It’s frustrating opening your closet every day and feeling like you hate all of your options because nothing fits quite right.
The struggle of “I have nothing to wear” is real for so many of us, and when you’re in between sizes, it can feel even worse. You know decluttering would probably help, but you don’t want to get rid of things that might fit again soon.
But here’s the truth: keeping clothes you love that don’t fit right now in your closet isn’t motivating—it’s discouraging.
As I’m thick in the middle (pun intended) of postpartum right now, I get this on a very real level. I thought maybe—even if all my tops needed to be nursing-friendly—I’d at least be back in my old pants by now. Spoiler alert: that hasn’t happened yet.
But I’m also not getting rid of all my pre-pregnancy clothes that don’t fit… because I’m (hopefully 🤞🏻) going to wear them again.
Maybe you’re not postpartum, but your weight has fluctuated and you have pieces you want to wear, you just can’t right now. Same situation, different reason.
Think of Your Clothes Like Employees
You hired your clothes to do a job, and that job is to make you feel good. End stop.
Anything that doesn’t meet that basic requirement should get fired from your wardrobe.
And especially anything that makes you feel bad about yourself? That has no place in your closet.
1. If It Doesn’t Currently Fit, It Needs to Go (From Your Closet)
I’m not saying you have to get rid of it forever. But it does need to be removed from the space where you’re choosing your daily outfits.
Keep your closet reserved for clothes that fit your body right now. That’s how you reduce decision fatigue and actually enjoy getting dressed again.
Store the “not right now” items nearby so they’re still accessible when you need them.
These types of storage bins make it easy to have items accessible when you’re ready for them:
Low-profile under-bed storage containers
Vacuum storage bags for bulkier items like sweaters
2. Evaluate What’s Left
Now look at what’s still in your closet. Do you actually have enough pieces to create multiple outfits?
The goal here is flexibility, items that can be mixed, matched, and worn multiple ways. Think of your wardrobe like puzzle pieces.
Start pairing things together:
What outfits come together easily?
What feels like a stretch every time you try to wear it?
If something doesn’t go with anything else, pause and ask:
Do I actually like this?
Would I buy this again today?
If the answer is no, it’s probably time to let it go.
3. Identify What’s Missing
This is where you get strategic. You probably don’t need a whole new wardrobe, but you might need a few key pieces to make what you already have work better.
Maybe that looks like:
A pair of pants that works with multiple tops
A layering piece that pulls outfits together
Basics that actually fit your current body
Focus on how something fits, not the number on the tag.
You might have to buy a size that makes you cringe a little at first, and that’s okay. The goal is to have clothes you can wear comfortably right now, without constantly adjusting, tugging, or feeling restricted.
Jeans, especially, can be tricky when your weight has fluctuated. If traditional denim isn’t working, try a pair with a stretchy waistband. And no, these aren’t the stiff “mom jeans” you’re picturing. There are genuinely good options now that look like regular jeans but feel way better.
A few well-fitting basics can completely change how your wardrobe functions.
Here are some great places to start:
Pull-on jeans with stretch (look like real denim, feel like sanity)
A versatile cardigan (easy layering, flexible sizing)
Basic tees (that don’t break the bank)
Final Thought
Be kind to yourself.
Weight fluctuates for so many reasons. There’s no need to beat yourself up about it. Embrace where you are right now.
Keeping clothes in your closet that don’t fit isn’t helpful, it’s mentally draining. And while buying a larger size might feel uncomfortable, constantly wearing things that are too tight or don’t fit properly feels worse.
The goal isn’t the size on the label.
The goal is having clothes that fit your body and make you feel good.
If you’re constantly adjusting your outfit or feeling uncomfortable, those clothes aren’t serving you. You deserve better than that.
Think of this as a phase. It might not be forever, but you still deserve to feel good getting dressed today.
And it starts with only keeping what fits in your closet right now.
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