That claim is not based on any medical, legal, or universal rule—it’s a mix of superstition and clickbait.
There is no evidence that keeping certain belongings from someone who passed away brings harm or “bad energy.” What people do with a loved one’s items is a personal and cultural choice, not a fixed list of “never keep these 4 things.”
🧠 What actually matters after a loss
❤️ Emotional comfort
Some people:
- Keep clothing, photos, or jewelry for connection
- Find comfort in familiar objects
Others:
- Prefer to donate or store items
- Feel better with fewer reminders
Both responses are completely normal.
⚖️ Practical considerations
The only real “rules” are practical ones:
- Legal documents (wills, IDs, property papers) should be kept safely
- Medications should be disposed of properly (don’t reuse them)
- Personal items can be kept, shared, or donated
🧴 Hygiene & safety (rare exceptions)
You might avoid keeping items only if they are:
- Contaminated (e.g., infectious disease cases)
- Broken or unsafe
That’s about health and safety, not superstition.
🚫 Why these posts spread
They:
- Create fear or curiosity
- Use vague “4 things” lists to hook attention
- Often tie into cultural myths or spiritual beliefs
🧾 Bottom line
There are no universal items you must never keep after someone dies. The right choice is whatever feels respectful, safe, and emotionally right for you and your family.
If you want, I can share:
- how different cultures handle belongings after death
- or practical steps families take after a loss
- or ways to preserve memories without keeping everything