How Your Clutter Has a Negative Effect on Your Mind

There’s a pile of magazines in the hall that you keep meaning to go through before you recycle them. In the corner of the living room there is a little mound of toys that has been sitting there for over a week now, waiting to be sorted and either put away or discarded. In the garage you have several boxes of ‘stuff’ to go through, when you have the time …

Does this sound familiar?

Do you realise that these belongings are having a negative effect on your mind?

Any items that aren’t in their correct place are sending you subliminal messages, each and every time you look at them. It can be a subtle nudging that you need to get it on your To Do list and get around to actually doing it, or it can hit you like a sledgehammer because looking at it has a massive negative effect on your mood. Imagine someone sending you a negative message twenty times a day – do you think it would have a negative effect on you? Absolutely it would!

We can often let small jobs build in our minds until they become insurmountable tasks, which will require enormous effort. But there is another way, a simpler one that doesn’t need an hour or a full afternoon to get the job done.

Rather than waiting until you get time – that elusive thing that most of us these days complain we don’t have enough of (it certainly feels like it sometimes) – try this instead.

Next time you pass those magazines, take the top one from the pile. Flick through it, take photos with your phone of any articles you’d like to go back to (rather than the old way of tearing out the page and creating another pile made up of articles to go through … sometime), or resources you think could be useful in the future, then immediately take the magazine to the recycling bag or box. So simple, easy, and time-efficient!

If you do this each time you’re waiting for the kettle to boil, or before heading upstairs for a bath – or just every time you walk past the damn pile – how quickly do you think that pile will disappear? And without you having to invest any ‘spare time’ or energy into it!

The same thing goes for the toys: just pick up one item, decide whether your child still plays with it or if it they’ve outgrown it, then either put it straight into its rightful place or put it in the charity/selling bag (which you can set up right now if you don’t have one already). In one of the boxes of stuff to sort, open the lid and remove just one item whenever you are close by. Going out to put something in the rubbish bin? Open a box. Enjoying your coffee in the garden? Open a box. You get the picture.

This may seem straightforward and so simple that everyone should already be doing it, but you can bet that some people won’t have thought of it. Instead, they just let their belongings pile up and cause them stress, probably without even realising it. Some people make tackling clutter over-complicated but it doesn’t have to be this way. If you currently don’t have time to take everything from your wardrobe, sort through it all, then put back what you’re keeping and dispose of the rest, you’ll procrastinate over it as long as possible. But removing one item from the wardrobe every day is manageable and before you know it, there will be space around your clothes and you’ll be able to see exactly what you’ve got to wear.

Finally …

Clutter is predominantly negative, and anything we can do to reduce negativity in our lives is always beneficial.

Do you have clutter in your home? Is it confined to certain spots, or do you get rid of it diligently on a daily basis? Let me know in the comments.

clutter

Published by Gill

Northern lass. I ❤️ 📷 photography🖋writing 🎼 music ✈️ travel 💜 Reiki 🏡 homes & interiors ✂️ decluttering & living more simply 💻 my online biz 📝organising 😁 laughter 💚 LOA💛 GRATITUDE CHANGES EVERYTHING 💛

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