Welcome to Monday! I’m working on the corporate paperwork and training an AI but the cleaning Goal for you and for myself today is:
| Clearing the space around the bed – Decluttering – Getting rid of visual stress |

Did you drink your coffee today? For detoxification, it is important to have coffee in the morning with some dairy. You can have dairy in your coffee or have a piece of cheese. Health Storey Coaches can explain to you the importance of coffee with dairy milk.
Clear Space, Clear Mind: The Importance of Minimal Visual Clutter in the Bedroom (Especially Around the Bed)
If your bedroom feels like a staging room for everything you own, your sleep routine might be paying the price. Visual clutter can drain energy, disrupt relaxation, and even make mornings feel chaotic. The good news? A simple, deliberate approach to keeping the space around your bed free of clutter can transform how you rest, recharge, and wake up. Here’s why it matters and how to make it work in real life.
Why visual clutter around the bed matters
- Sleep quality and stress: A calm, orderly environment signals to your brain that it’s time to unwind. When surfaces are crowded with books, devices, and laundry, your brain has more stimuli to process at a time when it should be winding down. A cleaner visual field can help reduce cognitive load and promote deeper, more restorative sleep.
- Safety and ease: The bed is the room’s center of comfort, but it’s also a potential trip hazard if cords, shoes, or laundry spill into the floor or nightstands. Keeping the space around the bed clear reduces the risk of stumbles at night and makes it easier to get in and out of bed.
- Routine and mental clarity: A tidy bedside area supports a smoother evening routine. When you know exactly where the essentials live (lamp, water bottle, a notebook, a charger), you waste less time searching and more time relaxing or drifting off.
- Ambiance and mood: Clutter clashes with a tranquil mood. A minimal, uncluttered vibe—soft textures, warm lighting, and a cohesive color palette—creates a sanctuary-like feel that’s inviting to rest.
What “clutter around the bed” typically looks like
- Nightstands overloaded with gadgets, cables, and random papers
- Cables and chargers sprawling across surfaces or the floor
- Stacks of books, magazines, or laundry piles near the bed
- Decorative items that aren’t used for sleep, right at eye level
- Under-bed storage that’s overflowing or difficult to access

A practical path to a clutter-free bed space
Step 1: Start with the essentials, then edit
- Identify 2–3 bedside essentials you actually use within reach (e.g., a lamp, a water glass or bottle, a phone or book, and a small notepad/pen). Anything beyond that is optional.
- Use a shallow tray or small container on each nightstand for items you want to keep out but corralled (watch, jewelry, coins, remotes). This keeps surfaces visually calm.
Step 2: Tidy cords and devices
- Create a dedicated charging station away from the bed line (a small shelf or a corded tray at the foot of the bed works well). Use cord organizers or a simple rubber grommet to route cables neatly to a power strip.
- Consider wireless charging for fewer cables on the nightstand, but don’t let the charging clutter migrate to the floor or be visible as a tangle.
- If you don’t need a device at bedtime, place it out of arm’s reach or in another room to reduce wakeful scrolling.
Step 3: Manage books, papers, and clutter hotspots
- Limit the number of books or magazines in the bedroom. If you have stacks, move them to the living room or other rooms for storage. Rotate a single “current read” and place others neatly in a low, closed-storage bin or on a shelves by category.
- No paper in the bedroom. Place a small filing tray or a magazine holder near the door on a dresser or in a closet to deal with papers and get them to where they can be filed or properly stored. Recycle or scan what you don’t need to keep in physical form.
Step 4: Reassess under-bed storage | We will talk about this again later in the week. |
- A clear under-bed area feels instantly more open. If you need storage, choose flat, uniform containers that slide easily and label them. Avoid dark, bulky bins that invite you to shove more items under there.
Step 5: Create a safety-first layout
- Keep walkways clear. A clear path from the bed to the door reduces bumping into furniture in the dark and breaking your foot.
Step 6: Design for calm
- Embrace a neutral colour palette and soft textures. Neutral walls, low-contrast bedding, and minimal décor help the room stay calm.
- Choose warm light bulbs. A single bedside lamp with a warm bulb sets a soothing and calming room lighting.
- Add one plant that likes being near humans and recycling our air quality.
Practical routines to keep clutter at bay
- Before bed, set a timer and put away items, straighten the nightstand and make sure there is nothing random on the floor. It’s quick, and you’ll wake to a tidy space.
- One-in, one-out rule: For every new item that comes into the bedroom (a book, a gadget, clothing), remove another item. This keeps accumulation under control.
- Daily laundry: Place dirty clothes in a hamper or in the washer and away from the bed to prevent piles from forming on the floor or chair.
Quick wins for Cleaning
- Replace a cluttered nightstand with a single tray and two essentials: a small lamp and a water bottle. Remove all other items.
- Install a cable management solution (cord clips, a shallow tray, or a small box) to hide or organize charging cables.
- Clear the floor around the bed on each side.
- Use dedicated closet storage or storage furniture to keep items that are required for bedroom storage.

