Your clutter isn't a personal failing. It's the intended result of a system that profits from your overwhelm. Episode 300 is about opting out -- and taking back your power.

Resources Mentioned:


  
No New Things by Ashlee Piper


  
"Sit Still Look Pretty" by Daya


  
Wannabe Clutter Free on Instagram (30-day declutter series)


  ⁠⁠Deanna's Best Decluttering Resources⁠⁠


Three hundred episodes. When I started this show, I thought decluttering was about getting rid of stuff. And it is. But it's not only that.

The more I've done this work, the more I've realized the stuff was never really the problem. The problem is what keeps creating the stuff. For episode 300, I finally go there.

Your clutter is not an accident. It is not a personal failing. It is, in significant part, the intended result of a trillion-dollar industry that profits from your overwhelm, your insecurity, and your desire to feel better right now.

Desire is manufactured. Algorithms aren't showing you what you love -- they're showing you what you're most likely to buy. The "treat yourself" culture is a sales strategy. And the chaos that keeps you too exhausted to pay attention? Worth money to the people selling it.

But here's where it gets good: once you see it, you can't unsee it. And that's where your power starts.

Buying less is not deprivation. It's defection. Every time you walk past a sale and keep walking, you are opting out of a system that is counting on you not to. Every purchase is a vote for the kind of world you want to live in.

In this episode I cover:


  Why clutter keeps coming back no matter how often you declutter

  How desire gets manufactured (and the Stanley cup is a perfect example)

  The $44 billion self-storage industry and what it says about all of us

  Why voting with your dollars is one of the most direct forms of civic participation

  The mental clutter side: what short-form content is doing to your sense of enough

  5 low-lift ways to start opting out this week


If this episode resonated with you, share it with one person who needs to hear it. Text it to a friend who's been drowning in stuff and can't figure out why. The message that clutter is not your fault (and that you have more power than you think) deserves to reach more people. You're how it gets there.

Subscribe so you never miss an episode, and if you have two minutes, leaving a review on Apple Podcasts makes a real difference. Thank you for 300 episodes. 

TIMESTAMPS

0:00 -- Welcome + 300 episodes milestone

2:38 -- The story that changed how I see everything (the Amazon tab moment)

5:46 -- How desire is manufactured (ads, algorithms, "treat yourself" culture)

9:36 -- Why your overwhelm is worth money to someone

11:27 -- No New Things by Ashlee Piper + the reframe

12:42 -- Not buying is not deprivation. It's voting with your dollars

16:10 -- Feeling smaller and disconnected -- and what's still in your control

18:36 -- Mental clutter: what short-form content is doing to your sense of enough

19:57 -- The highlight reel fallacy

22:17 -- 5 practical experiments to start opting out

26:24 -- The hole in the boat: why decluttering without stopping the inflow never works

27:30 -- 300 episodes: what I actually believe

28:37 -- My one ask for episode 300
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Wannabe Clutter Free | Declutter, Simplify, Find Freedom

Deanna Yates | Professional Organizer, Decluttering Coach, Wannabe Minimalist

Decluttering: A Hidden Political Revolution? (Ep 300)

MAR 11, 202633 MIN
Wannabe Clutter Free | Declutter, Simplify, Find Freedom

Decluttering: A Hidden Political Revolution? (Ep 300)

MAR 11, 202633 MIN

Description

Your clutter isn't a personal failing. It's the intended result of a system that profits from your overwhelm. Episode 300 is about opting out -- and taking back your power. Resources Mentioned: No New Things by Ashlee Piper "Sit Still Look Pretty" by Daya Wannabe Clutter Free on Instagram (30-day declutter series) ⁠⁠Deanna's Best Decluttering Resources⁠⁠ Three hundred episodes. When I started this show, I thought decluttering was about getting rid of stuff. And it is. But it's not only that. The more I've done this work, the more I've realized the stuff was never really the problem. The problem is what keeps creating the stuff. For episode 300, I finally go there. Your clutter is not an accident. It is not a personal failing. It is, in significant part, the intended result of a trillion-dollar industry that profits from your overwhelm, your insecurity, and your desire to feel better right now. Desire is manufactured. Algorithms aren't showing you what you love -- they're showing you what you're most likely to buy. The "treat yourself" culture is a sales strategy. And the chaos that keeps you too exhausted to pay attention? Worth money to the people selling it. But here's where it gets good: once you see it, you can't unsee it. And that's where your power starts. Buying less is not deprivation. It's defection. Every time you walk past a sale and keep walking, you are opting out of a system that is counting on you not to. Every purchase is a vote for the kind of world you want to live in. In this episode I cover: Why clutter keeps coming back no matter how often you declutter How desire gets manufactured (and the Stanley cup is a perfect example) The $44 billion self-storage industry and what it says about all of us Why voting with your dollars is one of the most direct forms of civic participation The mental clutter side: what short-form content is doing to your sense of enough 5 low-lift ways to start opting out this week If this episode resonated with you, share it with one person who needs to hear it. Text it to a friend who's been drowning in stuff and can't figure out why. The message that clutter is not your fault (and that you have more power than you think) deserves to reach more people. You're how it gets there. Subscribe so you never miss an episode, and if you have two minutes, leaving a review on Apple Podcasts makes a real difference. Thank you for 300 episodes. TIMESTAMPS 0:00 -- Welcome + 300 episodes milestone 2:38 -- The story that changed how I see everything (the Amazon tab moment) 5:46 -- How desire is manufactured (ads, algorithms, "treat yourself" culture) 9:36 -- Why your overwhelm is worth money to someone 11:27 -- No New Things by Ashlee Piper + the reframe 12:42 -- Not buying is not deprivation. It's voting with your dollars 16:10 -- Feeling smaller and disconnected -- and what's still in your control 18:36 -- Mental clutter: what short-form content is doing to your sense of enough 19:57 -- The highlight reel fallacy 22:17 -- 5 practical experiments to start opting out 26:24 -- The hole in the boat: why decluttering without stopping the inflow never works 27:30 -- 300 episodes: what I actually believe 28:37 -- My one ask for episode 300 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices