At some point I got tired of opening my closet and feeling like I had nothing to wear despite having a closet full of clothes. Does that sound familiar? Because I think it's one of the most common and most frustrating feelings there is.
The problem wasn't that I didn't have enough. The problem was that I had too much of the wrong stuff and not enough of the right stuff. Too many impulse buys. Too many things that looked good in the store under that lighting. Not enough things that actually worked together.
So I did something kind of scary: I started over. Not by throwing everything away, but by getting really honest about what I actually wore versus what just took up space.
Here's what I learned.
The items that earn their closet space
These are the things I reach for constantly. The ones that work with almost everything else I own. If you're building a wardrobe from scratch or trying to make sense of what you have, these are the pieces I'd start with.
What I actually stopped buying
Trend pieces that only work one way. If I pick something up and can only picture it with one specific outfit, I put it back. It might be cute but it's going to sit in my closet and make me feel bad every time I see it.
Anything that needs to be dry cleaned. I love the idea of silk blouses and structured wool trousers. I do not love the reality of my life, which involves forgetting things at the dry cleaner for three months.
Anything that only fits if I stand perfectly still. Life is too short.
The mindset shift that changed everything
I stopped thinking about my wardrobe as a collection of individual items and started thinking about it as a system. Does this work with what I already own? Does it fit my actual life (not my aspirational life where I attend fancy events regularly)? Will I still like this in two years?
When you ask those three questions before buying, you buy less. But what you do buy you actually wear. And that feels a lot better than a full closet and nothing to wear.
One last thing
Your style doesn't have to look like anyone else's. The goal isn't to dress like a Pinterest board (though Pinterest is great for inspiration). The goal is to figure out what feels like you and build around that. Everything else is just noise.