![]() "It’s important to look at your home through the lens of, 'Whoa, my whole life has led me up to this point,'" Blom says, adding that no one should feel ashamed if it's "a bit over-cluttered." "But it’s time to update your home to your present needs. In The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, artist Margareta Magnusson, with Scandinavian humor and wisdom, instructs readers to embrace minimalism. During your lifetime, your needs change." In episode seven of "Swedish Death Cleaning" titled "The Würst of Times," Svenson and Engström help a man declutter his home. Engström says it's important to look where you are in life and "what serves you, here and now. The three, however, do offer practical advice throughout the series. "We implement something that we think that we can share with anyone." might ignite your own inner voice, your own compass, instead of having some authority or expert telling you what to do because we don’t really do that in the show," he explains. "If you watch all the episodes - see all the people and different destinies - (then) that. She has five children and lives in Stockholm. ![]() Margareta graduated from Beckman’s College of Design and her art has been exhibited in galleries from Hong Kong to Singapore. Born in Sweden, she has lived all over the world. ![]() Designer Johan Svenson adds that the show isn't meant to be exactly a template or manual to the viewer. Margareta Magnusson is, in her own words, aged between 80 and 100. ![]()
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