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10 Things You Should Delete From Your Life Right Now (Your Future Self Will Thank You!)

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Ansh Sharma

August 22, 2025

5 min read

10 Things You Should Delete From Your Life Right Now (Your Future Self Will Thank You!)

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Look, we all love a good spring cleaning session, but what if I told you the real clutter isn't just hiding under your bed? Sometimes the messiest parts of our lives aren't the overflowing junk drawers (though, yeah, those need attention too). They're the invisible habits, toxic relationships, and digital demons that are quietly sabotaging our peace of mind.

After diving deep into what people are actually struggling with in 2025 – from Reddit confessions to mental health research – I've compiled the ultimate "delete list." Think of this as your life's spam folder, except instead of questionable emails about miracle weight loss, we're talking about the stuff that's actually weighing you down.

Ready to hit the ultimate delete button? Let's go!

1. Your Doom-Scrolling Addiction (Yes, All 4+ Hours of It)

We need to talk about your phone. Research has shown a strong correlation between excessive screen time and mental health issues such as depression, anxiety, and loneliness. That "quick Instagram check" that turns into a three-hour rabbit hole of watching people make smoothie bowls? Yeah, that's gotta go.

The Reality Check: If you're spending more time looking at other people's highlight reels than living your actual life, it's time for a digital diet. Start with phone-free meals and see how revolutionary it feels to actually taste your food.

2. People Who Make You Feel Small

You know that person who somehow always makes you question your life choices? The one who responds to your good news with "Oh, that's nice" in the same tone they'd use to comment on burnt toast? Delete them. Not from your phone (well, maybe that too), but from your inner circle.

Life's too short to spend it around people who dim your shine. Surround yourself with cheerleaders, not critics wearing friendship masks.

3. The Need to Be "On" 24/7

That constant pressure to be productive, optimized, and crushing your goals every waking moment? Exhausting, right? Decluttering mastermind Shira Gill lists her top 18 things to remove in 2025 for a less cluttered, yet more abundant, life, and this hustle culture mentality is definitely on the chopping block.

Give yourself permission to be human. Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is absolutely nothing.

4. Your Old Digital Footprint (Yeah, Those Cringe Posts From 2019)

Speaking of digital detox, when's the last time you actually looked at your social media history? Protect your privacy, remove old posts and comments automatically, and maintain control of your digital footprint in 2025. Those political rants, subtweets about your ex, and photos from your questionable fashion phase aren't doing you any favors.

Take an afternoon to curate your online presence. Your professional future self will send a thank-you card.

5. Perfectionism (The Joy Killer)

Perfectionism isn't about having high standards – it's about having impossible ones. It's the voice that says "Why bother if it won't be perfect?" and then proceeds to paralyze you into doing nothing at all.

Here's a wild idea: What if "good enough" was actually... good enough? What if done was better than perfect? Revolutionary, I know.

6. The Comparison Game

Stop measuring your behind-the-scenes against everyone else's highlight reel. That influencer's "effortless morning routine"? There's a whole production team behind that 30-second video. Your messy, imperfect life is not a failure – it's real life.

Unfollow accounts that make you feel inadequate. Follow accounts that inspire you to be yourself, not to be someone else.

7. Saying Yes to Everything (Even When You Want to Scream No)

That committee you don't care about? That social event that makes you want to fake your own death? The friend's cousin's wedding where you know exactly two people? It's okay to say no. In fact, it's necessary.

Your time and energy aren't unlimited resources. Stop treating them like they are.

8. Apps That Hijack Your Brain

Over time, I realized I wasn't making meaningful progress. After deleting Duolingo, I turned to slower-paced resources – this person's experience with deleting attention-grabbing apps is so relatable. That notification-heavy app that interrupts your thoughts every five minutes? Gone. The game that's "just for five minutes" but somehow steals your entire evening? Deleted.

If an app makes you feel worse about yourself or steals your attention without giving value back, it doesn't deserve space on your phone.

9. Holding Grudges (The Mental Clutter Champion)

That argument from 2022 that you're still replaying in your head? That person who wronged you and doesn't even remember it happened? Holding onto grudges is like keeping a garbage bag in your living room – it stinks up the whole space.

Forgiveness isn't about them; it's about freeing up mental real estate for better things. Like remembering where you put your keys.

10. The Version of Yourself You Think You "Should" Be

Maybe you're not a morning person who does yoga at 5 AM. Maybe you don't want to be an entrepreneur. Maybe you actually like your 9-to-5 and don't want to "hustle harder." That's not just okay – it's perfect.

Delete the person you think you should be and embrace the person you actually are. She's pretty amazing, even if she drinks coffee at 3 PM and has strong opinions about pineapple on pizza.

The Plot Twist: What Happens After You Delete

Here's what nobody tells you about the life declutter: at first, it feels weird. Like when you finally clean out that junk drawer and suddenly you have all this empty space and don't know what to do with it.

But then? Magic happens. You have more time for things that actually matter. Your mental space clears up. You start sleeping better because you're not doom-scrolling until midnight. You have deeper conversations because you're not constantly distracted.

Most importantly, you start living your actual life instead of managing the chaos that was masquerading as one.

Your Homework (If You're Ready)

Pick ONE thing from this list. Just one. Start there. Maybe it's unfollowing that account that makes you feel inadequate, or maybe it's finally saying no to that commitment that's been draining your soul.

Small changes compound into big transformations. You don't need to overhaul your entire existence overnight (that's the perfectionism talking again).

Remember: deleting isn't about restriction – it's about making space for what truly matters. And you, my friend, deserve a life that feels as good on the inside as it looks on the outside.

Now stop reading self-improvement articles and go live your beautifully imperfect, newly decluttered life. The world needs more of the real you, not the stressed-out, overwhelmed version you've been carrying around.

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