You'd be surprised at how much you can accomplish in fifteen minutes of focused work, and that does tend to accumulate quickly as the days and weeks pass.
Plus, you get the enormous added benefit of staying close to your work, so that your comfort with it grows, it begins to appear less demanding and menacing, and your mind continues to chew on the problems even as you are occupied with other things.
Large, ambitious projects can induce procrastination and guilt. By committing to a small amount of work each day, with absolutely no pressure to do more than the minimum, steady progress can be made. - Andrew Utter in BizNik, Dec 2009
Don't you love the highlighted part of that quote! It has often seemed to me that "keeping my hand in" the declutter work of a particular area, with regular declutter appointments, keeps me from dreading it because I am "making it my own". Looked at from afar, clutter DOES seem demanding and menacing (eeek!). But from daily, no-pressure time spent right in the midst of it, the path out seems clear.
What steady declutter progress are you making - what progress do you hope to make in March? We have 31 days ahead of us to make change and improve the calmness of our lives!