What if the thing weighing you down isn’t your schedule or your closet… but an identity you’ve already outgrown?
Sometimes the heaviest clutter in our lives isn’t physical — it’s emotional.
In this episode of Chasing Brighter, Jessica and Kelly explore the idea of emotional clutter: the roles, identities, expectations, and coping strategies we once needed but may have already outgrown.
Because choosing real over perfect doesn’t always mean doing more.
Sometimes it means letting go of the version of yourself you worked really hard to become.
Together, Jessica and Kelly talk about how perfectionism, over-functioning, people-pleasing, and even certain dreams can quietly become emotional clutter over time. What once helped us survive may no longer help us thrive.
Jessica also introduces the concept of Internal Family Systems (IFS) in a simple, approachable way — exploring how different “parts” of us (like the overachiever, the fixer, or the over-analyzer) try to protect us. The goal isn’t to eliminate those parts, but to gently reorganize who’s driving the car so our compassionate, grounded self can lead.
Through personal stories about parenting, productivity, consumerism, and decision fatigue, Jessica and Kelly reflect on the roles and habits they are learning to release — and how doing so has created more space for presence, connection, and joy.
Because sometimes the most powerful reset isn’t organizing your life better.
It’s giving yourself permission to evolve.
✨ Want more inspiration for organizing your life this spring?
Sign up for the Chasing Brighter newsletter and take our free Organizational Style Quiz to discover simple systems that work for your real life.
👉 Visit https://chasingbrighter.com/newsletter/ and subscribe
Chapters
00:00 Choosing Real Over Perfect
05:31 Untangling Coping Strategies
10:39 Embracing Authenticity and Self-Confidence
16:47 Reflecting on Identity and Freedom
Connect With Us:
emotional clutter, letting go, personal growth, internal family systems, self-awareness, emotional health, identity, self-care, mental health, self-improvement