Wash the garment with water and coarse salt
Leave it in direct sunlight for several hours
Burn incense or use cleansing smoke nearby
Say out loud that any lingering energy should be released
For some, this is not superstition. It is a symbolic way of closing one chapter before beginning another.
- Attachment matters too
- Sometimes the real issue is not the clothing itself, but the grief tied to it.
Some people:
- Struggle to accept the loss
- Want to keep feeling close to the person
- Look for comfort through physical objects
But the deepest connection is not in a jacket, a dress, or a pair of shoes.
It lives in the memories shared.
When memory feels heavier than the clothing

Some people say they felt nothing unusual at all.
Others say they could never bring themselves to wear those items.
Neither experience cancels out the other.
What matters most is paying attention to your own feelings.
Because beyond belief or logic, some objects simply feel different.
Final reflection
Wearing the clothes of someone who has died is not automatically wrong… but it may not be as simple as it appears.
A garment can carry memory, emotion, and meaning.
And even if those things cannot be seen, they may affect you more than you expect.
Sometimes, letting go can also be a way of showing love and respect.
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