During our last "Brooklyn vacation" day, I was helping my son with putting clean laundry into different drawers of a bedroom dresser -- four drawers: one for socks, one for shorts, one for shirts, one for pants.
It is true that organizing things into different compartments can have many benefits, like (1) efficiency when you can locate a specific item super fast; (2) reduce stress that you experience when you can't find things you need; (3) clear visual message tells you which clothes inventory is getting low and needs to replenish; (4) provides a sense of order, etc.
But as with many good things in life, there is a matter of degree. That is, how thorough a person goes into being organized. Being over-organized can mean overtime consumed.
I told my son that he could put his clothes into two drawers instead of four, shorts and shirts in one, socks and pants in another. It won't be chaotic as long as he can keep them separated within the drawer, like socks on the left, pants on the right side. This will cut by half the time of putting-into and taking-out-of drawers.
There is a very good Chinese saying that I once shared with my children: 一寸光阴一寸金,寸金难买寸光阴 (Yīcùn guāngyīn yīcùn jīn, cùn jīn nán mǎi cùn guāngyīn) The literal translation is an inch of time is equal to an inch of gold, but an inch of gold cannot buy an inch of time. The message is as clear as the sun in a sunny day: time is more precious than gold because time is something you can't buy with wealth.