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From Chaos to Calm - A Better Relationship with Your Home

Read time 4 mins

Have you ever been on holiday and thought,ย โ€œI wish I could live like this all the time?โ€ Thereโ€™s space for your clothes. No piles of paperwork. No looming laundry. The kitchen feels calm and almost minimalist (even if you secretly miss your favourite juicer!)ย 

Thereโ€™s something about a holiday space that feels instantly relaxing. With less stuff around, thereโ€™s simply less to manage.ย 

And then you come home.ย 

Does your home feel likeย you? A place where you can relax, recharge, and feel at ease?ย 

Or does it feel like another thing quietly nagging you to โ€œdo betterโ€?ย 

If itโ€™s the latter, youโ€™re not alone. And the good news is... this relationship can change.

Why do our homes tend to fill up?ย 

Working as a professional organiser, Iโ€™ve seen firsthand how overwhelming a too-full home can feel, and the huge sense of relief as spaces become less full and easier to manage.ย 

Many of the busy brain traits that lead to clutter also define us โ€“ we're brilliant at seeing possibilities... rescuing things because we can imagine what theyย could become:ย 
โ€œThat table has so much potential - I could upcycle it!โ€ย 

We get excited about new ideas:ย 
โ€œIโ€™m definitely going to start doingโ€ฆ [insert new obsession] so Iโ€™ll need all the things.โ€ย 

And are crazily optimistic:ย 
โ€œI donโ€™t have time right now, but one day I will.โ€ย 

Not only that, but itโ€™s too easy to buy things online (especially when tired, bored, or emotional), so itโ€™s no surprise that things build up. Multi-buy deals, duplicates, โ€˜just in caseโ€™ itemsโ€ฆ they all quietly fill up space.ย 

So why is it so hard to let things go?

Clutter isnโ€™t just โ€œstuff.โ€ Itโ€™s often tied up with intention, memory, and unfinished tasks.ย 

For many ADHDers, piles act like visual reminders:ย 
โ€œIf I put it away, Iโ€™ll forget about it.โ€ย 

Decluttering also involves lots of small steps - decisions, sorting, returning items - which feel disproportionately hard with impaired dopamine function.ย 

Then thereโ€™s the desire to do thingsย properly:ย 
โ€œI should recycle this the right way.โ€ย 
โ€œSomeone would really love this.โ€ย 
โ€œI should sell it to get some money back.โ€ย 

And of course, the all-or-nothing thinking:ย 
โ€œIโ€™ll tackle it when I have a whole day (or week).โ€ย 

So things stay. And more arrive. And start to weigh on us too heavily...ย 

First: this is not a moral issueย 

Before anything practical, this matters most.ย 

Your home is not messy because youโ€™re lazy.ย 

Youโ€™re not failing. Your brain simply works differently.ย 

Self-compassion is one of the most powerful busy brain-friendly tools you can develop.ย 

Notice the shift:

Before:ย 
โ€œMy home is such a mess. Why canโ€™t I get this sorted? I feel ashamed.โ€ย 

After:ย 
โ€œThis room is starting to bug me. Iโ€™m noticing Iโ€™m avoiding it. What might help me get started?โ€ย 

That gentle curiosity opens the door to change. Shame keeps it firmly shut.ย 

Redefine โ€œtidy enoughโ€ย 

Many of us unknowingly hold ourselves to an impossible standard. On the โ€œTidy vs Messy spectrumโ€, โ€œTidyโ€ often means perfect, โ€œMessyโ€ covers everything else, from a few clothes on a chair to being knee deep in clutter.

So if things arenโ€™t perfect, it feels like failure.

Instead, try creating your own version of โ€œtidy enough.โ€ย 

What level feels manageable? Comfortable? Good enough for your real life?ย 

And remember - we rarely see the everyday reality of other peopleโ€™s homes - just the version they choose to show us.ย 

Slow downโ€ฆย 

A friend once said to me:

Have you ever been on holiday and thought, โ€œI wish I could live like this all the time?โ€ ย 

Thereโ€™s space for your clothes. No piles of paperwork. No looming laundry. The kitchen feels calm and almost minimalist (even if you secretly miss your favourite juicer!)ย ย 

Thereโ€™s something about a holiday space that feels instantly relaxing. With less stuff around, thereโ€™s simply less to manage.ย ย 

And then you come home.ย ย 

Does your home feel likeย you? A place where you can relax, recharge, and feel at ease?ย ย 

Or does it feel like another thing quietly nagging you to โ€œdo betterโ€?ย ย 

If itโ€™s the latter, youโ€™re not alone. And the good news is... this relationship can change.ย ย 

Why do our homes tend to fill up?ย ย 

Working as a professional organiser, Iโ€™ve seen firsthand how overwhelming a too-full home can feel, and the huge sense of relief as spaces become less full and easier to manage.ย ย 

Many of the busy brain traits that lead to clutter also define us โ€“ we're brilliant at seeing possibilities... rescuing things because we can imagine what theyย could become:ย ย 
โ€œThat table has so much potential - I could upcycle it!โ€ย ย 

We get excited about new ideas:ย ย 
โ€œIโ€™m definitely going to start doingโ€ฆ [insert new obsession] so Iโ€™ll need all the things.โ€ย ย 

And are crazily optimistic:ย ย 
โ€œI donโ€™t have time right now, but one day I will.โ€ย ย 

Not only that, but itโ€™s too easy to buy things online (especially when tired, bored, or emotional), so itโ€™s no surprise that things build up. Multi-buy deals, duplicates, โ€˜just in caseโ€™ itemsโ€ฆ they all quietly fill up space.ย ย 

So why is it so hard to let things go?ย ย 

Clutter isnโ€™t just โ€œstuff.โ€ Itโ€™s often tied up with intention, memory, and unfinished tasks.ย ย 

โ€œThe only difference between a tidy person and a messy person is that a tidy person finishes the job.โ€ย 

That really stayed with me.ย 

Our brains are fast. We move quickly from one thing to the next, often leaving a trail of half-finished tasks behind.ย 

Now, I try (not perfectly!) to pause - especially when I come home - and finish small things like unpacking before moving on.ย 

Tiny pauses can make a big difference.ย 

Gentle ways to get startedย 

If youโ€™re ready to tackle your space, keep it simple and ADHD-friendly.ย 

1. Phone a friendย 

Body doubling can make a huge difference. Being on a call while you tidy helps you stay focused and makes it less boring.ย 

Tip: if someone offers to help, make sure they are non-judgmental. (You decide what stays and what goes.)ย 

ย 2. Gamify itย 

Make it light and achievable:ย 

  • 10-minute tidyย 
  • Find 10 items to donateย 
  • Clear one shelfย 

Small wins build momentum. Big, overwhelming plans usually donโ€™t.

3. Make it easier to be tidierย 

If something keeps ending up in the same place, thatโ€™s useful information, not failure.ย 

For example:ย 

  • Add hooks by the door for keysย 
  • Upgrade a โ€œfloordrobeโ€ into a โ€œchairdrobeโ€ย 
  • Use open baskets or tubs instead of complicated storageย 
  • Try clear, coloured or labelled containers to improve visibilityย 

Work from where you are.

4. Give things a homeย 

Everything doesnโ€™t need to be perfectly organised, but it helps if it has a general place to live.ย 

Start by gathering things together into โ€˜familiesโ€™. For example:ย 

  • Clothesย 
  • Paperworkย 
  • Techย 
  • Sentimental itemsย 
  • Seasonal itemsย 

Then organise these into smaller categories in a way that makes sense to you.ย 

A helpful guideline:ย 

  • Store things where youโ€™d naturally look for them, orย 
  • Where you use them mostย 

Everyday items need to be easy to reach. Occasional items can live further away.

5. Keep decluttering simpleย 

Most items fall into three categories:ย 

  • Binย 
  • Belongs elsewhereย 
  • Donateย 

Try to move these on quickly, so they donโ€™t become a new pile.ย 

Two simple approachesย 

A Small Sort

Perfect when just one area is bothering you.

Pick a drawer or shelf.ย 
Take everything out (no โ€œfishingโ€ around).ย 
Only put back what truly belongs there.ย 

Aim for about 80% full - completely full spaces are harder to use and maintain.

A Big Sort

If a room feels overwhelming, go broader.

Start with obvious categories:ย 

  • Rubbishย 
  • Clothesย 
  • Dishesย 
  • Paperworkย 

Create loose piles without overthinking. Then tackle one category at a time.ย 

This reduces decision fatigue and creates quick, visible progress.ย 

A final thoughtย 

Your home doesnโ€™t need to be perfect to support you.ย 

It just needs to feel a little lighter. A little easier. A little more like somewhere you can breathe out and relax.ย 

Youโ€™re not aiming for a show home. Youโ€™re creating a space that works for your beautifully busy, creative, ADHD brain.ย 

And small shifts - done with kindness - really do add up.ย 

ย 

About the Authorย 

Sarah Bickers is an ICF-qualified Life Coach and founder of Free Your Space ย where she helps her clients find ADHD-friendly solutions to organise their homes, improve wellbeing and reduce overwhelm. If you would benefit from working with Sarah, get in touch here.

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