This kind of headline is partly based on practical advice and partly on superstition/viral storytelling. There’s no universal rule that says you must throw away specific belongings after someone dies, but there are four categories of items people are often advised to be careful with—for emotional, legal, or safety reasons.
Here’s a grounded, real-world breakdown:
1. Expired or unsafe personal items
Things like medications, medical supplies, or old food should always be discarded.
- Especially prescription drugs (they can be dangerous if misused)
- Open or expired health products
2. Highly personal hygiene items
Some items are usually not kept for health reasons:
- Toothbrushes, razors, used cosmetics
- Anything that can carry bacteria or is meant for personal bodily use
These are typically not “memorial items” and are safely thrown away.
3. Financial or legal clutter (if not needed)
Not everything should be kept automatically:
- Old receipts, expired documents, duplicate paperwork
But important items like wills, property papers, and IDs should obviously be preserved or handled legally.
4. Items that cause emotional distress
This is less about rules and more about mental well-being:
- Objects strongly tied to grief that make healing harder
- Things that repeatedly trigger distress or trauma
Some people keep everything, others keep only a few meaningful objects. Both are valid.
Important reality check
There is no cultural, religious, or psychological rule that says you “should never keep” specific belongings of someone who died. In fact, many people find comfort in keeping:
- Clothing
- Jewelry
- Photos
- Personal keepsakes
It’s very individual and depends on grief, culture, and emotional readiness.
The real principle behind this advice
Instead of “throw these 4 things away,” a more accurate guideline is:
Keep what has meaning or utility, discard what is unsafe, unnecessary, or emotionally overwhelming.
If you want, I can also explain how different cultures handle belongings after death—it varies a lot and is actually quite interesting.