Hi, my name is Morgan Conner, and I am a recovering “goo-hoarder”.
When I was younger, I was obsessed with creating collections, collecting many things and different types of things. My biggest collection is what I have deemed goo. I define “goo” as any kind of beauty product, makeup, lotion, perfume, soaps, creams, gels, chapstick, or any other type of goo.
If it's scented and you put it on your body it's a goo.
I wanted to collect these, have tons of different products, and a never-ending supply of lotions. At one point I had over 100 bottles of lotion…..seriously girlfriend you have ONE BODY.
As I got older, the urge to have and maintain collections
disappeared. Thank God because a dresser full of toiletries is excessive and wasteful. Not to mention, that if I used all of that goo I would literally not be able to sit in a chair without sliding right out of it.
Picture: Clark Griswold trying to sled.
About three years ago I started my mission to simplify the goo. I posted on Facebook that I was starting this effort to:
1. Keep me motivated
2. Let family members know I was simplifying and request no one add to the collection (although appreciated I did not want more stuff to go to waste)
3. To potentially motivate people to also get rid of their goo.
The reason for the spark of this effort? I realized I wanted to simplify my routine and be less of a consumer.
You do not need all of that goo. No one does.
Companies want you to believe that you do, that you need eye cream, hair cream, leg cream, butt cream, boob cream, arm cream, foot cream, nose cream, ear cream, and cream for your cream.
It's part of being a woman in today's society.
If they can shame you for it, they can sell you a goo to fix it.
This is a stark difference between male goos.
Goos for men is shampoo, conditioner, oil for your car, fertilizer for plants, gluten-free snacks, laundry detergent, and the cure for cancer. Not to mention their goo costs a metric sh*t ton less.
So I started the task of getting rid of the goo.
I started by giving my friends and family some of the unopened lotion bottles in their favorite scents (if I had them). This way the products were able to be used and I didn't feel bad about getting rid of them.
Then, I started throwing away things that I knew were expired. For reference most liquid-based products (like lotions go bad after about three years, whereas anything near your eye most of the time is three months.) Some powder products last a little bit longer, but again for reference, around three years. Some products have an image of a jar with a time frame (3M 6M 9M etc.) of how long after being opened it is good for. This might surprise you, things expire far faster than I had originally realized.
Now, this was the part that started to get difficult for me. There were certain things that I had attached an emotional value to. There were also things that I felt bad getting rid of because it was wasteful or I had spent a lot of money on them.
The thing is,
once the item is purchased it has already served its purpose.
Holding onto an eyeshadow pallet I bought in high school 10 years later is pointless. It brought me joy then and its purpose now is to be out of my life.
Then the last phase was using up the things that I had that were not expired. This was and has been time-consuming and challenging. Over the three years I have been doing this, I have been taking pictures of each of the goos before I put them in the trash. I do this to keep track of just how much stuff I had, remind me how I don't want things to get again, and motivate me to finish products.
Over three years I have used up:
Chapstick - 48
Lotion - 45
Makeup - 24
Body spray - 19
Nail polish - 19
Deodorant - 17
Sponges - 13
Hair masks - 12
Dry shampoo - 12
Perfume - 10
Body Wash - 8
Bars of soap - 7
Body Scrub - 5
Shampoo - 6
Bath bombs - 4
Conditioner - 4
Face wash - 3
Hair Spray - 3
Shave gel - 2
Face masks - 2
Self Tanner - 1
Box of Pimple patches 1
Lip scrub - 1
Eye cream - 1
I keep all these photos in an album on my phone which is something I love to look through. This also serves a dual purpose as now I have a record of the products I have tried and when I am looking to purchase a product I can remember if I liked it or not.
The goal for me is to have two products max by type. Example: one lotion I am actively using and one for backup. I still have a pretty big backlog of products I am working through, but with each day I am closer than I have ever been to accomplishing this goal.
I want to challenge you all to purge your goos.
You do not need all of this goo to change you,
you are perfect as you are.
Let’s be honest, if the product fixes the problem, you wouldn't constantly need to rebuy it.
You are
enough.
Love you more,
Morgan
Check this out Corner:
checkfresh.com
This is such a helpful tool, when you enter the batch number of a beauty product it tells you when the batch was created. This helped me find bottles of lotion still lurking in my backlog that had expired for YEARS. Your body deserves better than trying to use up expired stuff, toss it.
is the passionate creator and driving force behind The Modest Journal. At 28 years old, she wears many hats as the owner, founder, CEO, and self-described "resident words girl."
For Morgan, words are more than just communication—they are her love language, her means of storytelling, and a source of inspiration for others. Her blog is a testament to her desire to merge her passions into a single creative outlet, aiming to bring joy and provoke thought through her words.
Whether she's impacting, inspiring, or offering a fresh perspective, Morgan hopes her writing resonates deeply with her audience.