Most people identify clutter as a tangible entity. It’s that pile of papers, books, and objects sitting on your desk waiting to be put away. While the physical stuff is obvious, most of our clutter is ...
There's a reason why cleaning and tidying up your surroundings makes you feel good, and it’s based on neuroscience. Most of us dislike clutter. For instance, a study published in the journal ...
You walk into your home after a long day, ready to relax and recharge. But instead of feeling relief, you feel a vague sense of unease. Nothing dramatic happened. There’s no obvious emergency. Yet ...
How often have you looked at a pile of laundry in the living room, dirty plates in the kitchen, or unpaid bills on your desk and thought, “I’ll take care of them later; they’re unimportant.” Maybe to ...
A confession, first: I love clutter. The horizontal surfaces in my family room are covered with newspapers, magazines, books I’ve started, books I intend to read, books I want to read but never will, ...
We all have it. Paperwork we will never look at again, memorabilia that really isn’t that memorable, books and magazines we will never read. Why are they hanging around? If you can’t answer that, they ...
When the world followed the advice of Marie Kondo and decluttered, I did too. I soon discovered my digital life needed to be decluttered just as much as my house once did. A weekly routine helps me ...