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The Art of Decluttering

Too Much Part 2

Season 5, Ep. 6

You’re invited to keep going with a honest look at the categories most homes definitely have too much of — even if they don’t look like clutter at first glance. This is about being realistic, not perfect, and questioning what’s taking up space in your home and your head.


You’re encouraged to approach each category with simple questions: Do you use it? Does it fit your life now? Would you miss it if it were gone?


Rethink shoes that hurt your feet, don’t fit, or are worn beyond repair — especially if you keep taking them off moments after putting them on. Textbooks get a hard truth moment too: if you’ve tried to sell or donate them and no one wants them, they’re just taking up space. Letting them go is allowed.


Take a brave look at makeup that’s expired, unused, or unhygienic, along with incidental furniture that no longer serves a purpose but quietly attracts clutter. Clothing gets an honest call-out — you likely have far more than you need, and letting go won’t leave you stranded without options.


You’re also encouraged to reduce visual clutter by decluttering ornaments and trinkets, especially those without meaning or joy anymore. Practical categories like stubby holders, wine glasses, lingerie, and fidget toys are reframed around actual use rather than “just in case.”


The aim isn’t to strip your home bare — it’s to create breathing room. When you declutter by category, momentum builds, decisions get easier, and your space starts supporting you instead of draining you.


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You may also like to listen to these episodes:

5 Home Truths

Opportunity Cost/ Cost Benefit Analysis


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  • 12. Body & Brain

    15:36||Season 5, Ep. 12
    Clutter 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. 11
    It'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. 10
    Progress 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
  • 9. Lingering

    18:06||Season 5, Ep. 9
    Before you jump into decluttering, what if you paused—just for a moment? That small pause, or “linger,” can completely change the way you make decisions in your home.Instead of rushing straight into tidying, stand back and observe the space first. Notice what’s actually being used, what keeps becoming clutter hotspots, and what systems might not be working. When you linger, even for five seconds, you give yourself the clarity to solve the real problem rather than repeatedly tidying the symptoms.You might walk into a playroom and realise the mess isn’t the issue—there’s simply too much for your kids to manage. Or you might see that clean clothes piling up on a chair aren’t about laziness but about a system that doesn’t suit your household. That pause helps you respond intentionally instead of reactively.Lingering also allows you to check in with your emotions before decluttering. If you’re feeling frustrated, rushed, or overwhelmed, that emotional state can influence your decisions. Recognising how you feel helps you choose what to tackle and what to leave for another day.It also helps you plan realistically. Instead of pulling everything out and getting stuck midway, you can think through the whole process, the time you have, and the outcome you want. This leads to smaller, achievable wins rather than overwhelm.When you practise the linger, you become more intentional with your space, your time, and your energy. You create systems that actually work for your real life, not just ideal organisation. Over time, this thoughtful pause leads to smarter choices, sustainable systems, and a home that serves you long-term.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Neat vs TidyBiting Off Too MuchJoin 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
  • 8. No More Containers

    20:12||Season 5, Ep. 8
    You’re constantly told you need better storage, smarter systems, and more containers to get organised. But what if the real issue isn’t storage at all? When you keep adding containers, drawers, racks, and boxes, you’re often just increasing the pressure on your space rather than solving the root problem: you simply have more stuff than your home can comfortably contain.Your home is your biggest container. Within it, each room, cupboard, drawer, and shelf acts as a smaller container with natural limits. When those limits are exceeded, clutter begins to creep — into spare rooms, garages, wardrobes, and even onto benches. Instead of noticing the overflow and decluttering, you may instinctively buy more containers, assuming the storage is the problem.You’ll learn how to spot “clutter creep” in key areas like your wardrobe, kids’ toys, kitchen, and garage. If clothes are spilling into multiple wardrobes, toys are migrating across rooms, groceries don’t fit in cupboards, or stacked tubs are rarely opened, those are signs that the stuff in your containers needs decluttering.You’re encouraged to pause before buying another box or basket and ask whether the container is full because it’s too small, or because it’s holding too much. Reducing categories, curating what you actually use, and respecting the limits of your space creates calm far more effectively than endless storage solutions.Containers are meant to contain, not expand endlessly. When you own less, everything fits more easily, your systems work better, and your home feels lighter and more manageable.Join my Free 5 Day Wardrobe Challenge todayYou may also like to listen to these episodes:Wardrobe 101Toys 101Kitchen 101Garage 101Join 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
  • 7. House Burping

    18:22||Season 5, Ep. 7
    Have you ever walked into your home and felt the air was a little… stale? Maybe a bit heavy, dusty, or holding onto yesterday’s dinner? You might not realise it, but your house needs to “burp.”House burping simply means opening doors and windows to create cross-flow ventilation so fresh air can move through your home. Not just a cracked window — real airflow. Even ten minutes a day can make a noticeable difference.When you live in a home (with humans, pets, cooking, showers and heaters running), moisture builds up. That moisture turns dust into grime, increases the risk of mould, and traps smells in soft furnishings and paint. If clutter is present, airflow is even more restricted — which means more stagnant air, more dust settling, and more odour lingering.When you open windows regularly, you improve air quality, reduce moisture, and make mould less likely. You also disturb settled dust while decluttering, which is exactly why ventilation matters when you’re tidying.There’s a psychological shift too. Fresh air and natural light change how you see your space. You notice dust on the mirror. You feel more motivated to wipe it down. Light reveals what’s been hiding behind closed blinds. Airflow reduces that oppressive, boxed-in feeling clutter can create.Try opening several windows across your home for ten minutes in the morning. Let your house breathe. You might find it easier to clean, clearer to think, and lighter in your space.You may also like to listen to these episodes:Reducing VolumeBlame 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
  • 5. Too Much Pt 1

    16:28||Season 5, Ep. 5
    You know that feeling of wanting to declutter but not knowing where to start — or feeling too tired to tackle everything at once? You’re invited to take a gentler, more realistic approach by focusing on categories that often overflow in most homes.Some categories will earn you a gold star — no excess there. Others might feel uncomfortably accurate. That’s okay. You don’t need to fix everything. You just need one place to begin.Go through common problem categories seen again and again in real homes: books you’ll never reread, renovation or gardening clothes that have multiplied, craft supplies from hobbies that had their season, and baking trays that seem to breed in cupboards. You’re also prompted to rethink old phones, excess blankets, paperwork, toys, reusable shopping bags, and stationery that no longer fits how you live now.You’re reminded that loving something doesn’t require keeping all of it. You can love reading without owning shelves of books. You can be creative without storing supplies for ten different crafts. You can be prepared without holding onto every “just in case.”If you’re overwhelmed, unwell, or in survival mode, you’re reassured that rest comes first. Your home has waited this long — it can wait a little longer. But if you’re ready to do something, choosing one contained category can restore momentum, clarity, and confidence.Join my Paperwork Course if you're wanting to get started sorting through and organising your paperwork in 2026You may also like to listen to these episodes:5 Home TruthsOpportunity Cost/ Cost Benefit AnalysisJoin 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
  • 4. Where To Begin?

    18:03||Season 5, Ep. 4
    You want to declutter, but you’re standing in the middle of your home thinking, Where on earth do I begin? You’re not alone. Even when it’s obvious a space needs attention, knowing where to start can feel surprisingly overwhelming.Instead of searching for the perfect starting point, focus on momentum. Decluttering doesn’t begin with emptying an entire room, buying containers, or consuming endless inspiration. It begins with one small, doable action.Explore three simple ways to start without overthinking. First, you learn how powerful it can be to grab just one bag and fill it — either with rubbish or donations. One bag creates a clear finish line and instant momentum. You also learn why organising won’t solve clutter if the quantity stays the same, and how reducing what you own is always the first step.Next, you’re encouraged to choose a single, low-emotion category to declutter. Not a whole room — just one contained category like towels, DVDs, clothes that no longer fit, or reusable shopping bags (yes, you probably have too many). Smaller categories mean faster wins and less decision fatigue.Finally, learn how to start with a habit instead of a project. By placing a donation bag somewhere visible and committing to one item per day, decluttering becomes part of everyday life rather than another overwhelming task.Remember that regret is rarely about letting go — it’s usually about waiting too long. Progress matters more than perfection, and freedom comes from simply starting.Join my free 5 Day Wardrobe Challenge if you're wanting to get startedYou may also like to listen to these episodes:5 Home TruthsConfirmation BiasJoin 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