this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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It is interesting to me that very few people want clutter in their life (both tangible and intangible), yet it tends to manifest insidiously even for vigilant minimalists and requires the periodic clean-out to bring a space back into the desired state.

What is your insidious clutter that constantly tries to creep in? How do you manage it?

For me it's papers (bills and stuff waiting to be scanned) and children's toys (family just loves to buy my kids more and more junk). For my wife, it's stuff like lotions, shampoo, soaps, etc.

Our basic strategy is to give all this kind of stuff a designated amount of space they are allowed to take up, and once that space is full, stuff must leave before new can come in. We have a folder for mail/papers, bins for the kids toys (that have to be put away each day), and a basket for my wife's products.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Well for me it's mostly tech gear and gadgets. I work a lot on optimising my lifestyle, my habits, my routines. I am also always on the lookout for a product from a brand that meets my requirements and with which I can fully identify. As long as I haven't found something that I can stand by 100% or as soon as I see something as fundamentally better, I'm ready to buy something new.

For example, I was looking for a perfume that I could really identify with. I searched, tested and finally found what I wanted. I don't have to buy another one or look for a new one because I am satisfied and have crossed this item off my (almost endless) to-do list.

However, there are still many unresolved issues. For example, just recently I switched to a few clothing shops where I buy all my clothes, sometimes several copies of one model instead of going from shop to shop trying things on. But the same principle goes for services I use, places I go, people I interact with.

The clutter that accumulates is then attempts that didn't quite work out or that didn't suit me. This also applies to my digital services, by the way. I constantly delete accounts from services I don't use, delete bookmarks, mails, ... and delete everything that can't stay 100%.