The poorer the household, the more cluttered and messy it tends to be.


Various small shelves are nailed to the walls of each room, holding duplicate items.
In the kitchen, plastic bags and cloths are piling up, and there are more and more.
Unnecessary bowls, plates, chopsticks, and knives of different styles are placed on seldom-used shelves.
Drawers are filled with instruction manuals, expired medicines, and old bills and receipts.
Every crevice is stuffed with stuff.
In the freezer, there are frozen foods whose expiration dates are uncertain.
The wardrobe is filled with more and more unused clothes, and more boxes are bought to store clothes.
Unused or semi-defunct small appliances and electronic devices are piled in one area.
The bedding is accumulating, some distributed during old building demolitions years ago, some already yellowed and moldy, still stored under the bed.
The bedside table drawer is packed with unused charging cables, old phones, batteries, spare keys, and unpaired glasses lenses.
Samples of shampoo and toothpaste, disposable hotel toothbrushes are stacked in a basket, reluctant to throw away, waiting for “traveling trips.”
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