


Tidy Enough is for you!


No shade to all the KonMarie’ers out there, but tidy ENOUGH is better than the MOST tidy any day.  


Why?  Because homes are for living in, not for spending our evenings and weekends desperately trying to make them look good.  The most tidy is a waste of your very limited energy.  


You can be more happy and be less tidy.


What if your home was organized in a way to support how you want to live in it?  Tidying is boring, and you could spend more time napping and a whole lot less time looking for your favorite mask if you were organized - but just enough.


Not the most.  


Nobody cares if the inside of your drawers are color coded, alphabetized, and labeled. Listen, you do you if this truly sparks joy. BUT DOES IT THO?  HGTV will tell you otherwise, but there is no wrong way to be organized.


Get organized ENOUGH to support your values and goals, and leave the Pinterest rules behind.  You are the only one who gets to decide what the rules are to support you in your journey to be the person you want to be.  


Tidy is not the goal!


Sure, tidy is a nice byproduct of getting organized to support your goals and make room for more of YOU...  


But a tidy house doesn’t mean sh*t about who you are.  As it turns out, cleanliness is not next to godliness.  So, let’s leave the morality at the door and focus on what makes you happy, rested, and unburdened by all the outside expectations from anyone who doesn’t live there.  


This is YOUR haven.  What story do you want it to tell you about who you are?


It can feel mystical figuring out whether or not your small army of nautical figurines is clutter or if it sparks joy. But its easy to miss the real point: once you know exactly how your stuff either supports your values or distracts you from them, the clouds will clear and you will no longer be tempted to buy every mermaid statue in every cute little beach shop on every vacation (unless mermaid statues honor your personal values, then you do you!).  


What if you knew exactly whether or not you should buy that 27th pack of eyeshadow, and what to do with it when you get home so that you can still see your counter??


Tidy Enough will walk you through determining how your personal values translate to your physical stuff.  (And then you can shop without buyer’s remorse for allllll of the mermaid statues). 


Dump the pressure of a perfectly organized home, and embrace the antiperfectionist way.  

Let’s say “no” to the clutter that keeps us from resting and dreaming up a better way to be.  AND let’s say “no” to the temptation to do it perfectly so that we can get useless gold stars from the patriarchy.  


You make your own rules.  

FAQ

  • Who the heck is The Tidy Rebel?

    The Tidy Rebel was birthed by Kelly Haller, a recovering perfectionist and "the most organized person she knew"... that is, until she burned out for the last time, and rose from the ashes with a newfound appreciation for prioritizing rest and rejecting the grind. Suddenly she wasn't the most organized person anymore (gasp!), BUT she was the happiest and most well rested. And her well-rested eyes were open to the systemic issues that keep us all grinding and striving for this made-up idea of "perfection". Her mission is to help you get UNexhausted and UNdistracted by all of the societal BS that keeps us on the hamster wheel (instead of making our world a more just and equitable place to live). Starting with your home!

  • How long do I get access to the lessons in this guide?

    You get lifetime access, no matter what your payment method!

  • What is your refund policy?

    Due to the low price point of this guide, there are no refunds offered. If you are unsatisfied with your purchase, send me an email! I’d love to chat about your challenges.

  • What is the format of this guide?

    The guide contains a series of 3-6 minute videos with accompanying worksheets for you to review the main points and put your own challenges to practice. (Videos include closed captioning and an audio-only option).

  • How long will it take me to do this?

    You can watch/listen/read at your own pace in easy-to-digest 5 minute increments (and come back as often as you like) OR you can binge watch and complete all of the video lessons and worksheets in about 1.5-2 hours.

Payment options available so that nobody gets left out

Either way, you get lifetime access