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The Art of Decluttering
Laws of Stuff
You’re not imagining it—there really is freedom on the other side of clutter. When your home isn’t ruled by stuff, you walk in and feel lighter, calmer, more in control. And that’s what you’re moving toward.
A helpful way to understand your relationship with stuff is through the “laws” that quietly shape your home. For example, the more you have, the more you need. More items lead to more storage, more furniture, and sometimes even the feeling that your house itself isn’t big enough. It’s a cycle that can sneak up on you.
You also see how excess crowds out what actually matters. When everything is kept, the meaningful things—photos, memories, keepsakes—get lost in the noise. As you reduce, the good stuff becomes visible again.
Then there’s the reality that your belongings expand to fill the space available. If there’s an empty drawer or shelf, it rarely stays empty. But this works both ways—when you reduce space, your stuff naturally reduces too.
Over time, you stop seeing what’s around you. Clutter becomes background noise. Looking at your home with fresh eyes helps you notice what no longer belongs.
And perhaps most importantly, something is only valuable if you use it. The true value isn’t what you paid—it’s what it adds to your life right now.
When you understand these patterns, you make clearer, more confident decisions—and create a home that feels free.
The Complete Idiots Guide to Organizing Your Stuff by Georgene Lockwood
10 Laws
- The more you have, the more you need
- Useless stuff crowds out the good stuff
- Dirt and bugs love stuff
- Stuff stays where you put it
- Stuff multiplies to fill the spaces you have
- Overtime you don't see your stuff
- When you have a lot of stuff you have to pay over and over for it
- Stuff affects your mental health
- Stuff is valuable only if you use it
- Stuff can't buy happiness
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18. Motivation and Benefits
16:20||Season 5, Ep. 18You don’t need more convincing that decluttering is a good idea—you need a reason that actually matters to you.When you step back and look at why you might want to declutter, four powerful motivations rise to the surface: greater wellbeing, financial freedom, more time, and ethical living. And here’s the exciting part—these aren’t just motivations. They’re also the outcomes waiting for you on the other side.If you’re craving calm, decluttering helps you feel more in control of your space. You walk into your home and exhale instead of feeling overwhelmed. Your evenings become less chaotic, your mind less cluttered, and even your sleep and relationships can improve.If money feels tight, living with less creates breathing room. You stop buying duplicates, reduce impulse spending, and free up money for what actually matters—whether that’s paying down debt, investing in support, or creating experiences.If you feel like there’s never enough time, this is where decluttering really shifts things. With less to manage, clean, and organise, your daily tasks become quicker and lighter. You spend less time maintaining your home and more time actually living in it.And if you care about your environmental impact, consuming less is one of the most powerful choices you can make. Fewer purchases mean less waste, less production, and more intentional living.So if you’re wondering whether it’s worth it—choose your reason. Because the thing that motivates you is the very thing you’ll gain.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Women Against WasteWatch on YouTubehttps://youtu.be/FdH648BRr08Join my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
16. Micro-Efficiency
14:22||Season 5, Ep. 16You don’t need a full home overhaul to feel more organised—you just need smarter systems. When you introduce micro efficiencies into your home, you reduce decision fatigue, streamline daily tasks, and create a space that simply works better for you.Micro efficiencies are small, intentional changes that remove unnecessary decisions. Think simplifying your wardrobe so you’re not standing there every morning wondering what to wear. Whether it’s creating a personal “uniform,” repeating outfits you love, or standardising basics like socks and underwear, you free up mental space for what actually matters.The same principle applies throughout your home. In the kitchen, matching sets of crockery, cutlery, and containers make cooking, stacking, and unpacking effortless. In your linen cupboard, assigning colours to beds or bathrooms eliminates the guesswork when folding and putting things away. Even choosing consistent storage containers across different rooms allows items to move easily around your home without creating clutter or extra spending.These changes may feel small, but the impact is significant. Once the decision is made, you benefit over and over again—saving time, energy, and frustration. Instead of constantly managing your home, your home starts supporting you.The goal isn’t perfection or minimalism for its own sake. It’s about creating an environment where the everyday runs smoothly, giving you more capacity for the things that truly matter.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Where To BeginReducing VolumeWatch on YouTubehttps://youtu.be/42g76udnpOwhttps://youtu.be/NyU4mwpuuZ4Join my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
15. Malignant Clutter
15:24||Season 5, Ep. 15You might think clutter is just part of everyday life—and sometimes it is. But not all clutter is created equal.Some clutter is benign. It comes and goes. It’s the after-school rush, a busy morning, or a temporary pile that gets packed away by the end of the day. It doesn’t weigh on you, and it doesn’t change how you live in your home.But other clutter? It’s different.Malignant clutter doesn’t stay contained. It spreads. It invades your space, your time, your relationships, and even your thoughts. What starts as “just stuff” can quickly become something that affects how you function in your home—and how you feel in it.You might notice you’re avoiding certain rooms. Maybe you stop inviting people over. Simple tasks take longer because you can’t find what you need. Or the clutter isn’t just in your home anymore—it’s in your head, creating stress, overwhelm, and even guilt.The key is learning to recognise the difference.When clutter starts impacting your daily life, your wellbeing, or your relationships, it’s no longer benign—it’s something that needs attention.But here’s the hope: it can be managed.You don’t need to fix everything at once. Start small. Contain the clutter. Restore function. Aim for progress, not perfection.Because your home should support you—not work against you.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Peter Walsh - Letting GoBecause. Really. AndWatch on YouTubehttps://youtu.be/NyU4mwpuuZ4Join my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
14. The Meaningful Home
25:05||Season 5, Ep. 14You’re often told that less clutter equals more calm—but what if that’s not actually true?In this conversation, you’re invited to rethink everything you’ve believed about clutter, home, and wellbeing. Drawing on research with over 1,100 participants, you discover that it’s not the amount of stuff in your home that impacts how you feel… it’s your relationship with it.You’ll explore the idea of your home as an “extended self”—how your belongings aren’t just things, but reflections of your identity, your story, and what matters most to you. And when those items stop aligning with who you are, they can begin to work against your wellbeing rather than support it.You’ll also be introduced to the concept of a “psychological home”—the feeling of being at home in your space, regardless of how tidy or cluttered it may look from the outside. This is where real change happens.As you listen, you’ll begin to see that decluttering isn’t just about getting rid of things. It’s about curating a space that reflects who you are now—not who you used to be.And perhaps most freeing of all: you don’t need a perfectly organised home to feel better. You just need a space that feels like you.Articles mentionedHome and the Extended SelfYou may also like to listen to these episodes:Minimalism, Wellbeing and the EnvironmentReducing VolumeJoin my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
13. Speed vs Change
12:07||Season 5, Ep. 13There are two powerful approaches you can use when decluttering: speed and change.Speed is about quick wins. You make fast decisions, move things along, and create simple, functional systems that work for now. It’s what helps you reset your home when time is tight, capacity is low, or you just need breathing room.Change is slower. It asks you to pause, reflect, and get underneath your clutter. Why are you holding onto something? What’s the real barrier? This is where emotional processing happens—and where long-term freedom is built.The frustration comes when you use the wrong approach at the wrong time. If you rely on speed when you really need change, clutter keeps coming back. If you try to force deep change when you’re low on time or energy, you end up overwhelmed and stuck.So the question becomes: what do you need right now—relief or resolution?When you learn to choose the right pace, everything shifts. You can use speed to get unstuck, and change to create lasting results. Both matter. Both have a place. And knowing when to use each one is what moves you forward.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Spoon TheoryMaking ChangesJoin my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
12. Body & Brain
15:36||Season 5, Ep. 12Clutter doesn’t just affect how your home looks. It affects how your brain works, how your body feels, and even how you relate to the people around you.Your brain naturally prefers order. When you’re surrounded by clutter, it constantly processes excess visual information. That ongoing processing drains your mental energy and reduces your ability to focus. You may notice it becomes harder to remember things, start tasks, or feel motivated to get things done. Every task simply feels more overwhelming than it needs to be.Clutter also increases stress and anxiety. Research shows that people living in cluttered homes often have higher levels of cortisol — the body’s primary stress hormone.Over time, that can keep you stuck in a constant low-grade “fight or flight” response, leaving you feeling tense, agitated, and emotionally drained.The impact doesn’t stop there. Ongoing stress can influence your physical health, affecting your immune system, digestion, and long-term risk of chronic disease. When your body is constantly responding to stress, it prioritises survival rather than rest, repair, and digestion.Your sleep can also suffer. A cluttered bedroom makes it harder to relax, fall asleep, and wake feeling refreshed.Clutter even affects behaviour and decision-making. When you’re surrounded by unfinished decisions, your mental bandwidth shrinks. People in cluttered environments are more likely to procrastinate, be less productive, and choose unhealthy snacks.There’s an important distinction, though: mess and clutter are not the same. Temporary mess can support creativity, but chronic clutter quietly drains your energy, focus, and wellbeing.Reducing clutter isn’t about perfection. It’s about creating space for a calmer mind, healthier body, and a home that supports the life you want to live.Articles mentionedRACGP - The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners: What does clutter do to your brain and bodyUCLA Study: The Clutter Culture You may also like to listen to these episodes:Wall Clutter SleepJoin my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
11. Minimalism, Wellbeing & the Environment
29:56||Season 5, Ep. 11It's very exciting to have an Australian PHD written about minimalism, wellbeing and the environment - it's a great paper that I loved reading!Research into low-consumption lifestyles shows that people who consciously reduce what they own often begin for very practical reasons. You might feel overwhelmed by the amount of stuff in your home. Moving house, managing a deceased estate, or simply feeling constantly behind on housework can push you to rethink how much you own and why.As you begin reducing your possessions, something interesting happens. The benefits start multiplying. Your home feels calmer and easier to manage. You spend less money. You gain back time that was previously spent cleaning, maintaining, storing, or organising things.Minimalism also changes how you think about what you bring into your life. Instead of constantly acquiring, you begin editing your possessions, buying more mindfully, repairing items where possible, and disposing of things thoughtfully.Over time, you may notice a deeper shift in your values. You develop a stronger sense of “enough.” Social pressure to keep up with trends begins to lose its influence, and consumer culture becomes easier to question.Minimalism isn’t without challenges. Advertising, social expectations around gift-giving, and other people’s belongings in your household can make the journey harder.But when you experience the calm, clarity, and alignment that comes with owning less, most people discover something surprising: they have no desire to go back.Links mentionedRebecca's PHDZero Waste HomeYou may also like to listen to these episodes:RightsizingA Minimalist and a PrepperJoin my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
10. One Step Back
12:47||Season 5, Ep. 10Progress in your home rarely looks neat and linear. More often, it feels like two steps forward and one step back. When you’re decluttering or building new habits, that backward step can feel frustrating—like you’ve undone all your hard work. But the reality is that two steps forward and one step back is still progress.When you notice things slipping, it doesn’t mean you’ve failed. Decluttering and organising rarely move in a straight line. Progress can be jagged, uneven and sometimes messy. Instead of seeing those slips as going backwards, you can treat them as valuable feedback.Sometimes the “step back” is simply life happening. A birthday brings new items into the house. A move or family change disrupts routines. Other times, the slip reveals that a system isn’t working the way you thought it would. Maybe the storage solution doesn’t actually fit the quantity of items you have, or perhaps the system is too complicated to maintain consistently.In many homes, the step back can also come from living with other people. You might be making decluttering decisions and creating systems, while other family members continue interacting with the space in their own way. That’s part of shared living.Often the backward step is surprisingly small—a micro slip rather than a major setback. Toys creep out of their storage. Books start piling up again. A once-working system slowly becomes less effective.Instead of pushing harder, pause and get curious. Ask yourself what changed. Adjust the system, simplify the habit, or declutter a little more.Small daily habits can make the biggest difference. Tiny actions—washing a drink bottle when it comes home or cleaning a dish right after you use it—can prevent those micro slips from becoming bigger problems.Progress doesn’t have to be perfect. As long as you keep moving forward, even slowly, you’re still creating a home that works better for you.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Later Never ComesBlame EntropyJoin my communityLeave a 5 Star Google ReviewFollow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookJoin my Facebook groupThank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio