
Why Your Cluttered Home Is Affecting Your Nervous System
Why Your Cluttered Home Is Affecting Your Nervous System
It's not weakness. It's neuroscience. And here's what it means for your home.
I want to share something that shifted how I understood my own relationship with my space.
Years ago, I used to think that the stress I felt in a cluttered room was just a personality thing. Like I was maybe a little more particular than other people, a little more sensitive to visual noise. Something that was just part of how I was wired.
And then I learned that there's actual neuroscience behind it. And suddenly the way I'd been feeling for years made complete sense.
What happens in your brain when you walk into a cluttered room
Before you've consciously registered a single thought, your visual system is already at work. It takes in the scene, identifies disorder, and sends signals that keep your stress response slightly elevated. It's subtle. It's usually below the level of conscious awareness. But it accumulates, all day, every time you're in that space.
Research on how our visual cortex processes information shows that clutter competes for our attention even when we're not looking at it directly. Every object in our visual field is a small demand on our cognitive resources. Multiply that by a room full of things and you have a constant, low-level drain on your brain's capacity.
Why this hits differently for some of us
For people with ADHD, sensory sensitivities, or anxiety, this effect is amplified. The brain that is already working hard to filter and focus finds the visual noise of clutter significantly more taxing. The result is that you feel more tired, more irritable, less able to think clearly in cluttered spaces, and you may not even know why.
You're not being too sensitive. Your brain is giving you real information. The question is what we do with it.
What relief actually feels like
I want you to think about a moment when you cleared one surface, or walked into a freshly tidied room, and noticed something shift. Maybe your shoulders dropped a little. Maybe you took a slightly deeper breath. Maybe something in you, some small tension you'd been carrying, released.
That's your nervous system responding to reduced visual demand. That feeling is real information about what your body needs.
Start with your most-used space. The bedroom you wake up in. The kitchen you return to throughout the day. Clear one surface. Keep it clear for a week. Notice how you feel. Your home is part of how you regulate. Give your nervous system a little relief. You deserve it. 💕
Ready for more?
If you'd like a gentle, step-by-step guide through your whole home with exactly this kind of approach, I'd love for you to pick up my book, Creating Space with Julie: A Step-by-Step Guide.
https://www.creatingspacewithjulie.com/product-details/product/book
With love and encouragement,
Julie xo
P.S. Have you ever cleared one surface and felt your whole body exhale a little? Tell me about it. I love hearing these moments.
