Hi Friend,

Clutter is always saying something.

Not just about your space—but about your time, your energy, and everything you’re carrying right now.

And I don’t mean that in a harsh or judgmental way. I mean it as information.

Because clutter isn’t just “stuff.”
It’s feedback.

Most of us look at clutter and think,
“I just need to get more organized.”
“I need to finally deal with this.”

But if it were just about effort, you would’ve fixed it by now.

Clutter usually sticks around when something underneath it feels hard, unclear, or like too much to deal with on top of everything else you have going on.

So it shows up like this—

Closet clutter: something in your life has shifted and you haven’t fully adjusted yet.

Paper clutter: there are decisions you don’t have the energy to make.

Kid and family clutter: you’re doing a lot, and it still feels like it’s not enough.

Gift clutter: you don’t want to feel ungrateful, even if you don’t need it.

And sometimes it’s just:
“I’m overwhelmed and don’t even know where to start.”

It’s really easy to look around and feel like you’re behind.
Like you should be more on top of things.

But clutter isn’t a character flaw.

It’s usually a sign that your current systems—or your capacity—don’t match what your life actually looks like right now.

That’s also why it keeps coming back.

You can clean up, declutter, reset…
but if nothing changes in how you’re making decisions or managing everything on your plate, the same patterns show up again.

The shift happens when you stop seeing clutter as failure—and start seeing it as feedback.

Instead of,
“Why can’t I keep up?”

It becomes,
“What is this trying to show me?”

And from there, you don’t need to fix everything.

Just pick one area that feels heavy and pause.

Ask yourself:
What feels hard about this?
What decisions have I been avoiding?
What would make this feel easier—not perfect?

That’s your starting point.

Clutter isn’t the problem.
It’s the signal.

And when you start listening—and give yourself a simple way to respond—everything starts to feel a little lighter.

If this resonated with you and you’re feeling that “okay… but now what?”—you don’t have to figure it out on your own.

This is exactly the work I do with my clients—helping you clear the mental and physical clutter in a way that actually fits your real life.

If you’re ready for your space (and your days) to feel lighter and more manageable, you can learn more about working with me [here] or reach out—I’d love to support you.