Professional Organizing by Yve

Professional Organizing by Yve Yve Irish is a Rochester NY based professional organizer helping busy homeowners and professionals Let me introduce myself.

My name is Yve Irish, your residential professional organizing consultant. I have had a passion and eye for organizing for as long as I can remember. Starting from a very young age, I have enjoyed helping friends and family with their organizing needs. Since taking my skills to a professional level in 2006, I can honestly say, it has been my greatest pleasure to help make positive changes in my cl

ient's lives. I will make every effort to reduce your stress and anxiety by taking a gentle, non-judgmental, and fun approach to the organizing process. While I am dedicated to helping you clear the physical clutter, I am also passionate about teaching new skills to maintain your newly organized spaces and systems. These skills will help minimize stress, save time and money, and increase productivity, while freeing up more time for yourself to focus on what is important in life. Since joining the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) in 2010, I've been an active volunteer planning & chairing Upstate NY NAPO Members Group meetings.

I did not read this book, but I have worked with many clients of the years going through the same struggle. Start going ...
03/04/2026

I did not read this book, but I have worked with many clients of the years going through the same struggle. Start going through the stuff now, before you or your loved ones are gone and take the burden from your family.

I loved the review in the description below…especially #3

https://www.facebook.com/share/18ESPswNA6/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Nobody tells you what to do with your mother's nightgowns after she dies. I mean the ones still hanging in her closet six months later because you can't bring yourself to touch them but you also can't leave them there forever like a shrine to someone who isn't coming back.

Nobody prepares you for standing in your childhood home surrounded by fifty years of accumulated life - dishes, furniture, photographs, Christmas ornaments from 1962, seventeen sets of sheets for beds that don't exist - and having to decide what stays and what goes.

What gets kept because it mattered. What gets thrown away even though it mattered. What defines the difference.

Plum Johnson's "They Left Us Everything" is what happened when she faced exactly this. Her parents died. Their house was full. And she - middle-aged, living miles away, barely holding her own life together - got stuck being the one to sort through everything they'd left behind.

This memoir is the most brutally honest thing I've read about that impossible task. About what it actually feels like to dismantle your parents' lives piece by piece. About discovering that you can't sort through their belongings without sorting through your relationship with them. About learning that grief isn't just missing people; it's reckoning with who they actually were versus who you needed them to be.

1. Every object you touch is a conversation with ghosts you can't finish.
Plum opens drawers and finds love letters from before her parents married; tender, passionate, nothing like the brittle marriage she witnessed growing up. She finds photographs that contradict family stories. Receipts that reveal secrets. Her father's tools organized with obsessive precision. Her mother's aprons worn like armor. Each object carries memory, raises questions, demands decisions. And you realize: this isn't about decluttering. It's archaeology. You're excavating truth about people who can't explain themselves anymore.

2. Keeping everything isn't honoring them
This is the math nobody teaches you. Plum finds dozens of her mother's aprons. Her mother wore them like proof she was a good wife, evidence she was doing everything right. And Plum realizes: her mother's entire identity was wrapped in performing a role that's over now. She keeps one apron. Donates the rest. Feels like a terrible daughter for both choices. Because everything you keep becomes a burden you carry. Everything you release feels like betrayal. You can't win.

3. What you owe the dead versus what you owe yourself
Do you preserve everything because throwing it away feels disrespectful? Turn their house into a museum? Or recognize that you can't live your life while curating theirs? Plum keeps her mother's wedding ring, her father's tools, the dining room table where decades of meals and arguments happened. She releases most of the rest. And learns to live with the guilt and relief that come with both. Because letting go isn't betrayal. It's choosing to keep living.

If you're facing this right now - the full house, the impossible choices, the grief mixed with guilt - you need this book.

Maybe not for answers. Maybe for company.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/4u8u8eW

02/24/2026
For those living in the Rochester, New York area. Feel free to add any other resources you know of.
01/06/2026

For those living in the Rochester, New York area. Feel free to add any other resources you know of.

The urge to purge can feel especially strong right now, but make sure to declutter responsibly. Here's a few tips and resources to help along the way:

-Utilize Buy Nothing groups to share items
-Donate items in good working condition (verify what items are accepted in advance)
-Some great local community organizations that keep items in circulation include:
🧶🧵🪡SewGreen Rochester (accepts sewing machines, sewing, knitting & crocheting supplies and remnant fabrics) https://www.sewgreenrochester.org/donations
🔨🔩🧰South East Area Coalition Tool Shed https://seactoolshed.org and the Fairport Tool Thrift Shop https://toolthriftshop.org/ (accepts hardware and tools, even those not working)
🩼🦽InterVol https://www.intervol.org/new-donate (accepts medical supplies like canes, crutches, wheelchairs, walkers, and more)

Feel free to share others in the comments!

'Tis that time of year again when we think about making positive changes in our lives. Getting organized is right at the...
01/02/2026

'Tis that time of year again when we think about making positive changes in our lives. Getting organized is right at the top of that list. This quick read may be the inspiration you needed to get started!

Organization isn’t about perfection—it’s about progress. Discover a mindful approach to decluttering and organizing your home that works with your time, energy, and real life, not against it.

Happy New Year! 🎊
01/01/2026

Happy New Year! 🎊

Isn’t that the truth!
11/15/2025

Isn’t that the truth!

Great blog post for moms and dads as we approach the holiday season.
10/31/2025

Great blog post for moms and dads as we approach the holiday season.

By Zeenat Siman The Calm before the Santa Storm Every November, something shifts. The calendar fills, the closets fill, and suddenly every flat surface starts collecting things that weren’t there a…

Saints Place is in need of donations. Can you help?
09/18/2025

Saints Place is in need of donations. Can you help?

Can you help us re-stock our shelves and warehouse? We are running low due to many unexpected home set-ups. We need the following items: small dressers, kitchen tables, kitchen chairs, kitchen garbage cans, lamps with shades, blankets in all sizes, comforters size twin and double, brooms, dust pans and buckets. You can drop off items from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday-Thursday at St. John of Rochester Parish Center, 10 Wickford Way, Fairport. If you have furniture to donate, call (585) 383-6860 to schedule a pickup. We are deeply grateful for your support.

How much do you recycle? I shared this video before...it helps shed a little light on what can be recycled in Monroe Cou...
04/25/2025

How much do you recycle? I shared this video before...it helps shed a little light on what can be recycled in Monroe County.

Address

Pittsford, NY

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+15852016009

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