Stop Shame Cleaning: How to Build Systems That Work on Your Worst Days Podcast Por  arte de portada

Stop Shame Cleaning: How to Build Systems That Work on Your Worst Days

Stop Shame Cleaning: How to Build Systems That Work on Your Worst Days

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo

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.

Todavía no hay opiniones