Owning less slowly changed the way I experience my home.
Sometimes the easiest way to improve your home isn’t by buying something new. It’s by letting some things go.
Why Owning Less Feels Like Gaining More
Our homes rarely become cluttered overnight.
It happens slowly. A sweater we might wear again. A kitchen gadget we thought we’d use every week. A decoration we loved years ago but no longer notice. None of these things are bad. In fact, many of them are still perfectly good.
They’re simply not our “cup of tea” anymore. Fortunatly, we change over years and so does our taste and needs.
Small steps
This spring I decided to declutter my wardrobe. I had to start somewhere. I divided everything into 3 piles:
- pieces that I love wearing, and wear occasionally or often,
- pieces that are in good condition but haven’t been worn in months or even years
- pieces that are broken – non repairable
First pile was a keeper, of course. Third was a trash / recycling material. But the second is the one that always bothers me and creates the unnecessary clutter and noise.
Someone else might need what you no longer do
One of the biggest shifts in my mindset came when I stopped asking:
“Should I keep this?”
and started asking:
“Could someone else actually use this today?”
Maybe they’re simply waiting for someone who will enjoy them more than I do. So I started thinking. I have put aside everything i found nice, but does not fit me anymore. I called my sisters and friends and organized a fun night where everyone had the chance to choose one thing at the time. And in circles.
All that remained was donated further. Donating turns decluttering into something much more meaningful. It’s one of the few situations where everyone wins.
Fewer clothes. Better choices.
I used to think having more clothes meant having more outfits. The opposite turned out to be true. Every morning I found myself staring at a wardrobe full of options, somehow feeling like I had nothing to wear.
Too many choices often create the illusion of freedom while making decisions harder. After letting go of the clothes I no longer wore, getting dressed became surprisingly easier. Because everything left I actually enjoyed wearing and choose happily.

You don’t have to do everything in one weekend
Decluttering isn’t a challenge.
It’s not about filling dozens of donation bags in a single day. Sometimes all you need is one drawer. One shelf. One kitchen cabinet.
You begin to notice how much calmer a single organized corner feels, and naturally want that feeling in the rest of your home.

Keeping what matters
Decluttering isn’t about becoming a minimalist. It’s not about counting how many possessions you own. It’s about making space for the things that genuinely add value to your everyday life. The mug you always reach for. The blanket you love reading under. The jacket that has travelled with you for years.
When unnecessary things leave, the meaningful ones finally have room to be seen. And maybe that’s the real goal. Not to own less. But to notice more.


