
08/08/2025
I came across this post while scrolling this morning.
Having just finished emptying my mum‘s house this week, there was certain points that hit home I have been wondering what to do with the unicorn collection, so I thought I would re-share it. Please let me know your thoughts.
❤️Toni 
I didn’t stumble on this book looking for minimalism or a Marie Kondo reboot. It was the title that caught me—blunt, slightly rude, and painfully true. Nobody Wants Your S*t.* I clicked on it out of curiosity during a late-night audiobook scroll session. I was knee-deep in sorting out a family member’s things and wondering why we keep so much stuff no one else would ever want. The title felt like a slap and a smirk rolled into one. The moment Hillary Huber’s voice came on, crisp, confident, and with just the right amount of sarcasm, I knew I wasn’t just in for a lecture. I was in for a reckoning. What followed was part therapy, part comedy, and part tough love from someone who has been in the thick of junk and come out lighter. Messie Condo doesn’t sugarcoat. She doesn’t whisper politely about clearing your space. She walks right into the emotional mess of our belongings and says what most of us are too polite to admit. Here are eight lessons that I took away from the book—lessons I couldn’t unhear even if I wanted to, and ones that could be helpful to anyone who has ever tried to let go of anything.
1. Your Stuff Is Not Your Story: This one hit hard. I’ve always held on to items that reminded me of a moment, a person, a feeling. Messie Condo doesn’t dismiss the sentiment, but she challenges the logic. She points out how we tie our identity to physical objects, believing that without them we’ll forget or lose a part of ourselves. But she flips it around. You are the memory, not the souvenir. Her honesty helped me realize that letting go doesn’t erase history. It just makes room for the present.
2. Emotional Guilt Keeps You Buried in Clutter: There was a part of the audiobook where she talked about inherited items that you didn’t ask for but feel guilty getting rid of. Her tone was sharp but understanding. I could almost see her raising an eyebrow through the speakers. I thought of the boxes in my closet filled with my grandparents’ things I’ve never used. She reminded me that honoring someone’s memory doesn’t require keeping their ceramic cat collection. This lesson is freedom for anyone who has inherited emotional baggage disguised as heirlooms.
3. Decluttering Is Not Just About Physical Space, It’s About Mental Weight: Messie Condo makes it painfully clear that clutter is not neutral. It costs you time, energy, and peace of mind. At one point, she described walking into a cluttered space and feeling your spirit shrink. I paused the audiobook and looked around my room. She was right. I didn’t just have too many things. I had too many decisions, too many reminders, too many unresolved emotions. This lesson taught me that cleaning your space is also a way of clearing your head.
4. Sentimentality Is Not a Storage Strategy: There is a moment when she almost sings this truth. Holding onto a broken lamp because it reminds you of your first apartment is not sentimental, it’s impractical. She’s not against emotions. She’s against storing your entire emotional life in dusty boxes. That perspective helped me sort through old clothes, letters, even furniture with a clearer head. I kept one or two meaningful items, not twenty. For anyone drowning in nostalgia, this lesson teaches how to preserve what matters without hoarding what doesn't.
5. Your Kids Don’t Want Your Collection: She says it straight. Nobody wants your collection of teaspoons, teddy bears, or dusty books from the seventies. Not your kids, not your nieces, not your neighbor. I laughed when she said it, but then I cringed. I had assumed someone would eventually want the things I’ve stored. Messie Condo makes you face the truth that your treasure might just be trash to someone else. That realization is both humbling and empowering. It pushes you to take responsibility for your stuff now instead of leaving it for someone else to deal with later.
6. Decluttering Is a Gift to Your Future Self: I loved the way she framed this. Most people declutter because they are moving or downsizing or grieving. But what if we started decluttering as a way to care for our future selves? She painted a picture of an older version of me, free from the burden of organizing years of accumulation. That image stuck. This lesson gave decluttering a purpose beyond cleaning. It made it an act of kindness to myself.
7. Organization Without Elimination Is Just Rearranging Clutter: This one made me laugh out loud because I’ve done it so many times. Bought containers, labels, bins, shelves—all to make my mess look prettier. Messie Condo calls this out with wit and just enough sarcasm to sting. Organization is not the goal. Letting go is. This lesson made me stop trying to “neaten” things I didn’t even need. It’s one of the most practical and eye-opening truths in the book.
8. You Don’t Need Permission to Let Go: Maybe the most powerful thing she said was this: You don’t need a reason or a story or someone else’s blessing to let go of something. That line felt like a release. I had been waiting for the perfect justification to part with some items, waiting for the right moment or emotional approval. Her words gave me permission to act now. This lesson is a deep breath for anyone waiting to be told it’s okay to start over.