Advertisement
How Feng Shui Can Help You Keep Clutter Out Of Your Home — For Good
If you feel like you're constantly clearing clutter and have resigned yourself to watching it come back as fast as it disappears, you're not alone. Every Kondo devotee knows that wiping out every bit of clutter in a house one time isn't a permanent or even long-lasting solution for many people. It's amazing to have that fresh, clear-space feeling, but then somehow—and sometimes quite quickly—the mess inevitably comes back.
I have many friends and clients who have felt stuck in this endless cycle of clearing, donating, organizing, and, somehow, needing to start all over again when the clutter returns.
Last year, I myself was trapped in a cycle of seemingly endless digital clutter, feeling as though everything I'd deleted was somehow multiplying instead. For a long time, I just let that "unread emails" number on my phone climb into the thousands because dealing with it seemed futile. Taking the necessary steps to clear this clutter for good took some determination, but it worked! The experience reminded me that reducing clutter is one thing. Keeping it from coming back can be its own amazing skill.
What's feng shui got to do with it?
As a feng shui master, I've noticed that positive changes tend to stick much more when you shift to address what caused the problem in the first place. So in the example of my cluttered inbox, you can delete all your unnecessary mail but it will likely keep coming back if you don't contact whoever is sending it in the first place and ask them to stop.
Addressing the source of the issue is sometimes time-consuming and annoying, so it's tempting to just let it be. (Clutter tends to work this way!) But ultimately, addressing whatever's emotionally and energetically behind the mess will dramatically change your life for the better and keep the clutter far, far away.
This can take time and all kinds of inner healing. In my experience, it's well worth the investment. Here are some feng-shui-approved ideas to get you started on your long-term decluttering journey:
1. Embrace imperfection—especially in creative spaces.
Decluttering can clear up space for you to live, enjoy your surroundings, and create things. So even if you have an art studio or a table that's a mess when you're in the middle of said creation, that's a lot different from having a whole home refill itself with clutter. Set boundaries around clutter, and be aware that creative mess will transform into a regular mess if you let it linger after you're done with a project.
2. Make it harder for clutter to build up in the first place.
This could mean placing a plant, accessory, or lamp on the area of your desk that usually fills with clutter to keep things clean and vibes high. If the shoe rack at your entryway is prone to overflowing, consider getting one that's half the size so you'll have to be very judicious about what pairs of shoes can stay there. If your nightstands are full of clutter, you might want to swap them for a pair with no storage space or add candles, fresh flowers, or other beautiful things so there's no void to fill.
While this type of thinking isn't always a long-term solution, it can help you to break the habit of placing things down where there's empty space only to watch them slowly pile up.
3. Keep the energy lighter at home.
Clutter is a manifestation of stagnant energy, so clearing space energetically can also clear it physically. Whether you burn sage, incense, or candles; use an aromatherapy diffuser; or do anything else that gets the energy flowing, do it more often in the rooms that tend to attract the most stuff.
When you get to the root of your clutter, it becomes an opportunity to grow. Even the very first steps you take to declutter your home and your life can bring incredible benefits, so there's no need to push yourself to speed through it. And there's every reason to celebrate your progress along the way!
Dana Claudat is a modern Feng Shui Master and founder of The School Of Intention Feng Shui Certification Program. In the last 15 years Claudat has pioneered her own approach to Feng Shui that is rooted in infinite possibility, creativity and empowerment. Rather than hope for lucky results and outcomes, she helps her clients to create them every day.
She’s a Stanford-educated art historian with more than a decade of experience in design yet her approach to space is simple. Claudat is a longtime mindbodygreen contributor and instructor (she may have had a hand in the hundreds of plants in mindbodygreen headquarters!), and her work has been featured in design and lifestyle publications around the world.
You can work with her from wherever you are in the world in her online Feng Shui Camps and through her Online Feng Shui Consultations.
You can sign up for her weekly Feng Shui Rituals, including rituals for every New and Full Moon, right here!
More from the author:
The Feng Shui Home Makeover
Check out The Best Of The Best High-Vibe Home Styling With mbg Feng Shui Master
More from the author:
The Feng Shui Home Makeover
Check out The Best Of The Best High-Vibe Home Styling With mbg Feng Shui Master
Dana Claudat is a modern Feng Shui Master and founder of The School Of Intention Feng Shui Certification Program. In the last 15 years Claudat has pioneered her own approach to Feng Shui that is rooted in infinite possibility, creativity and empowerment. Rather than hope for lucky results and outcomes, she helps her clients to create them every day.
She’s a Stanford-educated art historian with more than a decade of experience in design yet her approach to space is simple. Claudat is a longtime mindbodygreen contributor and instructor (she may have had a hand in the hundreds of plants in mindbodygreen headquarters!), and her work has been featured in design and lifestyle publications around the world.
You can work with her from wherever you are in the world in her online Feng Shui Camps and through her Online Feng Shui Consultations.
You can sign up for her weekly Feng Shui Rituals, including rituals for every New and Full Moon, right here!
Watch Next
Enjoy some of our favorite clips from classes
Enjoy some of our favorite clips from classes
What Is Meditation?
Mindfulness/Spirituality | Light Watkins
Box Breathing
Mindfulness/Spirituality | Gwen Dittmar
What Breathwork Can Address
Mindfulness/Spirituality | Gwen Dittmar
The 8 Limbs of Yoga - What is Asana?
Yoga | Caley Alyssa
Two Standing Postures to Open Up Tight Hips
Yoga | Caley Alyssa
How Plants Can Optimize Athletic Performance
Nutrition | Rich Roll
What to Eat Before a Workout
Nutrition | Rich Roll
How Ayurveda Helps Us Navigate Modern Life
Nutrition | Sahara Rose
Messages About Love & Relationships
Love & Relationships | Esther Perel
Love Languages
Love & Relationships | Esther Perel
What Is Meditation?
Box Breathing
What Breathwork Can Address
The 8 Limbs of Yoga - What is Asana?
Two Standing Postures to Open Up Tight Hips
How Plants Can Optimize Athletic Performance
What to Eat Before a Workout
How Ayurveda Helps Us Navigate Modern Life
Messages About Love & Relationships
Love Languages
Advertisement
We Need To Talk About Toxic Femininity In Beauty: Ever Encounter These Examples?
Perpetua Neo, DClinPsy
We Need To Talk About Toxic Femininity In Beauty: Ever Encounter These Examples?
Perpetua Neo, DClinPsy
We Need To Talk About Toxic Femininity In Beauty: Ever Encounter These Examples?
Perpetua Neo, DClinPsy
We Need To Talk About Toxic Femininity In Beauty: Ever Encounter These Examples?
Perpetua Neo, DClinPsy