Rob and Brent each did a room-by-room walkthrough of their own houses and came back with the evidence: a 90-year-old silk top hat, a custom motorcycle jacket from the Harley days, a bin of coaxial cables, gold-toed bowling shoes, and three corporate suits that have not been worn in years. In this episode they sort it all into three categories — the memories worth keeping, the expensive stuff held hostage by sunk cost, and the things that just need to go — and dig into the fear and identity underneath why we hang on. The point isn’t minimalism. It’s making room for the version of yourself you’re becoming instead of storing the one you left behind.
Links, resources, books mentioned:
Topics we are covering in this episode:
A room-by-room inventory of the stuff we keep
The three categories: sentimental keepers, expensive maybe-somedays, and things to let go
Why old suits and ties carry the fear of going back to work
The sunk cost trap of expensive purchases
How giving things away can feel better than keeping them
Replacing old stuff with items that fit your future self



