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The Clutter That Called Me Out

The quiet weight of everyday clutter

There’s a particular kind of overwhelm that loves to gather on my kitchen counters. It builds slowly. I’m talking about mail I’ve opened but not dealt with yet, half finished projets, or ingredients for a dinner I postponed. All are reminders of something unfinished.

Every time I walk past it I feel the weight of decisions deferred, tasks interrupted, and the invisible labor of “keeping things together”. The kitchen counter becomes the landing zone for everything I didn’t have time to finish, or didn’t know where else to put.

One Small Corner, One Small Start

Today I stood in the kitchen and felt the noise of it all, not just the visual clutter, but the emotional static. So I chose one small corner to clear. No rush. No pressure to finish. No goals of perfection. Just a beginning, putting away one thing, throwing away another. Soe things were easy to clear, expired coupons, the stack of mail I never meant to keep, ingredients and utensils. But the dinner I imagined till lingers, not on the counter anymore, but in the space between intention and reality.

Muscle Memory and the Patterns We Keep

I noticed how easy it was to put things back where they’d always been, even though that setup doesn’t work anymore. The counter has a kind of muscle memory, like the layout itself expects the same routine. It keeps trying to return to the old rhythms, even while I’m reaching for new ones. Breaking this pattern clearly takes intention.

For more on tending your space with care, visit Small Space Makeover

The Mental Load of Mail and Measuring Cups

Clutter is more than just stuff. It's stories, stalled intentions, and the weight of what we've postponed. 

Let me jsut give you a moment of validation here.

That weight you feel when you walk past the clutter? It’s real, nothing imaginary about it. Turns out, your brain really does care where the measuring cups land. Researchers (like Dr. Joseph Ferrari from DePaul University) have found that visual clutter, like that stack of mail, can spike your cortisol levels. It’s not just about the mess, it’s about how your space whispers to your nervous system all day long.

And when the countertop feels chaotic, your brain starts multitasking in the background, scanning, sorting, trying to ignore. That mental load? It’s exhausting. No wonder a clear surface feels lie a deep breath.

The good news is that cleaning just one small area can bring relief.

In his 2025 study in the North American Journal of Psychology, Dr. Ferrari found that clutter was a significant predictor of emotional exhaustion and stress.

The takeaway? Clearing even one small area can result in a surprising sense of relief, like your mind finally has room to breathe.

If you’d like to peek behind the curtain and explore this more deeply, I’ve linked both the 2025 study by Dr. Ferrari and the podcast conversation below.

Explore the podcast interview here

Read the study here

Tools That Helped

Personally, the more I clear and clean, the more the space works for me again, and I feel more clarity. It’s not a dramatic change, just steady improvement.

We ordered a couple of shelves to help with the overflow, simple sturdy pieces that invite order. They’re not fancy, but they’ve made a difference. I’ll share the links below in case you’re looking for something similar.

Affiliate Disclosure: These are affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission if you choose to purchase through them, at no extra cost to you. I only share what I truly use and love.

    Clearing More Than Crumbs

    I wiped the surface slowly, like I was cleaning more than crumbs. I was clearing the residue of days that blurred together. I was making space for breath.

    I didn’t finish right away, but I did get started. And that was enough. Progress, not perfection.

    A woman with curly hair cleans a kitchen counter using a spray bottle and cloth.

    What This Reset Reminded Me

    The kitchen wasn’t ever a disaster. It just held more than I could manage comfortably. Too many things competing for space, too little breathing room. It was functional, but not peaceful.

    Clearing the countertop was never just about tidying, it was about interrupting a pattern that didn’t serve me anymore.

    Each item I moved, each surface I wiped, helped bring back order and ease to the space. It’s more functional now, easier to navigate and less chaotic.

    But more than that, it reminded me that small, intentional changes can shift the way a day unfolds. The kitchen is where I start and end most days. It’s where life gathers, often without asking. You know, the stuff, projects, groceries, conversations, reminders. By making it workable, it made it easier to show up, for myself, for others, and for the rhythm I want to live in.

    If you’re in the middle of your own reset, start where you are. The impact may be small and quiet, but it’s real, and it builds. Share your own reset in the comments below, or tag me on Instagram @rootsrainandray_

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