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Divorce changes more than your relationship status. It changes your routines, your identity, your home, and often your relationship with your belongings.
When you're navigating such a significant life transition, it's normal for your home to become less organised. Your emotional wellbeing, finances, work, and family responsibilities often need to take priority. There is grace for that.
As you begin rebuilding, decluttering can become an important part of healing. You may discover that certain items trigger unexpected emotions. A wedding dress, a favourite board game, or even paperwork can bring up grief for both the life you had and the life you thought you would have.
You don't need to rush or force decisions. Start with the easy categories and allow yourself time to process the harder ones.
As you sort through your possessions, ask yourself:
* Does this item bring peace or pain?
* Does it belong in my future?
* Am I keeping it out of guilt?
Remember that your possessions don't hold memories. You do. An object only carries the meaning you give it, and you have permission to change the story attached to it.
You also don't have to get rid of everything. Keeping a few photos or meaningful items can honour an important chapter of your life without keeping you stuck in it.
As you create your home for this new season, give yourself permission to imagine a different future. Decluttering can be the gentle act of closing one chapter and making space for another.
You may also like to listen to these episodes:
Letting Go
Memories
Watch on YouTube
https://youtu.be/9csR6zmMBSk
Join my community
Thank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Amy Revell4.9
121121 ratings
Divorce changes more than your relationship status. It changes your routines, your identity, your home, and often your relationship with your belongings.
When you're navigating such a significant life transition, it's normal for your home to become less organised. Your emotional wellbeing, finances, work, and family responsibilities often need to take priority. There is grace for that.
As you begin rebuilding, decluttering can become an important part of healing. You may discover that certain items trigger unexpected emotions. A wedding dress, a favourite board game, or even paperwork can bring up grief for both the life you had and the life you thought you would have.
You don't need to rush or force decisions. Start with the easy categories and allow yourself time to process the harder ones.
As you sort through your possessions, ask yourself:
* Does this item bring peace or pain?
* Does it belong in my future?
* Am I keeping it out of guilt?
Remember that your possessions don't hold memories. You do. An object only carries the meaning you give it, and you have permission to change the story attached to it.
You also don't have to get rid of everything. Keeping a few photos or meaningful items can honour an important chapter of your life without keeping you stuck in it.
As you create your home for this new season, give yourself permission to imagine a different future. Decluttering can be the gentle act of closing one chapter and making space for another.
You may also like to listen to these episodes:
Letting Go
Memories
Watch on YouTube
https://youtu.be/9csR6zmMBSk
Join my community
Thank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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