31 Things Most People FORGET to Declutter | minimalism + decluttering
Summary
TLDRIn this video, Marissa from Aisen Life shares 31 often overlooked categories of clutter that people tend to forget about. From overflowing memory boxes and old voicemails to decluttering goals, schedules, and finances, she covers a wide range of areas that contribute to clutter, both physically and mentally. Marissa also offers practical advice on organizing household items, digital clutter, and even habits like diet and finances. She encourages viewers to set goals, manage their schedules, and declutter for a more organized, stress-free life.
Takeaways
- 🗂️ Memory boxes should be decluttered regularly to ensure they contain only the most meaningful items.
- 📱 Voicemails can accumulate over time. Set aside time to review and delete old, unnecessary messages.
- 🎯 Revisit your goals periodically to prevent overwhelm and ensure you're focusing on what's most important.
- 🗓️ Declutter your schedule by identifying priorities and limits to avoid burnout from chronic busyness.
- 💰 Financial clutter, like unused subscriptions and old credit cards, can cost money. Regularly review and streamline your finances.
- 🛍️ Set deadlines for items you're trying to sell online. If they don't sell by a certain date, consider donating or discarding them.
- 🧴 Household cleaners, especially worn-out tools or unused supplies, should be decluttered and disposed of safely.
- 🎒 Regularly check your purse, briefcase, or backpack for clutter like old receipts and papers.
- 🍽️ Declutter your diet by reviewing unhealthy or unnecessary food habits and making healthier choices.
- 🧹 Clear out reusable bags, gardening supplies, pet toys, and other overlooked items that may be taking up space without being used.
Q & A
What is the purpose of a memory box, and why does Marissa suggest decluttering it?
-A memory box is used to store sentimental items or keepsakes that aren't displayed or used regularly but are kept for their emotional value. Marissa suggests decluttering it because it can become overfilled, and people may keep items that no longer hold as much meaning. Revisiting and sorting through these items helps ensure only the most special memories are kept.
Why does Marissa recommend decluttering voicemails?
-Marissa recommends decluttering voicemails because they can accumulate over time, especially if left unchecked. She realized she had old voicemails from as far back as 2018, many of which were no longer relevant. With voicemail transcription technology, it’s easy to skim through and decide what to delete.
How does Marissa suggest managing multiple goals to avoid feeling overwhelmed?
-Marissa suggests focusing on a small number of goals, ideally two or three at a time, to avoid burnout. Once progress has been made and habits established, new goals can be introduced. Trying to juggle too many goals at once can lead to feeling overwhelmed and unproductive.
What are Marissa’s two tips for decluttering your schedule?
-Marissa’s two tips for decluttering your schedule are: (1) Know your priorities, and (2) Know your limits. These steps help prevent chronic busyness and the burnout that can come from overcommitting.
What is financial clutter, and how can it be decluttered?
-Financial clutter refers to unnecessary subscriptions, apps, and accounts that people may be paying for without using. Marissa suggests regularly reviewing finances to cancel unused services, avoid late fees, and track spending to save money.
Why does Marissa suggest setting deadlines for items you’re trying to sell?
-Marissa suggests setting deadlines for selling items online because if things don’t sell within a certain time frame, it might be a sign that they aren't worth as much as expected. At that point, it’s better to donate or give them away rather than letting them take up space.
What does Marissa advise for decluttering household cleaners?
-Marissa advises going through cleaning supplies and disposing of items you no longer use or that are no longer functional. For chemical-based cleaners, she recommends safely disposing of them or donating them to a local organization in need.
What areas of the house does Marissa say people often forget to declutter?
-Marissa mentions areas like the top of the refrigerator, hard-to-reach cabinets, inside purses, briefcases, wallets, and the car. These spaces often collect unnoticed clutter that can build up over time.
How does Marissa suggest decluttering your diet?
-Marissa suggests decluttering your diet by eliminating things like sugar, artificial food dyes, or processed foods that don't align with your health goals. She also recommends being mindful of foods that could contribute to behavioral issues in children, such as those containing certain dyes.
What are some examples of digital clutter that Marissa recommends addressing?
-Marissa recommends decluttering digital items like smartphone apps, email inboxes, and digital photos. Organizing these items helps reduce stress and makes it easier to find what you need when using your devices.
Outlines
🧳 Decluttering Sentimental Memory Boxes
Marissa introduces her channel and the topic of decluttering, starting with memory boxes. She explains how people tend to accumulate sentimental items in memory boxes without revisiting them. This leads to an overflow, requiring new boxes, and suggests reassessing whether these items are still meaningful. The focus is on keeping only the most special items to avoid unnecessary clutter.
📞 Clearing Out Forgotten Voicemails
Marissa talks about procrastinating on tasks like checking voicemails, revealing she had 43 unread messages dating back to 2018. She explains how advancements in technology, such as voicemail transcription, make it easier to clear old messages. She emphasizes setting a timer to tackle this digital clutter in a quick, focused manner.
🎯 Decluttering Overwhelming Goals
Marissa discusses the clutter of setting too many goals at once. She stresses the importance of focusing on a limited number of significant goals to avoid burnout. She advises prioritizing two or three major goals, mastering habits, and then moving on to new objectives once progress is made.
📅 Decluttering Your Schedule
Building on the previous point, Marissa talks about decluttering schedules to prevent chronic busyness. She gives two tips: knowing your priorities and understanding your limits. If overwhelmed, she suggests removing non-essential items from the calendar to prevent burnout.
💸 Decluttering Your Finances
Marissa transitions to financial clutter, pointing out how subscriptions, unused credit cards, and disorganized finances can accumulate. She stresses the importance of regularly reviewing finances, cutting unnecessary expenses, and highlights a sponsor, Mint Mobile, as a way to save money on phone plans.
🛒 Decluttering Items You're Trying to Sell
Marissa discusses the accumulation of items people try to sell online but end up keeping for too long. She advises setting deadlines for these items and being willing to donate or dispose of them if they don't sell within a reasonable timeframe.
🧼 Decluttering Household Cleaners
Marissa explains how household cleaners, brushes, and sponges can build up without being used. She recommends safely disposing of chemical-based cleaners, offering alternatives like donating them or using local disposal services.
🎒 Decluttering Purses and Backpacks
Marissa advises checking daily-carry items like purses, backpacks, and briefcases for clutter. She shares her own experiences with clutter in her purse, encouraging viewers to regularly clean out these items to avoid frustration when searching for things.
💳 Decluttering Wallets
Marissa moves on to wallets, recommending the removal of business cards, expired credit cards, and other unnecessary items. She stresses the importance of properly disposing of private information, like shredded credit cards or old IDs.
🚗 Decluttering Inside Your Car
Marissa highlights the car as a forgotten space for clutter, especially for busy people like parents or those who travel for work. She advises taking time to remove trash and unnecessary items from the car regularly.
📃 Decluttering Hard-to-Reach Areas
Marissa talks about how areas like the top of the refrigerator and hard-to-reach cabinets are easy to forget but can collect unnecessary items. She suggests periodically checking these spaces for clutter and disposing of unused items.
🍴 Decluttering Your Diet
Marissa introduces the idea of 'decluttering' one's diet. She gives examples such as reducing sugar, removing fast food from your routine, or eliminating food dyes. She shares her own experiences of adjusting her family's diet for health reasons, like reducing artificial dyes for her children.
☕ Decluttering Kitchen Supplies
Marissa expands on kitchen clutter, mentioning unused spices, teas, unmatched containers, and spare parts from assembling furniture. She suggests focusing on areas like junk drawers and toolboxes, which can become cluttered with small, forgotten items.
🛍️ Decluttering Reusable Bags
Marissa talks about the tendency to collect too many reusable bags. She encourages viewers to go through their bags and replace worn-out ones with higher quality, long-lasting alternatives, sharing her own experience with durable canvas bags.
🐶 Decluttering Gardening and Pet Supplies
Although Marissa doesn't have personal experience with gardening or pets, she mentions how these items can accumulate quickly for others. She advises reviewing and decluttering gardening tools, pet toys, and accessories to reduce excess.
💊 Decluttering Vitamins and Supplements
Marissa covers vitamins and supplements, suggesting that people often forget to discard expired or unused ones. She shares her experience with a protein powder that went unused and expired, emphasizing regular checks of these items to prevent waste.
🔌 Decluttering Cables, Glasses, and More
Marissa lists other items people commonly forget to declutter, such as old cables, cords, prescription glasses, and cleaning rags. She encourages recycling or donating old glasses and regularly assessing how many cleaning supplies are really needed.
🖼️ Decluttering Digital and Physical Photos
Marissa mentions decluttering digital photos and email inboxes. She humorously acknowledges that many people, including herself, have overwhelming amounts of digital clutter and suggests organizing these areas for better efficiency.
📱 Decluttering Smartphone Apps
Marissa wraps up the list by discussing smartphone app clutter, describing how organizing apps can make finding things easier. She shares the contrast between her organized phone and her husband's disorganized one, highlighting the benefits of decluttering apps.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Decluttering
💡Memory boxes
💡Voicemails
💡Goals
💡Schedule
💡Finances
💡Selling items
💡Household cleaners
💡Diet
💡Smartphone apps
Highlights
Memory boxes are great for storing sentimental items, but it’s important to revisit them periodically and decide if all the memories are worth keeping.
Voicemails can be a hidden form of clutter. The speaker discovered 43 unplayed messages, some dating back to 2018, and recommends decluttering them using modern voicemail transcription tools.
People often forget to declutter their goals. Focusing on too many at once can lead to burnout, so prioritizing a few can help avoid overwhelm.
Over-scheduling can lead to burnout. Declutter your schedule by knowing your priorities and limits to avoid chronic busyness.
Finances can collect clutter too. Regularly decluttering your subscriptions, unused credit cards, and accounts helps avoid unnecessary expenses.
Things you try to sell can become clutter. If items aren’t selling after a certain deadline, it’s better to donate or dispose of them.
Household cleaners, old cleaning supplies, worn-out brushes, and empty spray bottles should be regularly decluttered and disposed of properly.
Check your daily carry items like purses, briefcases, and backpacks for clutter, such as receipts, old papers, or unused items.
Wallets can also accumulate clutter, such as expired cards and old business cards, which should be shredded or disposed of.
The top of the refrigerator and hard-to-reach cabinets often collect forgotten items, which should be checked and decluttered periodically.
Declutter your diet by eliminating unnecessary items, such as artificial food dyes, sugars, or unhealthy processed foods, to promote better health.
Reusable bags can pile up, so it’s important to limit how many you own and ensure they’re high-quality and long-lasting.
Gardening supplies and pet accessories can take over space. Regularly declutter these items to avoid unnecessary accumulation.
Vitamins and supplements should be reviewed regularly to discard expired or unused items, especially after they’re no longer needed for specific health conditions.
Digital clutter, like old photos, emails, and smartphone apps, can be overwhelming. Organizing and deleting unneeded digital content can improve productivity and peace of mind.
Transcripts
hey there friends and welcome to my
channnel my name is Marissa and this is
aisen life and today I wanted to share a
list of 31 surprising things that people
sometimes forget to declutter there are
certain categories of clutter that tend
to be more in your face for example if
you have too many clothes and you find
that they're spilling out of your
dresser and your wardrobe onto the floor
or you've got piles of paper that are
stacking up on flat surfaces but there
are other kinds of clutter that are less
obvious and easy to forget about until
something jogs your memory a bit and
speaking of jogging your memory I think
memory boxes are the perfect place to
start this list memory boxes are a
special box or container that you use to
store sentimental items or keep sakes
that you don't necessarily want to have
out on display or to use on a daily
basis but you still want to keep For The
Memories however a lot of times people
will just put stuff into the memory box
and and then that memory box overflows
then you need to get a new memory box
and then at some point you have to ask
yourself are all of these memories
really special enough that I want to
keep them in a memory box or might it be
time to revisit some of these things and
see if I still want to keep them
remember a memory box should be a space
for your most special items so if you
have just gotten into the habit of
putting things into your memory box
without returning to them and
questioning again it might be nice to go
back through those things and see if you
still want to hold on to them next up
number two on this list is voicemails
and I don't know about you but there are
just certain things that I hate doing
and therefore will procrastinate on
doing for a really long time for example
putting gas in my car can't stand it
making more than one trip to the car to
carry in the groceries I would rather
turn into the incredible holek and carry
it all in one go
and listening to voicemails also falls
on this list when I was making this
video it suddenly occurred to me that I
haven't checked my voicemails for a
really really long time and I went
through my voicemails and found that I
have 43 right now some of them dating
back as far as
2018 what's interesting is that I found
that technology has now Advanced so far
that you can now you see a text note
that transcribes the content of the
voicemail into a little paragraph for me
to read so I can just quickly read
through that scan through the
information and see if it's something I
need to follow up on or delete it and
let it go and let's face it if it was
something from 2018 or 2019 what are the
chances that I'm going to need to follow
up on that I'm not sure if your phone
has this feature or not but if it does
that really makes it a breeze to go
through and delete old and unimportant
voicemails this is the perfect type of
clutter where you can just set a timer
for 10 or 15 15 minutes and do a really
focused decluttering session and if you
are anything like me you're literally
going to be clearing out years worth of
clutter number three on this list of
things that people forget to declutter
is their goals I'm a huge fan of goal
setting but I also know that I only have
so much time energy and attention that I
can give to each goal let's say that you
have goals to declutter your entire
house and you want to start an exercise
routine to lose 20 lbs and you want to
find a new job because you hate the one
that you're at and you're thinking of
starting a side hustle so you can make
an extra $1,000 a month or maybe you
want to get better at meal planning and
feeding your family healthy lunches and
dinners I think all of us can agree that
these are fantastic and potentially
life-changing goals but I know that for
myself as a busy mom anytime I try to
focus on maybe more than two or three
major goals at a time I quickly can get
burned out and overwhelmed
and it's like the quote goes that says
you can do anything but not everything
and so if you have a lot of big goals
for you yourself you might find it
helpful to try to tackle a small set
amount of goals and then once you've
made progress towards and mastered the
habits that will lead you to those goals
then you can start thinking of adding
new goals into your list number four
kind of goes hand inand with number
three and that's your schedule and I
have two tips to help you declutter your
schedule and that is to number one know
your priorities and number two know your
limits chronic busyness and over
scheduling can also lead to overwhelm
and burnout and if you're at that point
you might need to start removing items
from your calendar and to-do list
another clutter category that's easy to
forget is money clutter AKA your
finances and just like people can
collect duplicate spoons or spatulas in
their kitchen we can also collect
duplicate apps or subscriptions that we
don't use much but that still cost us
money like having multiple streaming
services where you're paying for Disney
Plus Hulu and Netflix or what about
credit cards or old accounts that you no
longer use but never bothered to close
and not only that disorganized finances
can also cost you in other ways for
example forgetting to pay your bills on
time resulting in expensive late fees or
overpaying for things that you could
find cheaper elsewhere because you don't
track your spending and have no no idea
how much stuff costs that's why I've
made it a habit to declutter my finances
just as regularly as I do the physical
clutter in my home and look for ways to
eliminate or trim back on expenses
whenever
possible and one great way to do that is
by switching your phone plan over to
Mint mobile who I've partnered with to
bring you today's
video one of my biggest Financial pet
peeves is getting nickel and dimed by
huge corporations that are overcharging
me already which is what happened at my
last phone plan at Big Wireless but with
mint mobile you can get unlimited talk
and text plans with the exact same speed
coverage data and access to the nation's
largest 5G Network that you can get at
Big wireless companies for as low as $15
a month I love mint so much that I've
been recommending them to tons of people
since I joined including on this channel
and it seems like you guys love them too
because every time I talk about mint I
always get comments from people raving
about mint and how much money they've
saved after switching to them which
always makes me happy to hear another
thing to love about mint is that
switching to them is super easy thanks
to their digital eim cards and you can
get signed up and activated immediately
right from the comfort of your very own
home so if you're sick of overpaying for
your phone plan why not take 15 minutes
out of your day to switch to mttmobile
for big savings and right now new
customers can get any plan for just $15
a month when they purchase 3 months or
more and that includes the unlimited
plan which is normally $30 a month so if
you're ready to make the switch head to
trym
mobile.com tozen lifee or click the
special link that I've shared down in
the description box below to start
saving and thanks again to me for
partnering with me to bring you today's
video number six on this list is things
you're trying to sell whether that's
your clothes on Poshmark or things like
Collectibles or knickknacks on eBay and
I know it can feel good to get a little
bit of money back and send those things
on to a new home by selling them online
but if you find that you have things
that are sitting for months and months
and are just not getting sold at some
point you have to be willing to accept
that maybe these things weren't as worth
as much as you thought they were and
it's time to let them go and you can
either donate them or get rid of them in
some other way maybe someone would be
willing to take it for free in a buy
nothing group so if you're someone who
tries to sell their things online
I would strongly recommend that you put
deadlines on your clutter and if it
doesn't sell by the end of that deadline
then it's okay to get rid of it another
clutter category that's easy to forget
is household cleaners and that can be
everything from cleaning supplies that
you don't use and know you never will or
brushes that are worn out sponges that
are no longer usable or spray bottles
that don't work I will say that when it
comes to household cleaners you want
want to make sure that you're safely
disposing of them if you don't want them
and they are chemical based so you could
try giving them away say in a buy
nothing group or to a local organization
that might be in need of cleaning
supplies or I will also make sure to
link to a website down below where you
can look by ZIP code in your area and
see what places accept things like
hazardous chemicals and other kinds of
items that might be dangerous to just
throw away number eight eight on this
list is purses briefcases and backpacks
depending on if you're a mom or maybe
you're a student or you're a dad that
has to take a briefcase to work get into
a habit of checking inside your daily
carries and see if there's any clutter
that's collected in there because it is
so frustrating when you need to find
something in your purse or your backpack
or whatever you're using and you have to
dig through a ton of stuff like a dog
digging in dirt because it's so full of
clutter as a side note don't feel too
bad if this point is making you feel
called out because my purse literally
used to look like Allison's from The
Breakfast Club so I want you to know
there is hope what is all that stuff do
you always carry this much in your
bag yeah so for example I know that just
going through my purse right now from
yesterday I've got some schedule paper
that I can recycle there's a receipt
that I forgot to take out out and put
into the budget that needs to be done
and things like old Post-it notes that I
need to trash so take a look through
those kinds of items and see if you have
anything inside that you can quickly and
easily clear out and then kind of going
along with purses you can also check
inside your wallet and see if there's
anything that you need to declutter in
there yesterday I got a business card
but I know the person's contact
information I can find it easily on
Google if I needed to so I don't need to
to keep this card and then another thing
you can look for while you're inside
your wallet is things like old expired
cards that's something else that people
forget about like say credit cards which
should be shredded please dispose of
your private information properly or
things like for example expired driver's
license so I had to get an updated
Illinois driver's license because mine
expired I still have my old New Jersey
one so now I need to dispose of this
properly the inside of your car is
another clutter Zone that easy to forget
especially if you're a mom that's
driving a lot of kids around or you have
to travel for work and maybe you have
stuff in your car for that the inside of
your car can get very out of control
very quickly so don't forget to
sometimes take the time to just drag up
a trash can maybe into the garage and
get some of that trash out of there
another area that's easy to forget about
is the top of the refrigerator now this
is something that I don't struggle with
as much anymore but it used to be that
when I would bring home papers from
school or maybe kids artwork A lot of
times I would just slap it here on top
of the refrigerator and then forget
about it because most of us aren't tall
enough that we're going to be above and
of course the refrigerator very loudly
turns on right while I'm talking great
most of us aren't tall enough that we're
going to be above the refrigerator and
able to look down and see what's on top
of the refrigerator so if you haven't
checked on top of your refrigerator in a
while maybe get up there and take a look
around and see if there's any any
paperwork or artwork or maybe tools that
I've kind of collected up on top of
there and clear them out and then if you
have any hard-to-reach cabinets like the
ones that we have up here above the
refrigerator this is something that I
can't get to without a chair and so when
you have cabinets like this those can be
spaces that very easily collect clutter
because maybe you take something that
you don't really use and you just shove
it up in there and forget about it
forget about it forget about what so
make sure to go through those kinds of
cabinets every once in a while just to
see what's inside of there and if you're
finding things that haven't been used
for six months a year or more maybe you
can clear those things out of those
cabinets and get back some of that space
another place that you might not have
considered decluttering is your diet for
example let's say that you want to make
some lifestyle changes and be healthier
and you want to reduce or eliminate
sugar from your diet or try to increase
your salt intake especially if you've
been diagnosed with particular chronic
illnesses or maybe you've gotten into
the habit of eating fast food rather
than home-cooked meals more often than
not and something else that you can even
consider that I'm relatively new to
figuring out is artificial food dyes in
your food so I didn't even realize this
was much of a thing until I came across
a few articles recently after moving
back to the United States how food D in
our food can contribute to behavior
avoral problems in children who have
hypers sensitivity to these things and I
know that my kids have food allergies
they seem to have some sensitivities to
certain kinds of foods so I've been
working to eliminate some of these food
dieses in our foods for example yellow
number five I switched our brand of
pickles to one that specifically says
that it does not contain yellow five
food dye so that's just some examples of
how you can declutter your diet and I'm
sure that there's plenty of other ways
other things that you might forget about
decluttering in your kitchen include
things like spices and condiments tea
and coffee supplies especially if you
didn't enjoy the taste of teas which I'm
so guilty of or things like unmatched
containers maybe you're missing the lid
or the bottom another thing that I know
that can collect in the kitchen
especially in junk drawer areas are
things like spare parts like for example
when we were putting together some
furniture for our home we ended up with
multiple pairs of Allen wrenches do we
need so many gon wrenches that are in
exactly the same size probably not so
keep an eye out for things like spare
parts and accessories and places like
junk drawers or in cabinets or maybe in
toolboxes shoved out of sight out of
mind and see if there's anything in
those areas that you can declutter as
well number 19 is one that I'm totally
guilty of as well and that's reusable
bags because they're just so useful and
they can be so cute and come in so many
different patterns like this one is one
of the first ones that we got when we
moved back to Chicago but you don't need
so many reusable bags and if you choose
bags that you know are higher quality
and will last a long time that means
that you'll be less likely to have to
replace them so often I know in the past
in Germany I would buy bags that are
kind of like this plasticky kind of I
don't know what to call it material and
it would get worn out and start peeling
off so moving back to the USA I got
these canvas bags that hold up to I
think 85 lbs and they are really really
sturdy and they're really thick high
quality Fabric and I know that these
will last a long time they're also
washable with which helps as well so I
would say it you know go through your
reusable bags and if you've got some
that are worn out and need to be tossed
the next time consider replacing them
with something like this and I will make
sure to put the link down in the
description box below if you're
interested in these particular bags
because these are something that are
really really practical and I know will
be able to last a long long time two
more areas that can be easy to forget
about decluttering our gardening
supplies and pet toys and accessories
and this is something that I don't have
a lot of personal experience with
considering that I don't Garden nor do
we have pets but I have friends who are
really into these things and I know that
they say that they can really take over
their lives with how much stuff that
they need for gardening or for their
pets I know when I was growing up we
have lots of pets and we would buy
things like dog beds and cat towers that
were like really fancy and multi-level
and lots of tunnels and things for our
cats and then all they wanted to do was
just go lay on the vent to soak up the
hot or cool air depending on what was
coming out of it at that time so
definitely go through things like your
gardening supplies your pet toys and
accessories and see if there's anything
that's worn out enough to toss or maybe
something that doesn't get used and you
can get rid of it number 22 we have
vitamins and supplements and I know that
there's been times in the past where
maybe we were taking a vitamin to help
with a certain problem like when we
lived in China I was B vitamin B
deficient and I had to take vitamin B
supplements but then no longer needed it
after that or there's been times where
my husband has started protein powder
but then found that he didn't like the
taste and so he just set it in the back
of the cabinet and just left it alone
until the point where then it expired
and we had half a huge container of
protein powder that was no longer usable
and we had to toss so make sure to
regularly go through your vitamins and
supplements and see if there's anything
that you're not using or that maybe
didn't work as you wanted it to and you
could get rid of I'm going to have to
head out soon to pick my kids up from
German school so we're going to move
through the rest of this list a little
bit more quickly number 23 cables cords
and adapters number 24 old prescription
glasses or contacts and things like old
prescription glasses there are places
that you can go and give those away so
that someone else can use them number 25
cleaning rags I mean how many cleaning
rags does one person actually need
number 26 jewelry especially if you have
jewelry that's broken or missing pieces
or a pair maybe you could get rid of
that 27 crafts or hobby supplies that
you no longer like to use or that you
never got around to using it all number
28 old batteries number 29 digital
photos number 30 your email inbox how
many do you have I don't even want to
mention how many I have in my inbox and
number 31 on this list is smartphone
apps and I always say that this is one
of those clutter categories where I am
so so glad that I decluttered and
organized nicely because it has been
such a GameChanger in helping me be able
to find what I need on my phone because
I know exactly where everything is and
it's so nice whenever I have to go and
look on my husband's phone to try to
pull up Google Maps or read him a
message if we're driving or something I
can never find the app that I'm looking
for because his phone is a mess so if
you also want help organizing your phone
and cluttering your smartphone apps make
sure to go check out this video or I'll
see you next week until then take care
bye-bye
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