Kim Sneath, Home Stager/Professional Organizer

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Kim Sneath, Home Stager/Professional Organizer Online Home Staging Consults & Sessions. Check out how we do it at kimsneath.com See my website for more info and to book directly in my calendar.

I offer Home Staging Consultations locally in the Greater Moncton area as well as virtually online. www.kimsneath.com

✨ Website Refresh Announcement ✨I’ve made things simpler and easier for you!My website just got a refresh, and it’s now ...
21/04/2026

✨ Website Refresh Announcement ✨

I’ve made things simpler and easier for you!

My website just got a refresh, and it’s now more streamlined to help realtors and homeowners quickly book and schedule online home staging support. If you’re getting ready to list your home, you can now access step-by-step guidance and expert recommendations—all online with me!

With 20 years of experience helping people prepare their homes for the market, I’ve designed this to make the process clear, efficient, and stress-free.

Take a look and let me know what you think! 💻🏡 kimsneath.com

Yes 👍
11/01/2026

Yes 👍

stewardship transforms spaces more than square footage ever will. is there nuance? sure. but the principle remains: if you can’t steward well what you have now, it will br no different when you have what you think you want.

05/01/2026

Lighting

If post holiday clutter is weighing you down, working with a professional organizer can provide direction, focus & suppo...
05/01/2026

If post holiday clutter is weighing you down, working with a professional organizer can provide direction, focus & support to help you move forward.

I have limited availability in person in Greater Moncton until January 21st.

Reach out now to find out more…

Need professional organizing help? DM me to discuss. Available in Greater Moncton until Jan. 20th. ✨
01/12/2025

Need professional organizing help? DM me to discuss.
Available in Greater Moncton until Jan. 20th. ✨

Look for meaning, not consumption. ✨
22/11/2025

Look for meaning, not consumption. ✨

There exists a peculiar mathematics to possession: each object we acquire promises to add meaning to our lives, yet somehow the sum total often equals less than we began with. In the crowded apartments of Tokyo, where space is measured not in square feet but in precious increments of breathing room, Fumio Sasaki discovered this paradox and chose to solve it through subtraction.

His book "Goodbye, Things" reads like a meditation on negative space, exploring how the deliberate removal of objects can create room for something far more valuable: the fullness of presence itself. Through Sasaki's lens, minimalism becomes not an aesthetic choice but a philosophical practice, a way of curating existence down to its most essential elements.

What emerges from these pages is not a manual for stark living spaces, but a blueprint for emotional architecture. Here, in the careful consideration of what to keep and what to release, lies a profound examination of how we relate to the material world and, by extension, to ourselves.

1. The Burden of Potential
Sasaki reveals how objects carry the weight of unrealized possibilities. That guitar gathering dust whispers of the musician you might have become; the stack of books reproaches with their unread pages; the exercise equipment stands as monument to abandoned aspirations. Each possession becomes a repository of potential selves, creating a psychological burden that extends far beyond physical clutter. The liberation comes not from acquiring items that align with our aspirations, but from releasing the pressure to become all the people our possessions suggest we could be.

2. The Illusion of Preparedness
Modern accumulation operates on the principle of "just in case." We stockpile items against imagined future needs, creating an illusion of preparedness that actually diminishes our ability to respond to real circumstances. Sasaki demonstrates how this hoarding mentality stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of security. True preparedness, he suggests, lies not in the accumulation of things but in the cultivation of adaptability. A mind uncluttered by the management of excess possessions becomes more resourceful, more creative in finding solutions with whatever is actually available.

3. The Economics of Attention
Every object in our environment makes a subtle claim on our attention. Sasaki explains how our possessions function as a distributed cognitive load, with each item requiring some quantum of mental energy to acknowledge, categorize, and maintain. The cumulative effect creates a background noise of decision fatigue that we rarely recognize but constantly experience. By reducing the number of objects competing for attention, the remaining items gain clarity and significance. A single beautiful cup becomes more meaningful than a cupboard full of mismatched mugs.

4. The Democracy of Enough
Minimalism, as Sasaki presents it, is not about deprivation but about discovering sufficiency. There exists a point (different for each person but discoverable through practice) where having less creates the experience of having more. This phenomenon transcends simple mathematics and enters the realm of perception and satisfaction. The practice becomes one of constant calibration: recognizing when enough becomes too much, when addition begins to subtract from overall well-being, transforming consumption from an automatic response to a conscious choice.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/4poByYg

Exactly! 👍
21/11/2025

Exactly! 👍

When tidying up, it’s important to keep your mind and body focused on what brings you joy✨Instead of asking yourself what to get rid of, I recommend focusing on joy and finding the things that speak to your heart, and naturally, you’ll know what to let go of with gratitude in a positive way❤️

06/11/2025

REALTORS

Send a message to learn more

DM to book
08/10/2025

DM to book

Yes, I’m still offering in-person professional organizing services. To inquire, text or call 506-588-9055.
19/08/2025

Yes, I’m still offering in-person professional organizing services. To inquire, text or call 506-588-9055.

25/06/2025

When the homeowner has Japanese touches inside…you bring it outside.

This lovely oasis of calm in the city (Dieppe) used to be a deck to forget or a place to store more stuff.

Not now! Coming to market tomorrow!!

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