Why Your Garage Feels So Overwhelming (and How to Finally Make Progress) You know the feeling…
You pull into the driveway after a long day, open the garage, and instantly feel that weight:
👉 "Ugh… I need to deal with that."
And then?
You don't.
Not because you don't care.
Not because you're lazy.
But because garages are a completely different kind of clutter challenge.
In this episode, Katy breaks down why garages feel so hard—and gives you simple, realistic strategies to finally create momentum (without dumping everything into your driveway).
KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODE: 1) Your garage feels hard because it is different from every other space Unlike your kitchen or closet, your garage:
- doesn't feel urgent
- holds multiple life categories at once
- contains heavier, more emotional decisions
- often mixes your stuff and your partner's
It's not just clutter… it's:
- baby gear
- old memories
- tools
- seasonal items
- "someday" decisions
👉 No wonder your brain wants to shut the door and walk away
2) The real problem isn't the stuff—it's the lack of decisions
Most garages aren't stuck because of volume
They're stuck because of indecision
That box you keep moving?
You already know it's there
👉 You just haven't decided what to do with it
Katy introduces a powerful concept:
Pre-deciding
Before you even enter the garage, decide:
- What stays
- What goes
- What your filter will be
Example:
- "Photos without people → toss"
- "Photos with people → scan and keep digitally"
👉 Clarity creates momentum
3) Define what your garage is actually for (this changes everything)
Before decluttering anything, ask:
👉 What does our garage need to support our life right now?
Because your life has changed:
- kids grow
- hobbies shift
- seasons change
But your garage?
It's often stuck in the past
👉 The goal isn't a Pinterest garage
👉 The goal is a garage that works for your current life
4) Think in categories, not individual items
Trying to decide item-by-item = instant burnout
Instead, zoom out:
- sports equipment
- tools
- holiday decor
- lawn + garden
- donation pile
👉 Categories help your brain process faster and make better decisions
5) Use "physical boundaries" to reduce conflict and chaos
This is a game-changer
Every category gets a defined space:
- a bin
- a shelf
- a wall section
- a zone
Why this works:
✔️ It creates natural limits
✔️ It reduces arguments ("your stuff vs my stuff")
✔️ It supports both calm and function
✔️ It removes the need to constantly "police" the space
👉 The boundary becomes the rule—not you
6) Don't buy bins first (seriously… don't)
It feels productive
But it's actually a trap
Buying storage before decluttering =
👉 just organizing clutter into prettier containers
Instead:
- Define your space
- Decide what stays
- Then buy what you need
YOUR ACTION STEP THIS WEEK Keep it simple
👉 Pick ONE category in your garage
Then:
- define its purpose
- give it a physical boundary
- decide what stays
That's it
👉 You don't need to finish the whole garage to start making progress