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42 Comments

  1. This is the heart of Konmari — don’t decide what to toss, decide what to KEEP, and only keep things you love, use, and need. Really, that’s it. Kondo’s “spark joy” has been widely misunderstood to mean you must be maniacally happy over every single thing, but that’s not true. For something like a toothbrush, keep one that serves your needs and is perhaps a color you love. You don’t have to go into ecstasies every time you use it.

    I was never able to truly declutter until I tried Kondo’s method, which also includes going category by category, not room by room. When I’d do the room by room way, I’d just churn things from one room to another. When I went by category, I could truly see how much of X thing I owned and mostly didn’t need or want. Happy 2026 to everyone!

    1. Yes, th is like Marie Kondo’s method. I agree with the comment. Doing the decluttering by groups is amazingly effective. I am a tidy enough person but after 30 years in a large house the grouping method had me cut out way more than the section at a time ever did.

    2. My mind immediately went to Marie Kondo when I read this. Deciding what to keep as opposed to what to get rid of (as per Marie Kondo) is what finally helped me actually declutter as well. And as you mentioned, decluttering by category rather than by room or by cupboard/drawer was a game changer for me too. When I gathered candles from every room in my house and realised I had literally hundreds in the pile, it was a definite eye opener.

  2. I love this plan as I recently moved to south Florida and retired. I keep ONLY what makes me happy and provides happy memories. It is “freeing” to get rid of things you’ve been keeping “just in case”.

  3. I was so relieved to see the decluttering in reverse. I live in a small one bedroom apartment
    I still have old boxes that I moved in with. I look at them and think “throw them away” and then the “what if”. any suggestions appreciated. thank you for all your ideas.

    1. Just say !!! 2026 is going to be my year & drop the items off to the good will , someone will love your repurposed love gifts & you will be free & your mind can refresh 🙏

      1. Not Goodwill but a local thrift or Salvation Army. Goodwill CEO etc are billionaires. They get the items free then sell them for higher prices than necessary. A pair of boots I found with a yard sale tag of $2.00 had a Goodwill tag of $30.00. I refuse to give my things to Goodwill.

        1. Jane, I agree 100%!
          Dropping off boxes of usable items at Goodwill is so easy that I’ve done it dozens of times in the last few months. I’m doing a deep decluttering now and I am taking all clothing/household items to a local church thrift store or women/family charity.
          I think I’ll do a FB/IG post about this method and recommend a couple of NON-Goodwill drop off options.
          Happy Decluttering in 2026!

    2. My decluttering kryptonite is paper. Bills, papers from my Masters degree, training information from a job, etc.
      Any advice would be great!
      Thank you,
      Leslie

      1. Maybe you can buy a scanner and just scan all the paper that comes into your office! Start filing everything electronically. 🙂

      2. Me too!!! Papers..cards…magazines…
        old bills..probably 10 boxes full from saving data for proof of taxes. I’m 80 years old…and hope to clear it all out before I leave Earth!

    3. I really want to declutter and actually manage to do it fairly well with my own belongings. The challenge is that I share my home with my family, who keep accumulating more and more things. Your article doesn’t address how to handle family members who aren’t interested in decluttering. If I lived by myself, my home wouldn’t be completely minimalist—I’d still keep sentimental items—but it certainly wouldn’t be overflowing with the overwhelming amount of stuff that’s causing me so much stress.

  4. Lord knows I need to do this is 2 bedroom buying to much some what handicap hard to grip things but I want to try alittle thanks so much helpful.

  5. I will have to try this. jce been getting way too many things since I retired from marketplace. some things I need and others I might need but I’m supposed to declutter not add more stuff

  6. I like the thought of this way better than dragging everything out and going through it. I would much rather pull out what I really want to keep and then see what’s left and get rid of it. It sounds like this would work for me.

  7. From an experienced quilter: T-shirt quilts are not easy to make. If you plan to make a quilt out of T-shirts, consult someone who has experience making them. Also, it may be helpful to note that making a quilt is pricey. Fabric, tools, notions, and batting are expensive if you buy quality. Don’t enter into it thinking it’s a cheap way to put your T-shirts to use!

    1. good points here that using to make a quilt aren’t that simple!
      what other suggestions?
      how about using it to make a new pillow cover?

      1. I’ve used t-shirts as pillow cover and it works great. Also, make blankets or furniture covers out of frayed worn towels by joining them together, butting the edges and using zigzag stitch.

  8. I saw this idea on YouTube months ago and remember thinking at the time, “How ELSE would you do it?!” Deciding what to keep is a no-brainer for me. You have summarized it nicely in that last sentence: CURATING our spaces!

  9. This is how I moved house, when I had to downsize from a large family home to a retirement townhouse.
    Marked the furniture and decor I wanted to keep (and had room for) with removable sticky dots. Kept a list. This was the easy part. Then once I was able to move, concentrated on items I was keeping. Along the way, other items have crept in. The whole process takes longer, but that way I felt in control of an otherwise overwhelming situation.

  10. I do a declutter every January going space by space. It doesn’t have to be perfect the first time. Each year it gets easier and I am surprised at how many more spaces have stayed decluttered and organized from the last time.

  11. Throw it all away.. the things we own end up owning us!

    Keep just the essentials. even if it takes an hour and cost $40 to replace.. what good does it do if you can’t find it amongst all the clutter!

    1. well said! now that makes sense to me.. and it is sooo True. i see the error s of my ways of declutering. i feel like I can do it now. thanks to all of you sharing how you did it.
      Brenda

  12. I concentrated when I can totally Clear/Clean Thoughts internally…of what I don’t want/need or make use of….. Anymore
    You remind.,.me-Thanks

  13. Today I declutter our hallway closet, give away a lot of stuff we didn’t need anymore in three kitchen trash bags. And it feels good, tomorrow I’ll tackle the coat closet.

  14. It all makes sense to me – If I Can get started. Too much accumulated in my 85 years. Example 1: I still have Some of my beautiful baby dresses with matching slips. No children but don’t know how to part with them. Example 2: my husband is a saver. Why does he think we will have use of a spool of string that must be 40 years old! We don’t wrap our packages as in the song with lyrics “Brown paper packages tied up with string…” so here I go to get uncluttered.

  15. I am so pleased and happy knowing all this new ways of decluttering stuff. I will definitely use this reverse decluttering method to welcome 2026 with so much space for more blessings/abundance.

  16. Don’t mean to sound negative but I think the same ideas keep getting rehashed year after year. If you haven’t worn it in a year….start small, hold it and see if it resonates. And I disagree with some of the concepts. Whatever approach works best for you is the answer. For example I can’t simply toss thousands of pieces of paper without handling them, as there are treasures among them. Loving insightful messages from my mom and dad, pieces of diaries, historical documents from my parents from WW2, childhood school autograph albums.There’s no one size fits all to getting rid of possessions that overwhelm us. Life history is worth preserving. It can help us connect the dots in our lifelong journeys to give meaning to our lives.

    1. wow, that says it all.
      So my present problem is organising medical tablets
      and 6 years of bathroom cosmetics. My mobility is limited by time on feet. and lack of energy. I start meds at 5.30am. 7.30am food.
      I shop for groceries every
      2 weeks. I will find a way.
      Rita.

      1. My bathroom is my issue too. I have too many products, but I do use them all, but I don’t need them all. I keep buying makeup, moisturizers, serums and always the latest gadgets. I wish I would could just age gracefully and embrace my wrinkles and crows feet.

    2. papers are hard! I intend to put my memorables in sheet protectors and put them in a binder. much easier to enjoy than riffling through a pile or box.

    3. After my mum died I went through all the old photos and framed th best and most meaningful ones and hung them as a gallery wall. I also am going to do it with old ration books and historic documents. some things are family history so rather than have them cluttering up the place in boxes I decided to display them, personalise my home and see my memories on a daily basis rather than just storing them. I live in a very small house and its the perfect solution for sentimental items.

  17. Cleaning out my woodshop and disposing of wood that I can nvr do anything with finally. As well as bunch of other stuff good article motivated me to get rid of more

  18. To clutter, unclutter, reclutter, stop the insanity by getting to the point of the issues.
    People are social creatures so shopping, thrifting, garage sales, trash picking are event, especially for old(er) adults. We become invisible and people only respond, acknowledge us, when making a transaction.
    If you’re ever homeless or forced to make sudden changes due to unemployment etc. Also a trigger to ” hold onto” items, clothes, anything really.
    Many things cannot be replaced since quality workmanship of everything is gone. Pride in homemade, skills, woodcraft, sewing etc also out.
    Everything now is disposable fast fashion, cheap furniture or poorly constructed particle board plastic. Of course its not all bleak but getting rid of everything is a big booming business now to resellers.
    Trash to Treasure for some.
    A complete loss to retired folks who have no or limited income. “stuff, money & time” are all gone. (memories too!)
    Be kind, friendly to old(er) people make eye contact, smile, say “hello” We have lost our niche. Oil boom, bust, dancing til dawn, working for the weekend 🎶 all without a smartphone before the kiddos were a thought.
    The clutter can be overwhelming but really hard to fix without doing it all over again.
    If cut we bleed right? So stop the madness. Get off your 🎧 📱 🌄 reduce, recycle be kind 😇 😊 😃
    It’s my comment, get your own!

  19. I love the idea of decluttering the way it described. My problem is I lost both my children in a 10-month period of time. My daughter passed away at 26 years old in April of 2021 and my son passed away at 29 years old in February of 2022. I need to deep clean and decanter but it is so hard to get rid of things that were theirs….snow boards, makeup, skate boards, art and writings they did, gifts and cards, clothing, etc. Maybe a room just for them? I have hired someone to help me deep clean. Maybe this method will help me see what to keep and what to let go of. Thank you.

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