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Folding your life into neat little squares
by Julie Williams
Monday, July 14, 2008
Lynnsey Stacy, an intern at The Buckle in the East Hills Shopping Center, folds clothes Friday afternoon at the clothing store. Ms. Stacy said her closet has always been organized, even before she started working at the retail store.

Photo by Jessica Stewart / St. Joseph News-Press / Purchase this photo

Lynnsey Stacy, an intern at The Buckle in the East Hills Shopping Center, folds clothes Friday afternoon at the clothing store. Ms. Stacy said her closet has always been organized, even before she started working at the retail store.

Abby Schulenberg’s closet is full of question marks, and she places the blame on her line of work.

Ms. Schulenberg, who works at Dress Barn at the Shoppes at North Village, is referring to the position of her clothes hangers, which all face exactly the same way. It’s a habit she picked up from her three-year tenure at the clothing store, along with folding her clothes as neatly as if they were going home with a customer.

“I think it’s a habit from working here all the time, and I end up doing it the same way at home,” she said with a laugh, holding up a special folding board with illustrated directions for the proper technique.

An acute attention to folding is something that many clothing-store workers take home at the end of the day. In Ms. Schulenberg’s case, it’s a conscious habit resulting from her appreciation of the way merchandise is folded at Dress Barn.

“Whenever we’re putting the clothes in the sacks for customers and I fold them all nice and perfect ... that’s what I do whenever I do my laundry,” she said.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that some psychologists are finding folding habits among retail workers that verge on obsessive behavior. Michael Jenike, chairman of the scientific advisory board for the Obsessive Compulsive Foundation in Boston, told the Journal he has treated people who have folding compulsions.

In St. Joseph, Megan Miller’s clothes-folding habit falls far short of obsessive.

“This is just what I’m used to doing; so when I’m watching TV, I’m just folding my laundry and not even thinking about it,” said Ms. Miller, a sales associate at Kohls at the Shoppes at North Village.

Sitting amid a pile of jeans transformed into crisp-cornered squares, Ms. Miller said she has also noticed the trait in her co-workers and that many of them even report organizing their closets by color.

“I don’t, I’m not that obsessive,” she said.

Scott Marconnet, manager of The Buckle in the East Hills Shopping Center, is familiar with treating his own clothing like store merchandise.

“It does kind of carry over into our homes,” he said. “My wife folds jeans different than I do. So whenever she folds my jeans, I refold them as they go in my closet.”

Mr. Marconnet also classifies his habit as minor, saying that 22 years of working at the retail store has simply caused him to organize his closet in a different way.

Dr. Nora Clark, who has a private psychology practice in St. Joseph, said she has never had a patient who reported an obsessive folding habit. She said it is unlikely that a job folding clothing in a store would produce extreme habits at home, and that even if a patient did complain of excessive folding, a more in-depth interview might reveal additional routines.

“The source of it is not that they work at the store,” Dr. Clark said.

Repeated actions such as clothes folding might be a sign of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), which causes a person to perform a certain action over and over again. Other habits might include excessive hand washing or rearranging things.

“The person thinks that it will reduce anxiety,” Dr. Clark said. “It doesn’t. It’s an error in thinking.”

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, many healthy people may experience habits, such as clothes folding, that fall short of obsessive.

“The difference is that people with OCD perform their rituals, even though doing so interferes with daily life and they find the repetition distressing,” according to the Institute’s Web site.

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biggieroth July 14, 2008 at 9:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Wow...Slow news day?

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wickedtruth July 14, 2008 at 10:32 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Would you rather have yet another article about crime, murder, the dire state of the economy? Sometimes reading what some might consider mundane is nothing more than a breather from the bad news we get all day every day. I think this type of reporting helps us realize regular, everyday life does still exist around us. Anyhoo, I can relate to the folding thing, as I too worked in a retail clothing store back in the day...must fold in squares...must organize the closet...hangers must face the same direction...lol

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jayhawkbabe July 14, 2008 at 11:01 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I didn't realize that it was weird to have an organized closet. I have never worked retail and all the closets in our house are organized and all our clothes are put away neatly.

Mine and my husband's closet, everything faces the same way. I also seperate my clothes and his into short sleeve shirts t-shirts, polos, nice dress shirts, long sleeved shirts, shorts, and pants. I do the same thing in my children's closets and all our t-shirts that get folded are folded like they are in a store.

I don't think of that as obsessive, I think that is just called being tidy, neat and having pride in your belongings.

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wickedtruth July 14, 2008 at 11:16 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree! I have so many clothes (my husband says I'm a clothes-horse...sobeit!) that it only makes sense to keep them organized. It makes for less stress in the mornings when I'm getting ready for work.

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just_sayin July 14, 2008 at 11:18 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm sure everyone has a few OCD traits if they think about it. For example, some people make fun of me because I arrange all of the bills in my wallet in descending order, back to front. All must be facing forward and right-side up. When I get my change from a cashier, I can't walk away until I have everything in order. After reading this story, I wonder if my little quirk is a result of my time running a cash register in high school. Interesting.

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wickedtruth July 14, 2008 at 11:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Let's just chalk it up to having good habits. I do the same thing with my money. It also drives me crazy when the cashier hands back the change and it's wadded, folded...AUGH!

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gladimgone July 14, 2008 at 2:43 p.m. (Suggest removal)

You mean flinging clothes in the corner or anywhere else on the floor and using the "sniff test" later is NOT an appropriate method of laundry management?

YOWCH!!! The wife just flung a shoe at the back of my head (again).

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wickedtruth July 14, 2008 at 2:46 p.m. (Suggest removal)

glad-you must be related to the male members of my household! LOL

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bs64507 July 14, 2008 at 5:40 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Everyone has an OCD of some sort. All my clothes are hung the same way and sorted by color. My OCD is at work. I have to do my job in a certain order or I feel like I forgot something. No one can help me either, throws me way off.

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