RISMedia
  • News
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • Events
  • Power Broker
  • Newsmakers
  • More
    • Publications
    • Education
No Result
View All Result
  • Agents
  • Brokers
  • Teams
  • Marketing
  • Coaching
  • Technology
  • More
    • Headliners New
    • Luxury
    • Best Practices
    • Consumer
    • National
    • Our Editors
Join Premier
Sign In
RISMedia
  • News
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • Events
  • Power Broker
  • Newsmakers
  • More
    • Publications
    • Education
No Result
View All Result
RISMedia
No Result
View All Result

Household Clutter Can Impact Relationships

Home Consumer
By Judi Light Hopson, Emma H. Hopson and Ted Hagen
March 5, 2014, 4 pm
Reading Time: 3 mins read

household_clutter(MCT)—Would you like to invite friends over to your house, but you’re ashamed of the clutter?

Or, maybe your teenagers or spouse would like to throw a party, but the paperwork and junk in your house would require a team of professional organizers.

You’re not willing to tackle the mess, so nothing changes. You feel buried by the stacks and piles surrounding you.

All of us know the internal pressure we feel just thinking about our clutter. It’s a heavy feeling that keeps us from feeling in control of our lives.

When we move to another house, for example, the boxes to unpack weigh heavily on our minds. Or, when we move the car to sweep out the garage, the clutter stored in the garage can feel completely overwhelming.

“I was dating a fabulous guy who is very well organized,” says a woman we’ll call Terri. “When he saw my house, our relationship was over. This man could see that I hadn’t managed my life properly.”

Terri says that she couldn’t work up the energy to clean house after her divorce in 2007. She moved into a smaller house and just let the boxes stay packed for years.

“If I had it to do over,” says Terri, “I would have spent an hour a day tossing my junk. If I had, I would have made a better impression on Mr. Neat. I used to be organized, but I fell off the train and never got back on.”

Clutter can represent a lot of things to us. For instance, creative people feel they’re doing something positive with art supplies, sewing materials, or gardening tools all scattered about. Clutter can also represent misery, failure, lost dreams, or living in the past.

If you don’t like your messy house, ask yourself: “Why do I not let go of this stuff? What’s holding me back?”

A man we’ll call Anderson says his boxes of paperwork represented a happy time for him. That’s why he couldn’t bring himself to dig in and begin discarding.

Anderson spent three years writing a book, and the boxes were full of his research and rough drafts.

“I feebly spent a couple of years attempting to go through the boxes,” says Anderson. “To me, they represented a book contract that I got from a major publisher. I felt good and cozy in my office with this paperwork swirling around me. I did until one day a mouse crawled out of one of the boxes!”

Page 1 of 2
12Next

Related Posts

Data
Economy

Econ Review: A Look at March’s Key Market Data

April 2, 2026
REMAX
Agents

Arizona’s REMAX Fine Properties & REMAX Solutions Merge

April 2, 2026
Mortgage Rates Continue to Climb in ‘Complicated Intersection’ of Geopolitics and Economic Policy
Industry News

Mortgage Rates Continue to Climb in ‘Complicated Intersection’ of Geopolitics and Economic Policy

April 2, 2026
Great Spaces: Oh, the Places You’ll Go in This La Jolla Legacy Estate
Industry News

Great Spaces: Oh, the Places You’ll Go in This La Jolla Legacy Estate

April 2, 2026
The Next Evolution of Home Search: Shopping Based on Verified Buying Power
Industry News

The Next Evolution of Home Search: Shopping Based on Verified Buying Power

April 2, 2026
Market
Industry News

Spring Market Attempts to Bloom, Despite Cloudiness of Geopolitical Tensions

April 2, 2026
Please login to join discussion
Tip of the Day

5 Key Reasons FSBOs Regret Not Using a Real Estate Agent

Some homeowners think selling their properties with no agent will save gobs of money on commissions. Almost always they come to regret it, settling on a price that could have been better, not to mention spending way more time on the process than they envisioned Read more.

Business Tip of the Day provided by

Recent Posts

  • Econ Review: A Look at March’s Key Market Data
  • Arizona’s REMAX Fine Properties & REMAX Solutions Merge
  • Mortgage Rates Continue to Climb in ‘Complicated Intersection’ of Geopolitics and Economic Policy

Categories

  • Spotlights
  • Best Practices
  • Advice
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Social Media

The Most Important Real Estate News & Events

Click below to receive the latest real estate news and events directly to your inbox.

Sign Up
By signing up, you agree to our TOS and Privacy Policy.

About Blog Our Products Our Team Contact Advertise/Sponsor Media Kit Email Whitelist Terms & Policies ACE Marketing Technologies LLC

© 2026 RISMedia. All Rights Reserved. Design by Real Estate Webmasters.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • News
    • Agents
    • Brokers
    • Teams
    • Consumer
    • Marketing
    • Coaching
    • Technology
    • Headliners New
    • Luxury
    • Best Practices
    • National
    • Our Editors
  • Publications
    • Real Estate Magazine
    • Past Issues
    • Custom Covers
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Podcasts
    • Event Coverage
  • Education
    • Get Licensed
    • REALTOR® Courses
    • Continuing Education
    • Luxury Designation
    • Real Estate Tools
  • Newsmakers
    • 2026 Newsmakers
    • 2025 Newsmakers
    • 2024 Newsmakers
    • 2023 Newsmakers
    • 2022 Newsmakers
    • 2021 Newsmakers
    • 2020 Newsmakers
    • 2019 Newsmakers
  • Power Broker
    • 2025 Power Broker
    • 2024 Power Broker
    • 2023 Power Broker
    • 2022 Power Broker
    • 2021 Power Broker
    • 2020 Power Broker
    • 2019 Power Broker
  • Join Premier
  • Sign In

© 2026 RISMedia. All Rights Reserved. Design by Real Estate Webmasters.

X