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Sarah Josipovic Writes an Open Letter to Anyone Feeling Stuck in Their Space

By: Zexprwire
  • Sarah Josipovic of Hamilton, Ontario is a Real Estate Sales Representative focused on new construction and helping people make clear, steady decisions about where and how they live.

Ontario, Canada, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Sarah Josipovic, a Real Estate Sales Representative licensed with Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, is sharing a practical open letter for everyday people who feel overwhelmed by their space. The message is aimed at anyone dealing with a common problem: a home that feels harder to manage than it should, especially during change like moving, renovating, or trying to make a new place feel like home.

This letter draws on themes from Josipovic’s work across Hamilton and the Greater Toronto Area, as well as her background in service work, new construction, and a family history tied to homebuilding and real estate.

In her recent profile, she noted, “Much of Josipovic’s current work centers on new construction with RealPro Homes.” She also described how the work often becomes less about a quick decision and more about steady navigation: “In new construction, she operates less as a tour guide and more as a translator between vision and execution.” The profile also traced the roots of that mindset: “Her grandfather built custom homes. Her mother became a real estate agent in 2015.” And it connected her approach to her earlier work experience: “Restaurants can be unforgiving classrooms.”

Josipovic says many people are not struggling because they do not care. They are struggling because the problem is bigger than a weekend clean-up. Space can hold stress, unfinished decisions, and the weight of daily life. And when the home feels off, everything can feel off.

To add context, research and public data underline how closely people’s well-being is tied to their home environment:

  • In spring 2024, 56% of Canadians ages 15 to 34 reported being very concerned about housing affordability due to rising housing prices. 

  • In 2022, about 1.7 million Canadian households (11.1%) were in core housing need, with affordability as the most common challenge among those households.

  • The U.S. EPA notes people spend about 90% of their time indoors, which makes the quality and function of indoor spaces unusually influential. 

  • Recent research has found home clutter is associated with reduced well-being. 

Open letter from Sarah Josipovic

If your home feels like it is fighting you, I get it.

Sometimes it is clutter. Sometimes it is too many half-finished plans. Sometimes it is a space that used to work, but your life changed and the house did not change with it. Sometimes you moved, and the boxes never really left. Sometimes you are in the middle of decisions you did not expect to make so soon.

I grew up in Stoney Creek. My grandfather built custom homes. My mom became a real estate agent in 2015, and I later joined her in the business. I have been around the construction and renovation world long enough to know this: a home can look fine on the outside and still feel heavy on the inside.

Before real estate, I spent over a decade in hospitality and service work. You learn fast in that kind of environment. You learn how to stay calm when things pile up. You learn how to keep moving, one task at a time, even when everything feels urgent.

That same idea applies at home.

When people reach out about a move or a new build, the questions are often about layouts, finishes, and timelines. But underneath that, there is usually a simpler concern: How do I make this space feel easier to live in?

You do not need a perfect house to feel better. You need a few wins that stick. You need systems you can repeat. You need less friction in the spots that trip you up every day.

You also need to stop treating your home like a final exam. A home is more like training. You adjust. You test. You improve. You build habits that match your life.

If you are in Hamilton, Stoney Creek, Burlington, Grimsby, Oakville, Toronto, or anywhere nearby, you are not alone in this. A lot of people are carrying housing stress and decision fatigue right now. 

And because we spend so much time indoors, small changes at home can have an outsized effect on how we feel day to day. 

Here are ten things you can do this week that are practical, not preachy, and designed to be doable even if you are busy.

What you can do this week

  1. Choose one problem zone only. A counter, a front entry, a bedroom chair, one drawer.

  2. Make a keep, relocate, donate bin. Do not overthink it. Just sort.

  3. Set a 20-minute timer, once per day. Stop when the timer ends.

  4. Clear the floor in one room. Floors change how a space feels fast.

  5. Put a basket by the entry for daily clutter. Keys, mail, chargers, sunglasses.

  6. Create one “next step” list for the space. No more than five items.

  7. Pick one storage rule: one in, one out for seven days.

  8. Walk your home like a guest. Notice what blocks movement and what feels tight.

  9. Fix one small friction point. A hook for bags, a lamp that works, a spot for shoes.

  10. If you are moving or renovating, write down your non-negotiables. Three max. Use them to filter every decision.

If you do only one of these, pick the one that makes tomorrow morning easier. That is the real test. Not the big weekend reset. The daily repeat.

Choose one action. Commit for seven days. Then share this letter with someone who has been saying, even quietly, that their space feels like too much.

About Sarah Josipovic

Sarah Josipovic is a Real Estate Sales Representative based in Hamilton, Ontario. Licensed in October 2020 with Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, she works with clients across Hamilton and surrounding areas and collaborates with RealPro Homes on new construction projects. She holds an honours Bachelor of Arts in Environment and Urban Sustainability with a minor in Geography from Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University), and she previously spent more than a decade in hospitality and service roles.

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