By Ayşe Gül Doğan Köse for Confidence Magazine
Every object in your home carries energy.
Every drawer, every corner, every untouched pile of “I’ll get to it later” holds a vibration and that vibration affects how you feel, think, and move through your day.

As the year draws to a close, there’s no better time to pause and look at your environment not as a collection of things, but as an extension of your wellbeing. The truth is simple: when your home is cluttered, your mind rarely feels clear.
The Home as a Reflection of the Self
Our homes are living reflections of our internal world. When life feels chaotic, clutter tends to accumulate. When we feel grounded, our surroundings tend to mirror that peace.
This is not about perfection — it’s about harmony. It’s about designing a space that supports the person you’re becoming, not the one you’ve outgrown.
Feng Shui and the Flow of Energy
Ancient traditions like Feng Shui remind us that our environments are not passive, they are energetic systems that influence mood, motivation, and even health.
The way energy, or chi, moves through your home determines how supported you feel in daily life.
- Blocked chi (created by clutter, sharp edges, or stagnant areas) can leave you feeling tired, stuck, or uninspired.
- Flowing chi (created by balance, light, and open space) restores your clarity and momentum.
A simple starting point: clear one surface every evening. It could be your bedside table, kitchen counter, or desk.
This small act invites flow, signalling to your nervous system that life doesn’t need to feel heavy, it can be spacious.

The Minimalist Myth
Minimalism isn’t about empty rooms or cold spaces, it’s about intentionality. It’s about surrounding yourself only with what adds beauty, meaning, or peace.
A minimalist home whispers, rather than shouts. It invites calm. It gives your eyes, your breath, and your mind somewhere to rest.
Ask yourself:
- Does this item add value or drain energy?
- Would I buy it again today?
- Does it represent the person I’m becoming?
When we hold onto things that no longer resonate — clothes from another life, paperwork from an old business, gifts we never liked but feel guilty discarding — we unconsciously anchor ourselves to old versions of who we were.
Decluttering becomes less about cleaning and more about releasing the past.
Designing for the Year Ahead
As you prepare for a new year, think of your home as a canvas for renewal.
- Introduce natural materials, wood, linen, stone, plants, to ground your space and soften your energy.
- Let light in. Open your blinds early. Light activates clarity and motivation.
- Create one sanctuary corner, a reading chair, a meditation nook, a place where you can retreat for five quiet minutes a day.
Your environment doesn’t need to be perfect, it just needs to feel like peace.
An Energetic Reset for 2026
This season, before you set resolutions or goals, clear space.
Make room, physically and energetically, for what’s next.
As you sort, release, and realign, whisper to yourself:
I’m not losing anything by letting go. I’m gaining space to breathe.
Because your home isn’t just where you live.
It’s where your next chapter begins.
Pull Out Quotes:
- “Every object in your home carries energy, the more intentional your space, the more peaceful your mind.”
- “Decluttering isn’t about tidiness, it’s about releasing the past to make space for who you’re becoming.”
Bio:
Ayşe Gül Doğan Köse is an art teacher, a mother of two, and a passionate advocate for self-expression through creativity. With a deep love for painting, she finds joy in translating emotion into colour, often spending her spare time in front of a canvas, allowing whatever is within her to flow freely. Through her teaching and her own artistic practice, Ayşe Gül invites others to slow down, connect inward, and let art speak the truths that words sometimes cannot.
Front Cover Strap Line:
Clearing Space, Finding Peace:
How the energy of your home can become your most powerful tool for calm and clarity this winter.
Content Page Blurb:
In this soulfully practical feature, our guest author explores how decluttering, energy flow, and minimalist design can transform more than your home, they can transform your mind.
