Dust bunnies form when tiny fibres, skin cells and hair drift through a room, pick up static, and slowly collect in corners where there is just enough air movement to bring new material in, but not enough attention to remove it.
Nothing dramatic happens, nothing appears broken, and yet over time those fragments cling together, grow, and eventually become visible, which is why they always seem to appear suddenly even though they have been forming for weeks.
Websites tend to age in exactly the same way.
Once a site is launched, it often becomes a finished object in the minds of its owners, something to be admired rather than actively used, and from that point on, small changes begin to settle quietly into the corners.
Search behaviour shifts, technology evolves, content dates, and pages that once worked well continue to function, but no longer quite do the job they were designed to do. Because the site still looks acceptable at a glance, it is left alone, allowing minor issues to cling together and compound until performance, visibility and trust begin to erode.
Like dust bunnies, it is the outcome of many small things being left unattended for too long. A plugin that is never updated, a service page that no longer reflects how the business actually operates, a blog that stopped being refreshed, or a homepage message that made sense three years ago but now feels slightly out of step. Individually these are easy to ignore, but together they change how a website is experienced.
It requires movement, attention and routine care. The same principles that keep a room clean apply to a website that needs to stay useful.
Both are the natural result of stillness. Regular movement keeps things clean, relevant and working as they should.