Stop Shame Cleaning: How to Build Systems That Work on Your Worst Days
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
Have you ever noticed that the only time your house gets truly clean is right before company arrives? You're not alone. But that frantic, shame-fueled cleaning comes at a cost—and it's not sustainable.
In this episode, Kathi Lipp and Tenneil Register dive deep into the difference between cleaning from shame and cleaning from a place of grace. They explore why those "shame spirals" actually make clutter worse over time and how to interrupt the cycle with practical, doable systems.
What Listeners Will Discover
- How to recognize when you're in a shame spiral versus simply operating at low capacity
- The concept of a "minimal viable house"—what systems to maintain even on your worst days
- Three common shame scripts cluttery people tell themselves (and why they're wrong)
- Practical daily anchors for laundry, dishes, and surface resets
- How to build grace into your systems so missing a day doesn't derail everything
- Why kindness to yourself actually builds capacity over time
The Minimal Viable House
Instead of striving for a picture-perfect home, Kathi introduces the concept of the "minimal viable house"—the basic systems that keep life functional even when energy is low. For Kathi, these include:
- Laundry: A simple schedule (Sunday and Wednesday) with decluttered drawers so clothes have a place to go
- Surface resets: Clearing at least one key surface daily (even half the kitchen table counts!)
- Dishes: Getting dishes handled in whatever way matches your capacity that day
Key Takeaways
The episode challenges listeners to move beyond all-or-nothing thinking. When you're operating at a "four out of ten," the goal isn't perfection—it's sustainability. A peanut butter and jelly sandwich is better than fast food. Half the kitchen table cleared is better than none. One day behind is manageable; two months behind feels hopeless.
As Tenneil beautifully puts it: when you give yourself permission to do less, you develop "room for grace, which means you get to skip a day" without the whole system falling apart.