What Psychologists Know About Your Clutter That You Don't 👀

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  • Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
  • Ever wondered why clutter seems to take over? Psychologists have revealed some insights about our links to possessions. Let's delve into the world of biases, distortions, and influence to understand what psychologists know (that you don't).
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 978

  • @MiaDanielle
    @MiaDanielle  6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for watching! Want to learn more? Watch my free masterclass 👉www.miadanielle.com/workshop

  • @julieyoung3315
    @julieyoung3315 11 місяців тому +940

    When I was 15 after my Mother was killed, my Father came to me one night and said we are moving 3,000 miles away in the morning. Just pack a change of clothes as the moving company will be bringing all of our possessions immediately. Found out a week later, there was no moving van coming. I lost everything I ever owned in my life. I know that's where my "Clutter" comes from.

    • @jo-annahicks3324
      @jo-annahicks3324 10 місяців тому +220

      My God!!!!..what an unspeakably EVIL thing to do to a young person (any person really!)...so sorry that happened to you...that level of 'Betrayal Trauma' is very hard to overcome...especially when it was from someone so close to you..someone you trusted.
      My heart goes out to you.
      Perhaps you could give some of the extra things you have to people who have gone through what you went through...I'm sure they would really treasure it.

    • @apacur
      @apacur 10 місяців тому +48

      I don't understand....
      How did you lose everything if the movers never came?
      You moved with your dad..... but the moving truck coming later was a lie ?

    • @truthbetold6942
      @truthbetold6942 10 місяців тому +46

      Did he give an excuse for doing such a horrible thing?

    • @julieyoung3315
      @julieyoung3315 10 місяців тому +20

      @@jo-annahicks3324 This is Exactly what I do.

    • @julieyoung3315
      @julieyoung3315 10 місяців тому +55

      @@apacur The truck never came. I brought 2 shirts with me.

  • @maryracine3389
    @maryracine3389 10 місяців тому +49

    I notice my clutter when a visitor is coming over.

  • @lindzee924
    @lindzee924 10 місяців тому +17

    "Creative minds are rarely tidy." Life is easier when you stop caring what other people think of you.

    • @ariesmry
      @ariesmry 10 місяців тому +4

      There’s a difference between having a system for your items and not having a system, which can cause anxiety and feeling overwhelmed.
      I’ve found most people who identify as creative have organized chaos, which is still a system nonetheless

  • @robertas.1739
    @robertas.1739 11 місяців тому +514

    Taking a photo of your your space so you can "step back" and study your area can really can be an eye opener. I first noticed this when taking a photo of my child and it really hit me how cluttered and messy the area was in the background.

    • @marlelarmarlelar9547
      @marlelarmarlelar9547 10 місяців тому +41

      I actually do this. It's amazing what you "see", that you didn't see before.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +19

      @robertas.1739
      That's a great idea, and you know how many words a picture is worth! Thanks.

    • @estherann7407
      @estherann7407 10 місяців тому +20

      Many people take candid shots and post on social media without first scrutinizing it... it tells me A LOT about their lives!!

    • @cindyriehm7411
      @cindyriehm7411 10 місяців тому +11

      Love this idea... then i can take an objective look. Plus plan which can go.

    • @moxafoot
      @moxafoot 10 місяців тому +22

      yes! I was taking a photo of one of my dogs, but didn't want to show it to anyone because of the clutter in the background that I never noticed as being that bad before!

  • @terenzo50
    @terenzo50 11 місяців тому +17

    My mother threw out my comic book collection and gave away both my skateboard and bike without asking. Every roommate I've ever had has wrecked cutting boards, pots and pans, vinyl records, etc. Keep your lousy stinking hands off my stuff or expect blind rage in return.

  • @HandbrakeBiscuit
    @HandbrakeBiscuit 11 місяців тому +24

    So I needed to tidy my desk, decided to procrastinate for 15 minutes by watching this video, and now I have a degree in psychology... ;)

    • @evelynbegay2495
      @evelynbegay2495 9 днів тому

      Glad to hear even the informed have hurdles:)

  • @robertjohnson4401
    @robertjohnson4401 10 місяців тому +384

    What was not mentioned for why some like to hoard resulting in clutter is the survival effect. Like a squirrel storing acorns for winter. An immigrant having to leave their country with only a suitcase and the clothes on their back. For these people, clutter is the antidote and signifies permanentcy and a buffer against starvation. They can always sell these items to buy food. Even offspring of immigrants may inherit this trait through epigenetics.

    • @CC-hx5fz
      @CC-hx5fz 10 місяців тому +45

      Absolutely. I know that I have a tendency to hoard because I was homeless 3 times when I was younger. Before that, my parents moved around a lot. I hate that feeling of being in a new place and not being sure how long you'll be there. You have to accumulate "stuff" to remember where you live.

    • @jo-annahicks3324
      @jo-annahicks3324 10 місяців тому +6

      Very true.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +7

      @robertjohnson4401
      That makes so much sense to me.
      Thank you.

    • @rosieE121
      @rosieE121 10 місяців тому +29

      Yes, and the urge not to waste the smallest thing. I think with me it also gives me my space rather than takes it. I developed a feeling that someone else will put their stuff there if I don't use it first. For a long time I was denied space by a former marriage partner, so that has to have affected my concept of personal space.

    • @estherann7407
      @estherann7407 10 місяців тому +25

      My parents were this way, NOT throwing anything away. They both grew up during the 1930's and were very poor. My Mom use to tell a story that she could remember when her family (parents & 7 kids) couldn't afford to buy a 2 cent package of yeast to make bread.

  • @katec9893
    @katec9893 8 місяців тому +50

    It's so interesting reading everyone's reasons for clutter, there is often some kind of trauma involved. I recently realised that I used to love buying clothes because they were a kind of armour against being bullied. Where I grew up if you looked good and dressed well people would begrudgingly respect you, so it was a protection mechanism. I also used shopping as an avoidance mechanism for things I needed to be doing and a way to comfort myself when I felt depressed. I eventually distanced myself from these sorts of people but I found myself with a house full of clutter, too many clothes, very few connections in my life and problems that I needed to face. I would still find myself wandering around shops feeling depressed and lost. It makes shopping for things I actually need difficult, as I have to ask myself if I'm just using shopping as an avoidance strategy or whether I do need the item I'm looking for.

    • @louisetaylor6952
      @louisetaylor6952 7 місяців тому +6

      I wish you were my neighbor, we could help each other and have fun doing it...probably lots of others would join in, too...

    • @katec9893
      @katec9893 5 місяців тому +1

      @@louisetaylor6952 Ah thanks Louise that's a nice comment to read. I've been watching Friends again on Netflix recently and could definitely do with a good group of friends like that to help eachother level up because it's hard doing it alone. I'm glad the Internet exists at least for people to talk and share tips and ideas.

  • @timeparty718
    @timeparty718 11 місяців тому +296

    I'm tackling clutter right now, losing stuff which holds memories is hard especially when my memory is fading, I use my stuff to recall my life experiences, hence the reluctance to let it all go. My partner has really helped by suggesting I take a photograph of all these items before giving them away to charity.

    • @chivonfortney1656
      @chivonfortney1656 11 місяців тому +36

      Yeah I’m right there with you. But to me a “Picture” doesn’t really satisfy or suffice having the childhood doll or toy or whatever it is. That’s where I am still.

    • @wendi2819
      @wendi2819 11 місяців тому +25

      Truthfully though I hardly ever look at that old stuff. I just wish Id never bought so much useless stuff.

    • @catmama3121
      @catmama3121 11 місяців тому +10

      I think that’s a great idea.
      I bet you would e surprised just by taking a photo, your recall of the mementos will be stronger.
      All the best.

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 11 місяців тому +24

      My friend hoards tourist leaflets and receipts: he is a tour guide and those leaflets were useful information before the explosion of the Internet - but I have a hard time convincing him that he can access all the information, updated, online! What's worse is that those leaflets are free, whereas he would have to pay substantial money for secure storage online: he has lost so many photographs and the memories of the places he has visited due to hard drive failure so I understand why he wants to hold onto the physical copy. I've lost all the photographs of my childhood and my children and my whole music collection! I can never get those memories back and I can never afford to replace the music, some of which are also not available anymore!

    • @timeparty718
      @timeparty718 11 місяців тому +7

      @@oakstrong1 gosh, that's so sad 😔

  • @deviritter5232
    @deviritter5232 11 місяців тому +35

    The getting rid of things represents giving up a dream, hope or intention in my case.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +3

      Perhaps one that didn't truly light you up anyway?

    • @evied4613
      @evied4613 11 місяців тому +5

      I feel for you I also find it very hard to let go. The key is to concentrate on your life and goals as they are now, and decide how your belongings can facilitate these, instead of archiving (I have to remind myself I am not running a museum) or saving a potential that won't be followed on.

    • @user-jv2sh7es8i
      @user-jv2sh7es8i 10 місяців тому +2

      By letting one go, you truly free up mind-power towards other dreams.

    • @madeleine1138
      @madeleine1138 19 днів тому

      "Aspirational" clutter(term used by the Declutter Hub)

  • @carolevanlandingham8529
    @carolevanlandingham8529 10 місяців тому +5

    After I make that decision, I do not even recall what I have gotten rid of. So, I guess that means I only get rid of what I do not treasure. I feel liberated and proud of myself.

  • @tomyoung8563
    @tomyoung8563 11 місяців тому +13

    I’m pretty sure my house is cluttered because I prioritize other things
    I can come home and pick up or I can come home and grab my guitar, do something with my dog etc

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 11 місяців тому +88

    I have lost *everything I own* more than once in my life! The first time was two boxes and a suitcase of my favorite clothes. I stayed at a friend's house while moving and someone mistook them for something going to charity and when I woke up, they were gone. A decade later, I was married and had some nice antiques, old books, (etc) and a Victorian house to keep it all in. My husband decided we had to sell everything and start over somewhere else. I tried to stop the house sale and never signed the papers. He or the agent signed my name and sold the house. 30 years later in a rented house, I still mourn my losses, I still cry over my house. I now have "organized clutter." I keep clothes, books, keepsakes, etc. in stacks of clear plastic boxes that seal with gaskets and clamps. It has taken 8 years living in this place for me to finally decide to go through the boxes and separate things that I will never use from what i will. I am amazed how much I'm getting rid of! Nothing will bring back my house, but I have some keepsakes. Photographs and memories. So, "progress not perfection" is my new motto as I whittle this down to a manageable amount.

    • @conormarie4310
      @conormarie4310 11 місяців тому +13

      I've felt pretty bad grief from losing seemingly insignificant things in comparison. If that had happened to me I think my body would turn inside out! You have a great and commendable degree of fortitude.

    • @homebody61
      @homebody61 10 місяців тому +10

      I empathize with you and am sorry for what you went through. I was homeless and lost everything on several occasions. I’m in a good place now. However, I shop and acquire too much, and almost nightly, I dream that I’ve lost everything again. Therapy is helping.

    • @estherann7407
      @estherann7407 10 місяців тому +7

      Ellen, I'm so sorry for what has happened. I wish you well with the progress you're making and I wish comfort for your soul.

    • @ellen4956
      @ellen4956 10 місяців тому +3

      @@estherann7407 Thank you very much! My daughter is helping, and I have to believe things will keep getting better!

    • @ellen4956
      @ellen4956 10 місяців тому +2

      @@homebody61 It sounds like you've lost much more than I did! And you're in a safe place now. I think we tend to buy more things because our minds are telling us to be prepared. It gets better with time (in some ways), or it did for me. I still have dreams too though about getting my house back, even though that's not possible.

  • @shoshanna8475
    @shoshanna8475 11 місяців тому +224

    I used to be incredibly organized, and I loved my white space. Married a hoarder, and after 15 years of being mocked, "when in doubt, throw it out" I'm having to recover my 30s and remember that I actually love getting rid of things 🙂that are just taking up space, dusty, or otherwise good for the bin.

    • @KimBouchard
      @KimBouchard 11 місяців тому +23

      I need to get back to that space, too. I wish you well in your endeavours, may we both get results we're happy with.

    • @bundydryandlime
      @bundydryandlime 10 місяців тому +7

      Ok you married the wrong person some people like to throw everything out cause they don't care to see any value, others see the beauty/value/kami in things
      Live and let live

    • @shoshanna8475
      @shoshanna8475 10 місяців тому +16

      @@bundydryandlime I can also throw things out AND have none of those accusations you've assigned to me. You don't know me well enough to determine if I see beauty, value, or anything else. Yeah, I married the wrong guy, and I still love my white space (unapologetically). Live and let live. You just did it - acted like my decluttering is because I lack values - is my ex still obessed or what?

    • @LittleKikuyu
      @LittleKikuyu 10 місяців тому +4

      You do you 😊 Just follow your heart and trust the process ❤️ Your relationship with things doesn’t define you. All the best from a (slightly cluttery) Berliner 🤗

    • @kimcham9949
      @kimcham9949 10 місяців тому +3

      DONATE!!!

  • @BlueMoon3l3b
    @BlueMoon3l3b 10 місяців тому +37

    My dad died when I was 16 and he was also a hoarder. I was brought back to our apartment to gather some things as my uncles were there ripping everything apart and dumping all that they could. I was asked if I wanted to keep certain things but I was still in such a state of shock that I left a lot of things that I wished I had kept later on. I developed a hoarding problem myself after that. It took a lot of time and some medication for things to improve, but I still have some lingering hoarding tendencies and a lot of trouble with organization.

    • @lorip1435
      @lorip1435 5 місяців тому +2

      That was a cruel thing your uncle's did. People often act very irrationally when they are stressed. I hope you can let go of that pain and move toward who you are created to be. ❤

  • @PurdyBear1
    @PurdyBear1 10 місяців тому +169

    I think there are two reasons why I have a cluttered environment. The first is the trauma of an abusive childhood- it literally is a protective barrier. The second is a parent removing items without my permission, thus I didn’t learn a decision making process. A child is quite capable at a certain age to decided to keep or donate a toy. By taking away a much loved toy I think it’s literally giving the child grief. Thus an aversion to getting rid of stuff. That’s my theory anyway.

    • @janetpattison8474
      @janetpattison8474 10 місяців тому +10

      I agree that clutter can be protection, if it’s good stuff, like my sewing machines, it can feel like a form of wealth, and I also agree that what we might collect as adults can be a way to self soothe the child within. Although we weren’t poor as a family, with Cadillacs and planes, boats, etc, I alway s felt poor, so that has impacted what I like to own. Owning stuff to me is also a form of power. We don’t need to make anyone else happy if we are ok w/ the stuff & on our own.

    • @jenniferjones9109
      @jenniferjones9109 10 місяців тому +11

      My dad used to “clean my room” by backing his pickup truck up to my window, kicking out the screen & throwing away everything that was mine except for my bed, dresser, & a few clothes. I never learned to declutter or organize. It was just all gone in a matter of minutes.

    • @PraveenSriram
      @PraveenSriram 10 місяців тому +1

      Sounds exactly like my predicament also when I was a child 👧 27 years ago. Turning 40 years old this year

    • @PraveenSriram
      @PraveenSriram 10 місяців тому +7

      @@jenniferjones9109that is just cruel and callously wrong

    • @danielamishkovska2833
      @danielamishkovska2833 9 місяців тому +2

      So sorry to hear this 😮

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 11 місяців тому +251

    I only have trouble decluttering my wardrobe and I know exactly why. For the first, long, part of my life I had little to wear, only one pair each of pants and shoes, three short-sleeved tops, one nightgown, and no outer wear, robe or slippers, etc. I was always cold, I didn’t get enough food, either and was emaciated, and I always felt very inferior because I lived poor in a very wealthy area. When I graduated from university, my ex also made a great fuss if I bought anything to wear for my career, even though I was the sole earner. It’s hard to get over that kind of real scarcity, but I’m trying. My grandmother had it from being a teen and young adult during the Great Depression, too, but she hoarded everything.

    • @Soo_Blessed
      @Soo_Blessed 11 місяців тому +36

      If your clothes make you happy and that's your only clutter issue
      Have at it
      KEEP THEM🍃
      YOU DESERVE THEM 🍃
      You can shut your closet door
      (I hope)
      I give you permission to not feel guilty because
      You do deserve nice things
      My best friend who always looked nice (me I wear the same few things over and over) when she passed away
      She was a widow
      when I helped clean the house out she had clothes in almost every closet in the house Her home was clean and nest I never knew she had so many clothes
      She gave me a lot back then probably hoping I would wear them😊
      They made her happy I'm glad
      for her she did not sacrifice in that area of her life
      She was in the Air Force 10 years and
      went to catholic school in a uniform
      Soooo
      she adored her clothes Glad she enjoyed them
      Don't worry be happy
      God bless

    • @cipherklosenuf9242
      @cipherklosenuf9242 11 місяців тому +14

      I hope you have some great outfits that you enjoy.
      Sometimes I like to say, “Happiness is having enough” …which can mean sufficient or reaching a tipping point of being overwhelmed.
      The clothes you give away may really help someone in a situation such as you experienced , that’s a good thought I think.

    • @melaniebrignell
      @melaniebrignell 11 місяців тому +17

      GOOD FOR HER.💪 LET'S CELEBRATE HOARDERS😇WHEN THE WORLD HAS DEPLETED ALL COMMODITIES EVERYONE WILL WISH THEY KNEW A HOARDER👍 HARD TIMES ARE UPON US ONCE AGAIN 😣REGARDS FROM 🇬🇧

    • @cipherklosenuf9242
      @cipherklosenuf9242 11 місяців тому +7

      @@melaniebrignellUs Yanks tend to refer to that as “Prepping” or “Prepers” and there’s wisdom in that, good point. But “Hoarding” we usually use with a more of a negative or unhealthy connotation.
      Do these words have different connotations in Great Britain too?

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +11

      💛Consider yourself hugged. You're worth it.

  • @kaythegardener
    @kaythegardener 11 місяців тому +52

    When I had extremely poor eyesight, ie, functionally blind without glasses, yet had to navigate in the dark to go to the bathroom, I had items all along the path. When there were no walls to guide me, I put waist high chests, etc, so there was no more than 24" gaps in the spaces. After many years, I finally reached 65 years & got Medicare, so my eye doctor did cataract surgery on both eyes. Now I put away much of that furniture & no longer stumble along...

  • @allouttabubblegum1984
    @allouttabubblegum1984 10 місяців тому +96

    As much as having an uncluttered appearing home is good for mental health, it makes us vulnerable and dependent on the system. If there's a real emergency, the stores will run out of food in 1-2 days. My family has hoarded for generations, I think it's trauma from the great depression passed down generationally. If you keep it organized, you're not a hoarder, you're a maximalist!

    • @PurdyBear1
      @PurdyBear1 10 місяців тому +23

      A lot in the Uk would be deemed as hoarders in the USA. However due to rationing etc a lot of folks taught their kids to have a full pantry and be Preppers. The allotments and growing your own food is very popular here. Small holdings are increasing, as are thrift/charity shops to reuse and up cycle furniture. The cost of living crisis has taught a lot of folks about the importance of prepping.

    • @Caperhere
      @Caperhere 10 місяців тому +18

      We looked at a house once we were considering buying. It was owned by a family who built it during WW2. There were 3 oil tanks in the basement. Shelves built along the basement walls were filled with bottles and containers of food and water.
      During the war, you had ration books with stamps you could use to buy food, if you had the money. Families could only get a very limited amounts of meat, sugar, flour, etc. I still have my grandparents’ and fathers ration books.

    • @russgaulin3721
      @russgaulin3721 10 місяців тому +6

      And when was the last time you witnessed stores running out of food? Gardening is great and it makes sense to have a few emergency supplies, but fear-based prepping and hoarding is a mental health issue, as miadanielle makes clear.

    • @cryssiejohnson2984
      @cryssiejohnson2984 10 місяців тому +33

      ​@@russgaulin3721I guess you didn't have to deal with supply chain issues and food shortages during Covid?

    • @MomToEight
      @MomToEight 10 місяців тому +6

      It totally agree. My parents were teenagers in the depressing. We always had extra food in the basement. I in today's economy, we n need to have extra food put away.

  • @noahjuanjuneau9598
    @noahjuanjuneau9598 11 місяців тому +11

    Over the past six months (since returning from a journey to the tropics of SE Asia) I have sold, given away and discarded everything I own(ed). Everything. All I have left now fits into two suitcases. I did spend several minutes early this morning searching around my empty house for an item I use almost everyday and after looking in every room suddenly realized I had donated it to the thrift store two days ago! Ha ha ha! Well, I don’t need to look for THAT anymore! Yup. Free of all that stuff (2,000+ CDs of rare music, hundreds of books, all my dishes, a closet filled with clothes I seldom wear… (I now own four shirts). All gone. Free at last. Free at last! Think I’ll go for a walk.

  • @allan-mccombs
    @allan-mccombs 11 місяців тому +10

    It's hard to throw stuff away because I have needed lots of stuff shortly after throwing it away.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +3

      Perhaps you are approaching it with the wrong angle! Decluttering isn't about simply tossing things away... it's about curating an intentional space that is both functional and something you love. So if you're using an item in your day to day, it shouldn't hit the declutter pile (unless of course it needs replacing, but thats another story!)

  • @rosemaryallen2128
    @rosemaryallen2128 11 місяців тому +10

    A tip I was given, which has proved invaluable, is to retain one item out of many, which encapsulates the significance of a collection of stuff, and to discard the rest. That way, the memories are preserved, and the emotional discomfort of the loss easily overcome.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 10 місяців тому

      Wish this worked for me.

    • @rosemaryallen2128
      @rosemaryallen2128 10 місяців тому

      @@StephieGsrEvolution If you have anxiety about discarding objects, forcing yourself to throw out just one thing, and deliberately enduring the emotional discomfort, tells the subconscious that it can be done. If you repeat the process, it gets increasingly easier.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 10 місяців тому

      @@rosemaryallen2128 it's far more complicated for people like me. It's a whole several question step process just to figure out that I can let something go. Even just to discard something is a several step process too, because I do my best to donate or recycle things in the best way. One item is fine, but when you have many and not much room, this gets to be super challenging. I've gotten better over time with letting go, but I still want what I let go to go to some perfect next place. It sux.

  • @lindagutierrez5409
    @lindagutierrez5409 10 місяців тому +7

    Also some keep clutter to fill the hole in their heart. My mom was abandoned at age 3 by her mother, and it has always been a source of unhappiness. She loves having lots of cute things about and doesn’t throw anything away.

  • @debbietodd8547
    @debbietodd8547 11 місяців тому +140

    I love a clear, uncluttered space and have really awakened to that as I have spent the last month clearing out my Moms' little apartment and couldn't imagine how much STUFF she crammed into that tiny space! I have always had a problem letting things go and I know it comes from a real lack most of my life and/or an inability to replace that item with something else. I also have such an emotional attachment to things as we had so little when I was growing up. I am older now, a widow and living in a tiny space, hanging on to bins of belongings in the hopes of one day having more space to display them.......I know, let them go! I don't want to leave my kids with the job I just had clearing my Moms apartment 😞

    • @cipherklosenuf9242
      @cipherklosenuf9242 11 місяців тому +24

      I moved recently and downsized a lot. I find it helpful to take a photo of things with sentimental value. A similar approach is to keep a portion, for example keep a button not the whole coat. Seeing the object in a photo permits me to objectify it and let it go much easier. When sorting I use dark black contractor bags..out of sight, out of mind…let it go.
      It’s ok to have some cherished objects or something to remember a loved one and featuring those things in your living space gives your personal space a depth of soul.
      I hope you find some treasures to enjoy and honor that are packed away.
      And I wish you well in creating more space and order, it’s a real challenge and it’s worth the effort!

    • @misst1586
      @misst1586 11 місяців тому +8

      ​@@cipherklosenuf9242nice thoughtful comment

    • @inezzbeadz
      @inezzbeadz 11 місяців тому +4

      I lost my mom 1yr ago on mother's day! Have alot of her things fur coats I can't get ride of. I have my husband's moms things a bit over whelping I need to decide soon what to do w items

    • @starseedstarseed311
      @starseedstarseed311 10 місяців тому +6

      Just before cov we moved to a tiny apartment compared to our old one and we are 4 humans and 2 cats. My parents are in scarcity mode to let go of items and they radher live into this condition than taking action 😤 and they even collect more. I tried many times myself to tidy up declutter and even myself I felt fed up and I give up. Though this baggage overwhelm makes my energy low and sick 😢😢 and I don't know what to do.

    • @cipherklosenuf9242
      @cipherklosenuf9242 10 місяців тому +9

      @@starseedstarseed311 Nice name Star Seed… Sounds very frustrating.
      It might be helpful to continue studying the psychology of hoarding sometimes understanding a phenomenon allows one to be more objective about it.
      This isn’t about fixing the problem, but just learning to observe the situation.
      Sometimes hoarders really do have undiagnosed or untreated mental illnesses, understanding their behavior as part of their physical condition and/or aging process may help you cope.
      You too may be grieving for loss of something, someone, sometime …I don’t know…but we can all benefit from self care…easy to say I know.
      Anyway, hopefully the cats are content 🐈🐈😸.
      Hang in there! Thanks for reaching out and I wish you well!

  • @johnroekoek9864
    @johnroekoek9864 11 місяців тому +18

    Wow! I had to stop the video a lot to process this, here in the middle of my cluttered living room. And I am gonna watch this again and again untill it sticks.
    This is a pearl.

    • @patriciaowens3479
      @patriciaowens3479 10 місяців тому +1

      Amen to that. I hope I can start to unclutter my bedroom. Especially the rest of the house is okay. I live with my daughter who really doesn't seem to have this problem as much as I do.
      I also have a VERY great faith and you know what they say: Cleanliness is next to Godliness or the other way around.
      So it's easy to have a guilt trip with that because I love to pray and I'm online helping other people come closer to the Lord so I just have a hard time understanding why I just can't get rid of stuff. I'm sure there's some deep psychological, something or other considering the life I had and I just don't realize it and it's part of the problem. But I don't want excuses. I just want to have the place Nice because when I see some place that's nice, I think that's really wonderful... and it's sort of miraculous how they KEEP it that way because I just can't seem to do it. And what's even worse is that I don't even care much. It doesn't bother me at all. Really. It's just the bedroom. That's the mess. The rest of the house is pretty neat. But being that I'm elderly and very tired and weak I just don't get to things like I want to. But I don't want to have excuses. I just want to take one day to time and parcel it out.
      And I think from reading these comments and knowing I'm not alone and also the video is very good. I think it'll give me a little more motivation. All right. God bless and love everybody and hang in there.

  • @Debthouse
    @Debthouse 11 місяців тому +60

    The Sunk Cost Fallacy seems to be applicable to (and quite common) in regards to relationships - both romantic and platonic.

    • @LittleKikuyu
      @LittleKikuyu 10 місяців тому +1

      Totally!! 🙈 Also jobs or studies that we’ve started and cannot seem to let go…

    • @mylesgray3470
      @mylesgray3470 10 місяців тому +1

      Absolutely. This is why it took me 9 years to file for divorce from a woman who treated me horribly. I wanted out at year 1 but I kept it going year after year.

    • @Debthouse
      @Debthouse 10 місяців тому

      @@mylesgray3470 I hope you are in a much happier and healthier place now!

    • @mylesgray3470
      @mylesgray3470 10 місяців тому

      @@Debthouse Thanks! I absolutely am. I’ve found a great lady I’ve been with 7 years and she is awesome. Never want to see my ex again and thankful since we didn’t have kids I don’t have to. She loves manny states away.

  • @elisam.s.k.gaspar3423
    @elisam.s.k.gaspar3423 10 місяців тому +36

    I live with my parents. They're in the verge of hoarder. I have clutter, my sister has clutter in her own house. I realise this and little by little I'm getting rid of my own stuff. Some easier than others but still I vision a life in a minimalism style. 😍
    Sometimes I loose myself cleaning my parents stuff just for them to substitute for another thing. That's an excuse for me not to deal with my own stuff, I know that now so I do my best to live here without being "contaminated" by the sorroundings and keep my goal alive. And I'm doing it and I know I can! 🙏💪
    Thank you for your amazing video, it gave me confidence to keep me going. Hugs from Portugal. 💞

    • @patdenman3887
      @patdenman3887 10 місяців тому +1

      Good for you. I am in similar environment. Longing for a simple lifestyle. Getting rid of my own clutter 😊.

    • @elisam.s.k.gaspar3423
      @elisam.s.k.gaspar3423 10 місяців тому

      @@patdenman3887 We've got this, sis. 😉💪💖

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  10 місяців тому +1

      That's amazing!!! Things can certainly be "passed down" but you also have the power within you to be different, one step at a time ❤️

  • @patwo4259
    @patwo4259 10 місяців тому +17

    I really relate to this video. I have a lot of sentimental clutter that is very hard for me to let go of. Most stuff is fairly easy for me to donate to charity or discard but the sentimental stuff is not. I get physically ill when I even think about letting it go. 😩

  • @wendypierce5621
    @wendypierce5621 11 місяців тому +71

    Figuring out which charity will take which thing can become overwhelming. I find the major charities in my city are quite picky. Also, I get trapped in that “I could sell it for” fallacy. Just because it’s listed on eBay or Etsy doesn’t mean it will actually get that price.

    • @ohsweetmystery
      @ohsweetmystery 11 місяців тому +5

      Throw it all in the trash. Why make extra work for yourself if you are already having difficulty?

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  10 місяців тому +5

      I create boundaries around something. If it's something I couldn't collect more than $20 for, I do not list it to sell. I have sold well used pieces of furniture in the past-- which has then allowed me to use those funds to contribute to the new piece of furniture I am upgrading it to. If it's somewhere in between, I donate (often times cities might even come to you, or even a FREE FB group.) f it's badly damaged and someone can't possibly use it, I toss it.

    • @CPerry-ld9ko
      @CPerry-ld9ko 10 місяців тому +5

      So true. In my town charity shops are very picky. It also seems that no wants used furniture in good condition. You can't give stuff away!

    • @homebody61
      @homebody61 10 місяців тому +8

      One thing I like to do is set out “goodie boxes” in my building/ neighborhood. People seem to appreciate them.

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 10 місяців тому +4

      I agree with ohsweetmystery. Sometimes I can put stuff on the curb and people will take it; if they don't, it goes away with the trash collector. Only 20% of stuff donated to charity ever gets sold, so they have to pay to have taken away just like we do. I cut out the middleman. Nobody wants my 30 year old shoes from Payless.

  • @diogenesegarden5152
    @diogenesegarden5152 11 місяців тому +36

    I quite like my clutter, it makes the place look interesting and lived in, much like an old curiosity shop. When I go to a really tidy house I feel uncomfortable to the point that I don’t even want to sit down in case I crumple the fabrics. I went to a customer’s house once, the kitchen was so uncluttered that everything was put away into drawers, clean white surfaces, it looked like a morgue with the sterile marble kitchen island, but without the body on the slab.
    I did have a bit of a tidy up the other week though and moved the chainsaw from the kitchen floor, that was underneath the bike and next to the big pot I use for winemaking, into the log basket. The oily rag that was underneath it is now wrapped around an oilstone I picked up from a skip along with some old hand tools that I couldn’t bare to see land filled and the old stock pot is in the attic. I even scrubbed the kitchen floor! I tend to save plastic cream pots to grow seeds in so have stacks of these dotted around the place. I’ve got driftwood, beach pebbles, rocks, sticks and logs all over the place, sometimes they go in the fire, or I eventually get around to making stuff out of them. I keep old glass jars for pickling and jam making, bottles for wine making. I am of course single😂. I think my favourite bit of untidiness is one of the pictures on the wall is slightly askew, I’ve left it like that as I know it winds my mate up when he comes around for a beer. A lot of my clutter also comes from family as a result of their decluttering ironically, and stuff left behind by various homeless friends who I put up for a few months or years at a time before they got themselves somewhere a bit more permanent.
    I’ve always been untidy, even my time in the Navy couldn’t break the habit, no matter how hard they tried, to the point that I’m sure that this is also my reaction and aversion to authority figures who seem to be fixated with tidiness and telling me what to do.

    • @gracecarcich2712
      @gracecarcich2712 11 місяців тому +10

      Agreed! While I don't have that level of stuff, I can see the aversion to authority and the comfort it provides. And who wants to be afraid to sit down and crumple the fabric? Lol!! You do you!

    • @tracyroose750
      @tracyroose750 11 місяців тому +9

      Wow! Respect for your choice to embrace, love and feel comfortable living in your clutter. I am your polar opposite. I love my sparkling white, practically empty kitchen counter tops. To each his own. I can see your point of view where clutter makes a home interesting and lived in. It does. I have several friends who have a lot of stuff in their homes. It makes me feel claustrophobic, and I wonder how do they keep the house clean? Pretty certain they feel uncomfortable in my uncluttered, sterile home. Again, to each his own. I certainly value my friendships enough to let them live their lives as they see fit. Blessings. Have a happy day.

    • @misst1586
      @misst1586 11 місяців тому +2

      Perfect. Same here

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 10 місяців тому +5

      Careful with oily rags though. They can catch fire as they decay.

    • @snsnplpl
      @snsnplpl 10 місяців тому +2

      It sounds like you have seen my kitchen which this time of year functions as a garden shed. But there is also just a lot of stuff that could be thinned down, or inventoried. When I counted up my canning lids, I realized I didn't need any more for at least a few years. It does help to organize... at least into piles or boxes.

  • @chivonfortney1656
    @chivonfortney1656 11 місяців тому +7

    Yeah but what about when certain counselors tell that u have collected too many sentimental items over ur lifetime?! That’s The Hard one! And they expect you to throw part of ur childhood away. I didn’t like that part because u CANT get those back!

    • @georgewagner7787
      @georgewagner7787 11 місяців тому +3

      Pick 10 percent, take photos and donate.

    • @ariesmry
      @ariesmry 10 місяців тому +1

      I’ve found that it’s less about the items itself and moreso about dealing with the underlying emotion as to WHY so many items are considered sentimental. The other part is are these sentimental items getting in the way of you living in a healthy and safe environment? Therapy is a choice, but if what you consider sentimental is creating a hazardous environment and outside entities are needing to step in, then yes, you will need to get rid of items and come to terms that your things are not your childhood. Your childhood is a period of time that you’ve already experienced and cannot be taken away from you as an adult.

  • @karhart6663
    @karhart6663 11 місяців тому +6

    It try to have intentional clutter. Every decoration and embellishment to my space is placed with a purpose/theme. Yes, I let me apt get cluttered when I have a busy week, but I throw out what I need to. The worst thing is going through old mail and filing important papers. And I hate getting rid of clothes because I like the thought of having options even if I wear the same stuff all the time. 😂

  • @barbh1
    @barbh1 10 місяців тому +3

    The best method of getting rid of clutter is the Marie Kondo. If it doesn't make you feel happy, toss it. Think first in case there's a real probability you'll need it - some tool, for example. The hardest things for me are gifts from people. Still, if it doesn't make you feel good, toss.

  • @beccagiessing3890
    @beccagiessing3890 11 місяців тому +7

    I do the picture process to actually see what's clutter in a room. Amazing what I can tune out.

  • @anitasoni9988
    @anitasoni9988 10 місяців тому +15

    The brutal Partition of our country was so traumatic for my parents that they carried the scars all their lives. My father used everything till it gave out and my mother hoarded everything. Even after they had risen from the devastation and done well in later years, these habits continued. To some extent we, their children, have imbibed some of these traits and often don't like to discard things unless we have to.

    • @MaryKnight-yk5mh
      @MaryKnight-yk5mh 10 місяців тому +1

      Women in fam. Hoard. Not unclean just so much stuff. After TV show came out I began to purge things twice yr.
      When Dad died I went to Florida she had 9 new cans of ladies shave cream and did not shave. Items stuffed under beds.

  • @teutonalex
    @teutonalex 7 місяців тому +2

    Weirdly enough, I learned to make my house minimalist and decluttered after learning ultralight backpacking skills. It just spilled over into the rest of my life.

  • @conormarie4310
    @conormarie4310 11 місяців тому +64

    I've often wondered if watching films like Brave Little Toaster and Toy Story as a young child had a significant impact on this kind of behavior and thought. I consider myself a very creative person with a strong empathetic side and when younger I recall feelings of guilt throwing away even a small torn scrap of paper that had been around for a while thinking "it would feel bad that I didn't want it". I don't struggle with these feelings as much today but still feel obliged to save spiders and the like despite not even wanting to touch them haha, and I still have most of my childhood toys despite long forgetting their names. I'm confident that if I'm lucky enough to have children of my own some day I'll not disregard the significance of these kind of stimuli.

    • @crazyratlady3438
      @crazyratlady3438 11 місяців тому +17

      Haha I save the spiders too. I have a huge problem throwing out things bc I understand the situation our society has created w our consumerism and disposable attitude. I have STRONG feelings about this. We need to stop producing and reuse, trade barter, etc. We've passed the point of garbage our earth can handle long ago. But this isn't helping me, I've been telling myself I need to just do it this once and be very careful what comes in after. The stuff I'd be throwing out won't make a difference when society is still operating the same anyways..I'm trying to convince myself this.

    • @conormarie4310
      @conormarie4310 11 місяців тому +9

      @@crazyratlady3438 This used to bother me a lot too but I'm not sure if it was just a rationalization of my desire to hold on to things. Either way, it's definitely still a big issue, if biodegradables were more commonplace it's be a good thing, and designing stuff that won't degrade to last and not be as disposable. Integrating planned obsolescence in to product design has always bothered me.

    • @Plushgamer619
      @Plushgamer619 10 місяців тому +10

      According to the law of oneness, everything is made of the same divine energy, people, places and things and that's probably why you feel attachments since you are an empath.

    • @rebeccarpwebb4132
      @rebeccarpwebb4132 10 місяців тому +4

      ​@@Plushgamer619i like ur response. Probably the most true statement

    • @Plushgamer619
      @Plushgamer619 10 місяців тому +6

      @@rebeccarpwebb4132 thank you! I am an empath too so I've always felt bad letting things go. I realize things can and should change and become different or given away depending on it's use for yourself or someone else. I usually thank my items for serving me and I try to donate instead of throw away. I don't want to be wasteful, and I respect things. I'm glad you like the statement😄

  • @oakstrong1
    @oakstrong1 11 місяців тому +47

    Hoarding can also be a symptom of trauma. Having become homeless a few times and lost everything or not having access to things I need, has created a sense of FOMO, to hoard household items I don't need. I also have difficulty throwing away DIY tools even though I don't expect ever having to do serious renovation in my rented place like I did when I owned my own home.
    A few years ago I got into yarn craft that made that helped to prevent depression but it also FOMO even worse - all those yarn companies that discontinue a particular label every few weeks, but also because I've known the whole time I am going to move into a country where I have never seen yarn sold anywhere! I did know a lady who did knitting, a very unusual thing: I was told she buys her yarn from a neighbouring country! I have no chance to do that so I started hoarding yarn as well.

    • @SpringNotes
      @SpringNotes 11 місяців тому +5

      True. Have you taken any steps to overcome this ?

    • @melaniebrignell
      @melaniebrignell 11 місяців тому

      GOOD FOR YOU .👍THERE IS GOING TO BE A WORLD SHORTAGE OF ALL COMMODITIES.I COLLECT WOOD I DO HAVE A STOVE .I AM FED UP OF PEOPLE SAYING " WHAT DO YOU WANT ALL THAT WOOD FOR" I CYNICALLY REPLY " I'M BUILDING AN ARK"THAT SHUTS THEM UP🌈 EVERYONE SHOULD BE PLEASED THEY KNOW A HOARDER WHEN THE PRICE'S GO UP & UP.WE ALL HAVE DEPRESSION & THIS GOES HAND IN HAND & SLOWLY CREEPS UP ON YOU LATER IN LIFE 😱 HAPPY YARNING👍

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 10 місяців тому +1

      I was homeless for years, when I got a pad I did not become a hoarder. Rubbish goes into the bin. So much for psychology.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 10 місяців тому +6

      ​@@Foxglove963we all respond to trauma in different ways.

    • @LittleKikuyu
      @LittleKikuyu 10 місяців тому +2

      @Foxglove963 Well that’s great for you. Why the judgmental tone if you’re happy?

  • @cherdonovan
    @cherdonovan 11 місяців тому +141

    Mia, you have outdone yourself with this lecture! I enjoyed the challenge of this intellectual material. Clutter control is complex and knowing the cognitive distortions and how our mindset can "set" us up for success is extremely important. Having completed an 8-month outdoor building and repair project (through the unusually long rainy season in San Diego) I saw firsthand how mental attitude affects the outcome. Our contractor was a beacon of hope and perseverance when there were days when it looked hopeless. His attitude rubbed off on everyone around him including my husband and I. We kept seeing the vision, the end result, practicing this day after day. and doing what we could each day to move a little closer to the vision. The project finally got done and it exceeded our expectations. This can also happen if we visualize and stay focused on the end result of how wonderful it feels to have the clutter-free home of our dreams. Thank you for your inspiration always there when we need it!!

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +4

      Thank you, Cher! I couldn't agree more 🥰

    • @SpringNotes
      @SpringNotes 11 місяців тому +5

      Thank you for sharing your life example story ! And may I ask, who your contractor was ? Thank you in advance.

    • @StBrigidsTempleHEALING
      @StBrigidsTempleHEALING 10 місяців тому +2

      Thank you for this rousing and encouraging *AND ILLUMINATING* response -- very helpful for us all!

    • @lbatemon1158
      @lbatemon1158 10 місяців тому +2

      What a beautiful thought! Thank you so much for sharing. I'm going to keep visualizing a beautiful, organized home.

    • @selmadebeer7272
      @selmadebeer7272 4 місяці тому

      @@MiaDanielle Your work is gold. The speed of your delivery sent me into anxiety as I just couldnt keep up.
      This is my problem and I'm a solution focused person, so I wonder is there a transcript so I can read alongside as you speak? Thanks
      Selma

  • @erindabney2758
    @erindabney2758 11 місяців тому +14

    It’s hard to declutter when you have so many authorities to answer to that the only thing you want to do at the end of the workday and work week is go outside into the trees. It’s a better stress release than sitting in your cramped apartment that you hate getting rid of stuff because life is forcing you through your worst nightmare and every single day you pray not to wake up.

    • @user-zl4rr1ic7w
      @user-zl4rr1ic7w 11 місяців тому +6

      You have too many bosses and a very stressful work environment. Very difficult situation. Please, please pray to God to help you and not that you don't wake up. Life can get difficult but God can always help you. He loves you and wants to help you!!

    • @susanpetropoulos1039
      @susanpetropoulos1039 11 місяців тому +4

      Erin, focus only on one tiny step at a time, not the ten thousand. God love you! You have the strength of an unseen army behind you.

    • @ThesoundofSilenceshh
      @ThesoundofSilenceshh 11 місяців тому +3

      So glad you know the trees are a peaceful place and a great place to rest. Wishes of peace in this season as you figure out what works for you. Sending 💕 love

    • @erindabney2758
      @erindabney2758 11 місяців тому

      @@susanpetropoulos1039 If only doing one thing at a time, until completion was possible. When I break it down to small steps and focus on one at a time, I get stuck and the finished product never materializes. Especially at work, where there’s other humans with competing interests and deadlines.
      Gah. Back to fiscal year change.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +2

      @erindabney2758
      It sounds like you've been through a lot.
      Stress and sadness really drained me at one time. I couldn't afford therapy so I read some great self-help books, and most importantly, started walking. When I got up to 3 miles a day, I added weight lifting every other day and cardio the off days, listening to music that matched my stressed out mood and then stretching to slower music. The exercise and music took most of my stress, and the books helped me change my attitude. Sometimes, for the present moment, that's all we *can* change.
      Best of luck to you!🍀

  • @dumbcat
    @dumbcat 11 місяців тому +5

    when people come to visit i give them those glasses you put on horses so they can only look straight ahead

  • @laramauss1948
    @laramauss1948 11 місяців тому +9

    thank you, very insightful thoughts i have to go through now! But one thing is obvious for me: the lonelier I get, the more stuff i buy and collect. I love to have complete Collections and go crazy on some topics/hobbies.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +2

      Interesting awareness you were able to draw on while watching this video!

  • @charlesbrightman4237
    @charlesbrightman4237 10 місяців тому +2

    For many things in life: It is better to have it and not need it rather than need it and not have it.

  • @fayereeves6568
    @fayereeves6568 11 місяців тому +3

    I love living in my motor home. The trick to living in a small space is having a garage or storage shed next to the RV.
    Right now I live in a three bedroom house. It is too big to get organized all at once. So, I have clutter.

  • @danknight4617
    @danknight4617 11 місяців тому +4

    The weight bench and weights along with the bicycle and tools and computer and DVD movie shelf (eight hundred movies) is all considered clutter because I'm supposed to "go to the gymnasium" or "go to the theater" with funds I don't have . "Organized clutter" is how my rental apartment is described , and , I'm dismissed as mentally incompetent , until someone needs my tools to fix something they don't want to pay a regular repair bill for . My books and magazines are "junk" , unless i give them to someone else so they can sell them but not buy them from me . What fun for me , because I paid full subscription price and still read and return for reference to the books and repair manuals , but , it's all clutter , apparently until someone else makes money off of my stuff . It's good that Mia can clutter up her walls with bizarre self serving objects yet dismiss us by insulting our possessions . Have a nice day .

  • @NavaSDMB
    @NavaSDMB 7 місяців тому +2

    I've spent 20 years as a business consultant; very often, I run into people who, because they're not highly educated, they're rural, and many of them because they have undiagnosed issues such as dyslexia, think of themselves as being stupid.
    Telling them "nah, I don't think you're stupid" and pointing out that they know a lot of things I don't (such as, how is _their_ factory organized) is usually part of Day One at a new place, and one of the most important steps in getting those people to be more efficient. Turns out, people are a lot better at doing anything when their self-esteem is in a healthy range. "Self-efficacy"? OK, I'm always happy to learn a new word.

  • @sl4983
    @sl4983 5 місяців тому +1

    It's a matter of being overwhelmed.

  • @amg9163
    @amg9163 11 місяців тому +16

    About 20 years ago, while living in NYC, I went to a counselor. I told her about my overspending, hoarding, etc. I described the sinkful of dishes that were there in a disgusting, smelly mess for months... Until I threw them in the garbage only to later buy a new set to do the same... (No rinse, just repeat...)Then I moved onto paper plates, plastic forks... Not a big fix, problem remained). The counselor's advice to me... *_"Get yourself Fiesta brand ceramic dishes, so it will be a pleasure to wash them..."_*
    Since that asinine advice, I have owned over 25 dish sets (wasteful and expensive) and I realize that she never understood the root of my problem. Over the decades since, I have figured out all that was wrong and caused me to sabotage my living space so much, living on squalor.

    • @TheMinimalistTherapist
      @TheMinimalistTherapist 11 місяців тому +8

      I'm a (UK based) counsellor. If a counsellor is giving you solution based advice, or is telling you what to do to "solve" your problems, they might not be the right person for you to see. What might seem like the answer to *them* might absolutely not be the answer for *you*, with your unique frame of reference.
      Most people who come to me are looking for a counsellor who can walk alongside the client and facilitate their journey towards finding their own solutions in the present, while acknowledging the context of their past. In my personal view, the way I'm trained and regulated by my professional body, solution focused advice has no place in a counselling relationship.
      I hope you won't allow this poor experience to colour your view of all therapists. ❤

    • @tommy7467
      @tommy7467 11 місяців тому +2

      But did you try Fiesta brand ceramic dishes? They meet your everyday needs and enhance any occasion all for the low price of $49.99 for a 3 piece set.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 11 місяців тому

      ​@@TheMinimalistTherapist
      ❤You're so positive and caring! I love that!❤

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@tommy7467
      Does anyone with a problem letting go of things need to buy more stuff? Does a really expensive bottle of whiskey help an alcoholic drink less???

    • @amg9163
      @amg9163 11 місяців тому +4

      @@tommy7467 I have not bought them yet, and will only buy them if I know that you will get a commission from the sale. 😀

  • @lynnebucher6537
    @lynnebucher6537 10 місяців тому +2

    I think I developed an excess accumulation issue after nearly 10 years of living in poverty. Several of those years were so tight that I lacked enough food. I have consciously decided to stop buying so much, but boy that urge to squirrel away food when I find it on sale is strong at times. At least I purged all the oit of date food I wasn't going to eat anyway.

  • @amyc5913
    @amyc5913 11 місяців тому +6

    Every person who is unemployed and worries about money while looking for work would have some clutter because of stress.

  • @divinetrouble66
    @divinetrouble66 6 днів тому

    I have a lot of stored trauma around cleaning. My mom was a hoarder and my dad would take stuff out and burn it while she was at work. This, naturally, resulted in terrible fights. Now, my brain shuts down when I try to address my clutter.
    The clutter also provides a protective nest to keep me safe. I can easily hide.

  • @jecellefetzer8716
    @jecellefetzer8716 3 місяці тому

    These concepts are directly applicable to someone's mental life as well. So fascinating

  • @bellastone-le9eb
    @bellastone-le9eb 11 місяців тому +12

    This video is the most actually effective one I’ve found. This gets to the deep roots of why we hang on to things.

    • @johngilmore697
      @johngilmore697 11 місяців тому +2

      I just set fire to my flat, problem solved

  • @Liz-ls7hu
    @Liz-ls7hu 11 місяців тому +53

    love all this. although I feel like I'm pretty good at donating/letting things go when they don't have any more use to me, occasionally it will be difficult to part with a tshirt I used to love but is now just taking up space. I really like what Marie Kondo said about "thanking" the clothing for its usefulness in the past before getting rid of it, haha.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +12

      Gratitude for your possessions is very key to building a space you love! I like it!

    • @carollynt
      @carollynt 10 місяців тому +1

      Thanking inanimate objects is a pagan belief. To each their own.

    • @blowitoutyourcunt7675
      @blowitoutyourcunt7675 10 місяців тому

      @@carollynt Most religions have their own symbology, Christian have crosses and crucifixes, Jews menorahs and their particular star - but most don't venerate or worship those objects.
      I have a queer habit of thanking my sewing needles before I have to throw them away because they have been a great tool that enabled a fantastic amount of work and made the end product impeccable but the idea that expressing gratitude to a tool for its good works and venerating it, to be the same - is sheer nonsense. But if you want to be judgmental and weird about it, were in America, go ahead - you do you boo!
      Meanwhile a few of us taking a second to express gratitude to an object that's been useful to us before setting it aside, might be useful psychologically to being able to let it go.

  • @BrandochGarage
    @BrandochGarage 8 місяців тому +2

    My valued possessions are always worth more than other people's stuff.

  • @RebeccaRuano
    @RebeccaRuano 11 місяців тому +21

    Psychology + organizational skills!! Just what I need! Thank you 💕✨

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +3

      You're so welcome! 🤗

  • @goodenoughgirl8102
    @goodenoughgirl8102 11 місяців тому +21

    My left brain is way out of control. Lol. It makes me pretty good at certain analytical tasks but it also can be a real hindrance. This is a wealth of info. Well, trauma and past abuse does actually “morph” the brain physically. Esp as a child. There is stuff so deep and unconscious in there and it takes awhile to chip down to the core of it. And to literally “re wire” the brain itself. But mostly if you are abused in certain ways, you very much become a kind of expert in rationalizing (excusing, justifying etc) the irrational behavior of those abusing you. You also get dull and used to it (as with the RDF stuff). I have also found SO many similarities with my relationships with things and my relationships with people. I don’t always like to refer to the past abuse these days but it seems to be a rather pertinent point even now with all the various facets of practical life. And truly some kinds of abusive situations destroy confidence and efficacy in a person…even many years later and it bleeds into every area of life. It’s extra to have to overcome, but I’m just glad it doesn’t have to be a forever, full on life sentence.

  • @mollypaintscows
    @mollypaintscows 11 місяців тому +29

    Growing up I had share my bedroom with my sister. We are both creative people. She hordes almost everything, while I can’t stand the clutter. I took pride in how organized my section of our room was, while she could care less. I’m sure we influenced each other’s behavior as we were growing up. To this very day, my home is organized and my artwork is detailed and simple. My sisters home is neatly cluttered (she has boxes of stuff she doesn’t know what’s inside them and packed shelves displaying some of her possessions). Her artwork is detailed yet free flowing. I will and have sold my artwork, while my sister won’t. If she finds a person worthy of having her artwork, she will give it to that person, but she will never sell it. I find it very interesting how our early childhood has influenced our adult lives concerning our creativity. Because not all creative people prefer to be messy (or free flowing). Maybe you could do a video about that.

    • @conormarie4310
      @conormarie4310 11 місяців тому +3

      This is a really interesting perspective, I've been trying to commercialize my creative projects for a while but the idea of selling them really rubs me wrong. I've given them to special people but selling them to strangers just seems wrong. I've recently tried designating the design of a project to the creative part of myself, keeping the master copy and then making replicas to sell, hopefully this means I can make a living from my passions. I don't know why but it still feels challenging, I've never felt this way selling my time to an employer but that eats away at me in other ways.

    • @doloresreynolds8145
      @doloresreynolds8145 11 місяців тому +4

      You say that your early childhood has influenced your adult lives concerning your creativity, but perhaps it was your inherent personality differences that influenced your creative and organizational differences from the start.

    • @mollypaintscows
      @mollypaintscows 11 місяців тому +1

      @@doloresreynolds8145 That’s very possible.

    • @conormarie4310
      @conormarie4310 11 місяців тому

      @@doloresreynolds8145 I tend to agree that it's probably a majority nature but I assume nurture can play a big role too depending on the circumstance.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  10 місяців тому

      Thanks for sharing Molly, this is very interesting!

  • @theGhostSteward
    @theGhostSteward 10 місяців тому +1

    One think to point is that for hoarders giving up things in fact generades more anxiety while for a non hoarder beeing in a cluttered space genaredes anxiety and then a wish to organize. (-source: Buried in treasures)

  • @KeikoBushnell
    @KeikoBushnell 10 місяців тому +8

    I alpreciate how you just put all these facts out there without filler non sense. ❤

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 10 місяців тому

      Yes, it was very easy to listen to and access. Too much filler detracts from the message.
      I think I'll watch another and, if it's as useful and concise, I'll subscribe. (I'm trying to declutter my social media, as well, so I don't subscribe indiscriminately.)

  • @kaybrown8493
    @kaybrown8493 11 місяців тому +8

    This really helped me understand why I'm struggling to tackle my clutter.

  • @josa720
    @josa720 10 місяців тому +4

    I recently closed a storage rental as the prices went up and up. And I realized after a while that for most of my stuff it would have been less expensive to throw it out and buy it if I needed it again, rather than rent a unit to save it.
    😊Great video

    • @mettamorph4523
      @mettamorph4523 10 місяців тому +2

      Yeah, the phenomenon of storage facilities shows our attachment to "stuff". Spending thousands to keep "stuff" we don't use.

    • @ninaannem.greeley2025
      @ninaannem.greeley2025 10 місяців тому +4

      Absolutely!!! And thanks for relating your experience. After both my parents died, I rented a storage unit to store a lot of their things. It took me quite a number of years to realize that I was spending way too much money on that unit. I have to say that I gave myself a break, because it can be very difficult to get rid of your parents' things in the first few years after their deaths and that's just a reality. But after five or six years, I realized that I wasn't looking at any of the things in the unit, I didn't even remember what was in the unit, and I was paying WAY too much money for it! So, I did some major clearing out and took the stuff I couldn't bear to part with and put it in my garage, which I now, after about ten years, am beginning to purge of stuff I don't remember having yet again. One great piece of advice I got from a friend was to take a photo of anything I didn't really need and would never use, but wanted to remember, like my mother's favorite sweatshirt that she embroidered herself ... we all can take and save photos so easily now. Often the physical object is not really necessary to hold onto. I've been trying to work one hour a day on decluttering my garage now and though it's going slowly, I am doing it.

    • @josa720
      @josa720 10 місяців тому

      @ninaannem.greeley2025
      Thank you for sharing your story. I can relate to everything you experienced. I think taking pictures is an excellent idea I can use too.

  • @homefrontforge
    @homefrontforge 10 місяців тому +2

    What is missing here is the value of time. You speak of worth as a dollar amount. Dollars fluctuate in their exchange value. Time is only spent once. That time represents your life. As you value yourself, you value your time. If you have sunk a lot of time into something, that thing begins to attain equivalency value with yourself.
    We are humans, not accountants. We count value on a different basis.
    Clutter can also represent the recall feature of memory. Things are cues for people with a lower ability of voluntary recall.
    I'm not defending hoarders, but this is much more nuanced than most think.

  • @cynthiamarston2208
    @cynthiamarston2208 11 місяців тому +1

    Yeah. Talk about cutting your losses! The things we value as worth more are the things we worked hard for.

  • @LaraOlsonUSA
    @LaraOlsonUSA 11 місяців тому +3

    I work about 65hrs a week and the last thing I feel like doing is cleaning. I love taking a car load to Goodwill and selling things...just need more time

  • @pearpo
    @pearpo 10 місяців тому +3

    Interesting video. If you’ve been on a sailing vessel out in blue water you know it is both highly organized and also very cluttered. Or feels that way.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo 10 місяців тому

      “Cap’n do we REALLY need Two Anchors?”

  • @nathananderson8720
    @nathananderson8720 4 місяці тому +1

    This is one of the channels that gave me the courage to start my UA-cam channel 10 months ago about self development. Now I have 1,976 subs and > 2k hours of watch time. I know it’s not comparable with others but I’m still proud I started because I’ve been learning so many lessons that I could haven’t learned without getting started in the 1st place.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  4 місяці тому +1

      I'm glad to hear it. Good luck!

    • @nathananderson8720
      @nathananderson8720 3 місяці тому

      @@MiaDanielle Whoever you are, I don't know you personally but I can say that you're one of the non-judgmental and open-minded people who is not fixated on tangible or external factors in order to learn from someone like me. Just because someone doesn't have a piece of paper as a credential, doesn't mean that person is not entitled to share personal experiences with the hope & intention to inspire others. Keep up with whatever it is that you're doing to improve mankind or improving your life even to a slight degree each day. This is just one part of a bigger puzzle for creating my UA-cam channel about holistic health. I literally could have died back when I was 14 years old due to major depression but here I am right now replying to you, a UA-camr, who's full of fulfillment and dedication to help others to be a better version of themselves. I ain't better than anyone else but my old self. That's all that really makes this UA-cam thing more meaningful and enjoyable. Thanks so much for your support! I am hoping that you can join me with this endless personal development journey! :)

  • @kim-pm8gi
    @kim-pm8gi 10 місяців тому +1

    I am a prepper. I stock food, prepare food. I rotate so it never goes bad. Some things are stored so they can last for many years. Never think that the " government " will help you.
    As for the rest of my house it is neat and not over cluttered

  • @crazyratlady3438
    @crazyratlady3438 11 місяців тому +9

    Taking a pic really works, or even just looking around thru your camera lense. I just told my hubby the other day, for some reason the mess looks more messy when I look thru the camera lense. He postulated it was bc you're only seeing that isolated area and not the room as a whole. As for believing you can or not, what if you were raised in a home w your mother and sister who are 100% organized, always have been but you're the exact opposite and always have been for as long as you can remember..it's hard to believe you're not a messy person and bad at organizing in such a situation. I do feel an abundance of happiness when I get an area cleaned up, just looking at the area is such a relief (my OCD makes me highly prefer clean and organized)..but it seems my mind/behaviors have always tended to be the opposite of what's best for me. I probably need a therapist to help undo things that were encoded as a child. I have no problem letting things go but I have a serious issue w letting usable things go to a landfill, I'm a staunch environmentalist and the thought of just throwing away normal everyday trash eats at me bc my mind understands the bigger picture and the enormous problem we're facing w how our society operates. Also, I need help. It's become overwhelming to the point when I look around to attempt to start something my mind goes numb/blank and I don't even know how to start. I have family who's said they will help..but they've been saying that for years. It also doesn't help that whenever I need something I can ALWAYS find or MacGyver something that works, lol. It only enforces in my mind that all this stuff is usable.

    • @homebody61
      @homebody61 10 місяців тому

      I’m wondering if you went through trauma and that has led to what you’re experiencing….

    • @crazyratlady3438
      @crazyratlady3438 10 місяців тому +1

      @@homebody61 maybe..I've been thru a lot of trauma, my childhood was not ideal.

    • @homebody61
      @homebody61 10 місяців тому +1

      @@crazyratlady3438 Sorry to hear that. Sending caring thoughts.

    • @crazyratlady3438
      @crazyratlady3438 10 місяців тому

      @@homebody61 😊❤️ty

    • @patriciaowens3479
      @patriciaowens3479 10 місяців тому

      Hear you loud and clear

  • @stephenpowstinger733
    @stephenpowstinger733 11 місяців тому +26

    I don’t know about this left-brain, right-brain theory. They talk to each other.
    ❤ Clutterman here. 😀 What you call cognitive errors might actually just be failures of logic - reaching the wrong conclusions. Also, bad habits or procrastination play a role in cluttering.
    A difficult childhood can be a antecedent. Growing up in a large family, I didn’t get a lot of things I wanted and I had to fight to hang on.
    Edit: Much of my excess stuff is paper (including books & magazines). Other stuff is things it brings me pain to look at - defective devices, useless electronics gear.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 11 місяців тому +6

      Try moving 23 times with a minimalist mom and a military dad who dumps all drawers onto the floor ans proclaims they are not up to standards.

    • @deborahlozano7134
      @deborahlozano7134 10 місяців тому +2

      @@auberjean6873 Oh, that is terrible.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 10 місяців тому +3

      ​​@@auberjean6873ugh! My momster did this along with everything in closet, curtains, mattress. And given 1 hr to make it right and there was always severe consequences. I'll spare everyone. Moving 26 times in 41yrs didn't help either. I have many things still in boxes from several moves ago. 😓
      So basically, I know that (with other things) really screwed me up. I have an all or nothing mentality and will rebel against anything authoritarian now, which is good in some ways, but even being on time is a challenge now.
      Basically, my heart goes out to you. 💜

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +1

      @@StephieGsrEvolution
      Thank you so much! There's nothing like empathy. We seem to have so much in common.Are you a perfectionist too? Yes, being on time for anything is an obstacle. My step-father would say that I'd be late for my own death, as if that were a bad thing! Mine goes out to you too.

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 10 місяців тому +1

      @@deborahlozano7134 💚
      Thanks! That felt like a hug, and I needed that from revisiting just a small corner of the past. Hoping your childhood was better.

  • @enascott5963
    @enascott5963 10 місяців тому +1

    Every time I get rid of something or allow someone else talk me into getting rid of something I ALWAYS end up needing that item and have to buy a new one which at a much higher cost!

  • @clutchnshift1
    @clutchnshift1 10 місяців тому +1

    Growing up, money was hard to come by. Dad had a factory job that paid not very much above minimum wage, mom worked a side hustle to pay for additional necessities. Then my parents separated, got back together, then divorced. I was 13. I always felt that my nostalgia fed my need to collect/clutter, when my parents were happy together. But perhaps it is also because of my youth, when money was hard to come by, so I valued everything, perhaps more than I should.

  • @bhsprinkle
    @bhsprinkle 11 місяців тому +23

    Yes! I find it refreshing to watch these types of videos.
    I find it difficult to eliminate certain things as I typically am very mindful about what I take in. It makes it more difficult to determine need.
    I think this is a brilliant discussion.
    I find that I value things I own more than things I don't also.

  • @VictoriaKimball
    @VictoriaKimball 10 місяців тому +4

    You are very easy to listen to and I like how you explain this stuff.
    However, whenever I am struggling financially I always want to sell the stuff; when I'm doing well, I am very happy to donate the same items as I feel like someone else will be able to use or enjoy it.

    • @VictoriaKimball
      @VictoriaKimball 10 місяців тому

      Oops, I meant to write...
      I am generally enthusiastic about letting go of clutter.
      However, whenever I am struggling financially I always want to sell the stuff; when I'm doing well, I am very happy to donate the same items as long as I feel like someone else will be able to use or enjoy it.

  • @brianlandis3057
    @brianlandis3057 8 днів тому

    Looooove this video., Mia! I found it by searching UA-cam for "help for OCD Hoarders" while I was decompressing after someone in my house had just taken all the multiple of piles of 6 inch high stacks of paper that were on my desk at home and had boxed them up while I was at work. I came home and was told my stuff had been boxed up and it was time to go through it and sort it out. I know I've got informational hoarding and related OCD, and that those papers should have already been sorted out before now, but I also know that the exact wrong thing to do to a hoarder is to clean out a space of theirs and put it all in boxes without them knowing ahead of time.

  • @patrickbuick5459
    @patrickbuick5459 10 місяців тому +10

    How interesting. I am going through this again now. I have had to move from a three bedroom two story house with large 2 bay garage to an apartment. It has been a multi-stage process. I walked away from many, very expensive items that would have been helpful, but a real accounting of the benefit vs cost hasnt been done.
    I have definitely had the "oh crud, I need that thing i got rid of a few weeks ago" in real life, not just as a concept.
    However, in this most recent round, it is definitely attachment. Grandmas old chest, my son's artifacts from growing up, tools.
    However, in some ways, this almost feels like victim blaming. Labelling things as dysfunctions that are quite common and were considered normal before being labelled.

    • @LittleKikuyu
      @LittleKikuyu 10 місяців тому

      All the mentioned psychological concepts are things that affect many, many people. So I feel in that sense they are completely „normal“. I think this video is more of an invitation to look deeper what could be reasons why the viewer is holding on to things. When we understand, we can make better choices in our lives 😊 ONLY if the keeping of things affects you (or your immediate surroundings) negatively then you should consider taking action, in my humble opinion 😅 So I feel there isn’t any judgement in this video or the mentioned psychological „labels“. What do you think?

    • @patrickbuick5459
      @patrickbuick5459 10 місяців тому +1

      @LittleKikuyu Apparently, I lost a paragraph in there. My phone was acting up. I am receiving comments by many sources, including family, that I have "too much clutter." That's what I was referring to as victim blaming, not anything in the video. Funny enough, a lot of the clutter are the same things that those family members foisted on me when my parents passed.

  • @SENSEF
    @SENSEF 10 місяців тому +3

    What about neurodivergence? Autistic family members obsess over their stuff, refuse to get rid of any of it, but freak out if you move anything - and no matter how messy it is they ALWAYS notice if you move something.

    • @patriciaowens3479
      @patriciaowens3479 10 місяців тому

      It kind of could make me wonder about my brain as well

  • @janeedgar-peterlin3968
    @janeedgar-peterlin3968 11 місяців тому +12

    This is an exceptional exploration of why we end up with clutter and what we can do to understand how best to deal with the problem. As a 1970s kid growing up with a (PTSD) hoarding mum, this was a revelation! Thank you 🙏

  • @shirleykathan-sayess5764
    @shirleykathan-sayess5764 7 місяців тому

    Awesome video!

  • @jeanniecampbell1374
    @jeanniecampbell1374 10 місяців тому +2

    I have been decluttering for years ! ..slowly getting better ..I worry about prices going up ,not being able to get pure cotton , being stuck in nylon or cloths made of plastic .feeling my home may look as if it has no soul ..the list goes on ( I say this with comic verse ) but secretly deep down some of this I feel is true ..but proud of how its going ..and give a lot to charity which always makes me feel better .

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  10 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for sharing!! It's always a process... change doesn't happen over night. It's taking the steps toward change that are important. 🥰

  • @genealotech
    @genealotech 11 місяців тому +10

    This is such a fantastic resource for information! Thank you!
    I’ve also learned a lot from the book Buried In Treasures, written by 3 mental health professionals who specialize in hoarding disorder.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for sharing this resource Dawn!

  • @leiaclark8388
    @leiaclark8388 11 місяців тому +5

    Outstanding. I really struggle with clutter and this video was illuminating. Thank you.

  • @kbencsik1
    @kbencsik1 10 місяців тому

    Loved this. Thank you!

  • @wendiosullivan8413
    @wendiosullivan8413 11 місяців тому

    Thank you. Awesome information.

  • @carlienvandernet7902
    @carlienvandernet7902 11 місяців тому +6

    It is great to know how our brain works. As you were telling these things my mind went like oh yeah I do that indeed and I do think like that on those moments. I’m a number one when it comes to rationalizing 😂. Thanks very much for this information.

  • @wordswithyoda6360
    @wordswithyoda6360 10 місяців тому +3

    This is excellent! Your explanations are so concise and helpful. I would love to see you expand deeper into this topic. It’s so valuable. Thank you for sharing 🫶🏽🌟

  • @Timefairyjina
    @Timefairyjina 11 місяців тому

    It’s a really good information, thank you!

  • @TheUberSchattenjager
    @TheUberSchattenjager 11 місяців тому +1

    Great info and fantastically presented! Sub'd!

  • @Debthouse
    @Debthouse 11 місяців тому +13

    This was incredibly insightful! I have not explored much in terms of psychology and clutter and look forward to exploring more on the subject matter!

  • @knudsandbknielsen1612
    @knudsandbknielsen1612 11 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for cloarifyibng. Also, I went to the other room and forgot what I was about to do. You reminded me! I was going to put the old "redundancy" printer at the door in order to remember to give it to a recycling station - we've got lots of those in Denmark...

  • @n.d8001
    @n.d8001 10 місяців тому

    very useful. Thank you

  • @rmmccarthy1240
    @rmmccarthy1240 5 місяців тому

    Nice job, Mia.👍

  • @Sweetlyfe
    @Sweetlyfe 10 місяців тому +13

    Hey thanks, this came up in my recommended and I subbed because it was informative and interesting, as the brain is. I’m dealing with my own hoarding/clutter issues at the moment, as a childhood SA and physical and emotional abuse and we didn’t have much, and both my parents hoarded different things in their houses stuff was put away, like my Dad’s shed where he worked for himself as a mechanical engineer there was no bench space anywhere, yet he could usually find what he was looking for, his younger Sister was a hoarder too, paperwork and stuff, his older 3 siblings were fine, my Mum she always had loads of paperwork stacked up in her office and myself and my Sister struggle with that too, I used to buy clothes and stuff all the time, my Sister too, but I don’t do that as much anymore, but I have just been diagnosed with ADHD and Autism at 55yrs old, and I have C-PTSD anyway from my childhood stuff, my sister didn’t get assaulted mine were strangers, and also I think I challenged my Mum a lot and would push the boundaries and she responded with the physical and emotional abuse, as she suffered that from her Mum, and the Nuns at school. So she did the best she could with skills she had and the lack of counselling and support back then, and then she was only 21 when her Mum died, and being the eldest she helped look after her 7yr old Sister, which ironically is what killed her as she would wash my Grandfather’s clothes and he was a plumber in navel shipbuilding, so the asbestos that insulated the hot pipes she inhaled when shaking out his overalls. I already worked on my anger about her treatment of me, and I was able to forgive her and recognise that she like me underneath her adult skin was still the little kid who copped it from her Mum and even though I still suffer symptoms of that stuff, I have a lot of compassion and empathy for her it took until 13yrs after her early death for me to get there, but I did Nurse her at her home when I was 30/31 so she could die in her own bed, and I know that she was grateful for that, because even though I’m a guy, it’s not something my Sister can do who is older than me, but it comes naturally to me, and my Dad looked after his best friend until he died and he moved in with my grandfather after my Nana died to look after my grandfather, so I definitely take after my dad as he was a real softy. Anyway thanks for the very interesting video I have saved it to help motivate me to sort my living environment out. I lost the love of my life 2yrs ago so it has certainly contributed to the chaos of my living environment, although I always wash my dishes as soon as I use them, as my Mum had a restaurant and taught us to clean as we go cooking and I was taught to do my own washing and cleaning so I have no problem with the idea of doing it as it’s something I’ve always been able to do, it’s just a psychological barrier at this point not a skill level or a sexist notion or anything, because I always did half the housework and more if my girlfriend was really busy or unwell, I am always up for doing the dishes if she cooked and if I cooked most of the dishes were already done while I cooked, besides I enjoy doing things that would lighten my love’s life if I was home before her or had a day off while she was working, I would have a meal ready, and washing done, and cleaning depending on what needed doing. Sorry a bit of a thesis.

    • @cherylreid2964
      @cherylreid2964 10 місяців тому +2

      Thank You for this insightful and revealing letter.
      Thank You ❣️

    • @GabrielGarcia-bf2kn
      @GabrielGarcia-bf2kn 6 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for this, I have ADHD too and I was able to follow your stream of consciousness very closely here. I have a profound fear of hoarding. My worst fear is becoming a hoarder. I am current very distressed as I am faced with the realities and pressure of being responsible for so many more items than I used to be now that I am the head of a household. My wife’s dad was a semi hoarder kept somewhat in line by his wife, which made for an on the verge of hoarder situation. His mother was a hoarder, she was left by her husband with many children to care and they grew up very poor. He is not good with money and his wife is a real bean counter but he often overrules her but I have seen that improve over time. My wife is not as bad but I have certainly had to work through a lot with her. An organized home can only come about through an organized mind and an organized mind is, I’m starting to form the idea, a mind which is inclined to think holistically. I think your and mine reduced reticular activition system is like an over clock of sorts that when harnessed can be a real strength. I don’t need to take a picture of my house to see the clutter, I notice everything. I always have a birdseye view of a lot of things. I have learned to employ that and it is becoming very lucrative. My wife is in many ways the opposite. I am trying to teach her my way of thinking, but honestly I wish I could instead translate and tap into the wealth of intellect she has but is unable to deploy effectively as a home maker. She wants to be a home maker first and foremost, but she is not very good at it. She is learning and I have succeeded in teaching her a lot but she is so focused on granular detail she always missed the tree she runs in to all the time if you know what I mean. Please offer prayers for us and that wisdom may be a fruit that flowers for our family.

  • @revdeandawg
    @revdeandawg 10 місяців тому +7

    Absolutely Fabulous video!
    Direct, Concise and full of helpful examples.

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  10 місяців тому

      Glad it was helpful!🥰

  • @John-mh6mi
    @John-mh6mi 2 місяці тому

    Thank you very well presented.

  • @TerrileeYO
    @TerrileeYO 10 місяців тому

    helpful in many ways. tyvm

  • @lindamorgan7568
    @lindamorgan7568 11 місяців тому +5

    Just seeing your channel for first time. This is an awesome and well explained list. Just subscribed to your motivating channel!

    • @MiaDanielle
      @MiaDanielle  11 місяців тому

      Welcome 🥰 Glad you're here!

  • @Conval-wi5eh
    @Conval-wi5eh 11 місяців тому +12

    Excellent video, Mia!
    Leaving a reply for the algorithm.
    One thing that isn't discussed enough imo is the link between clutter and obesity / unhealthy eating. Perhaps you can cover this topic sometime in the future, I think there are several studies out there.

  • @deanacincotta2236
    @deanacincotta2236 11 місяців тому

    This was amaaaaazing! Thank you!