Clothes
When de-cluttering, a key ingredient to stick with it and not feel overwhelmed, is to gain momentum. An area that is easy to toss things and gain that momentum is your closet (and second closet) and dressers. We, as consumers, felt compelled enough to purchase all these clothing items (shirts, pants, skirts, jeans, sweaters, etc) because advertisements, culture, our friends influenced us to the point where we felt we needed those items to fit in/be happy/be popular/to impress/insert whatever you want here. Once we purchased the item, we put that item in our closets and sometimes we wear the new item(s), but most of the time we kept the tag on it or wore it once never to be worn again. As time passed, we fell back into our routine and wore our “go to” clothing items because we knew we felt confident/comfortable/complete in those “go to” clothing items. We continue in this cycle to buy new apparel hoping something will change until our closets are jammed packed with apparel we do not wear. It happens to everybody.
What this does is makes us dread getting dressed in the morning because we do not want to sift through the racks of hangers just to say “I don’t feel like wearing that”, “I don’t look good in that”, “I need to lose 15 pounds before I even consider wearing that”, “this no longer fits how I like” etc. Why go through all this turmoil to get dressed in the morning? Why put ourselves through it all? We end up in this place because we bought apparel, we sort of liked or thought would make us happy to impress people we do not know. That is why de-cluttering your closest is the PERFECT place to start to gain momentum towards your new minimalist lifestyle.
I am sure this will not be your first rodeo with reducing your excess clothing and there are several ways to go about it.
- First, I immediately REMOVED EVERYTHING I DID NOT WEAR. This included jeans, shirts, jackets, sweats, etc. This also includes those “out of style” clothes that you still have, but don’t wear. I placed all of those items into large garbage bags and removed them from my room completely.
- The next set of clothes I tackled were clothing ITEMS THAT DO NOT FIT (whether too small or too big). This part was a little more taxing because it involved actually trying certain clothes on to make that determination. Again, I placed all those items into garbage bags and removed them from my room.
At this point I am left with clothes that fit me and that I actually wear on a consistent basis. Right now, you are at a place where you are gaining momentum, and this part should be easy for you. We will comb through our closets again and again with guidelines in place to ensure we do not allow the accumulation of clothes to get out of control again.
There is a purpose for everything, and everything has a purpose.
Clothes to be donated.
Remaining clothes after my first wave of de-cluttering
Remaining jackets and sweat pants after my first wave of de-cluttering
Remaining hoodies after my first wave of de-cluttering









