Digital clutter is not just apps and notifications. It is the charging cable on the nightstand, the tablet on the kitchen counter, the smart speaker in the bedroom. Physical placement determines behavioral default. This guide walks through your home room by room.
The Bedroom
Remove: Phone charger, television, work laptop, smart display.
Add: Mechanical alarm clock, lamp with warm bulb, stack of books, journal and pen.
The bedroom is for sleep and intimacy. Every device in this room is a potential 2 AM rabbit hole.
The Kitchen
Remove: Tablet used for recipes/entertainment during meals.
Add: Physical cookbook stand, printed recipe cards for your regulars.
Meals are one of the last communal analog rituals. Protect them.
The Living Room
Remove: Phone-from-couch charging station (the "reach zone").
Add: Board games, knitting basket, vinyl player or Bluetooth speaker (for music only — not podcasts during conversation).
The Home Office
Remove: Social media bookmarks, notification-enabled email, second monitor dedicated to "monitoring."
Add: Analog desk setup (see the analog desk setup guide for deep work), physical inbox tray, fountain pen for notes.
The Entryway
Add: A designated "phone bowl" — devices drop here when you arrive home. Not punishment. Transition ritual.
Your Phone (The Digital Room)
For the complete, step-by-step phone setup — including Focus modes, lock screen minimalism, and the physical placement habits that make it stick — see the minimalist phone setup guide. This guide is one piece of the broader Declutter cluster on phone habits and digital organization.
Quick starting points while you are here:
- Delete social media apps (use browser versions if needed — the friction helps)
- Grayscale mode ON
- Notifications OFF for everything except calls and messages from humans
- One screen of apps. No folders. No infinite scroll apps on the home screen.
Digital Declutter Checklist
Use this as a practical starting point for a full digital declutter (inspired by common practices that help people reduce overwhelm and reclaim attention):
- Delete or archive mindfully — unused apps, old accounts, duplicate files and photos.
- Close unused accounts and unsubscribe from mailing lists you no longer read.
- Organize documents and photos by theme or date; move to cloud or external backup and empty device folders.
- Create strong, unique passwords (use a manager) and enable two-factor where it matters.
- Tidy your desktop and downloads folder; empty trash and recycle bins.
- Take regular digital breaks — schedule them like any other appointment.
- Review and reduce: Which tools and notifications actually support the life you want?
Decluttering is not about owning less technology. It is about ensuring technology owns less of you.