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Messiness Is Not a Moral Failing | KC Davis

Sep 19, 2022 1h 3m 31 insights
<p><em>New episodes come out every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday for free, with 1-week early access for Wondery+ subscribers.</em></p> <p><em>---</em></p> <p><br /></p> <p>Today we're talking about an often overlooked source of suffering— housework. There are so many ways in which housework can be a bummer. Maybe we're feeling guilty about the fact that our place is always a mess. Maybe we're driving ourselves crazy with obsessive cleaning. Maybe we have relatives who are overly critical about the state of affairs in our home. Maybe gender politics with our spouses and partners is a source of strife. </p> <p><br /></p> <p>Our guest today, KC Davis, helps deconstruct these often rigid and daunting cultural norms that surround the concept of domestic bliss. As a self-styled anti-perfectionist, Davis has garnered a huge audience on TikTok with more than 1 million followers. She has also written the book, <a href="https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-to-Keep-House-While-Drowning/KC-Davis/9781668002841" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing</em></a>. On today's show, she offers a ton of practical tips that are rooted in self compassion and the dogged determination not to use shame as a motivator when it comes to our domestic lives. </p> <p><br /></p> <p><strong>In this episode we talk about: </strong></p> <p><br /></p> <ul> <li>One of KC's slogans,"You don't exist to serve your space, your space exists to serve you" </li> <li>The difference between what's "normal" and what's "functional". For example, why that pile of laundry on the floor is just fine if it works for you</li> <li>Why it's important to think of house work as morally neutral. For example, why doing dishes has nothing to do with you being a good or bad person</li> <li>Why she doesn't believe laziness exists</li> <li>The power of what she calls "category cleaning" </li> <li>Breaking the clean/not clean binary</li> <li>And achieving equitable division of labor around the house </li> </ul> <p><br /></p> <p><br /></p> <p><strong>Full Shownotes:</strong> <a href="https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/kc-davis-501" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/kc-davis-501</a></p>
Actionable Insights

1. Prioritize Your Space’s Purpose

Shift your mindset to believe your space exists to serve you, not the other way around. This allows you to customize your home to work for your lifestyle and needs, rather than feeling obligated to maintain it traditionally.

2. View Care Tasks as Morally Neutral

Consider tasks like laundry or dishes as morally neutral, meaning doing or not doing them has nothing to do with being a good or bad person. This helps reduce shame and allows for more flexible, functional approaches to home care.

3. Eliminate Shame for Better Functioning

Recognize that shame is the enemy of functioning and often holds us back. Letting go of subtle, unconscious shame in various areas of life can lead to greater freedom, happiness, and overall functionality.

4. Practice Self-Compassion for Humanity

Embrace self-compassion by giving yourself permission to be human, recognizing that feelings of worthlessness, pain, and failure are universal experiences, not unique flaws. This shifts focus from self-liking to acceptance and kindness towards oneself.

5. Cultivate Gentle Self-Talk

Replace critical inner dialogue with gentle self-talk, speaking to yourself with the same compassion you would offer a friend or child. This can improve motivation and reduce stress by counter-programming against an inner drill sergeant.

6. Challenge the Concept of Laziness

Instead of labeling yourself as ’lazy,’ examine if a task isn’t functioning for you, if you have different priorities, or if there’s a task initiation issue. This reframes struggles from character flaws to solvable problems related to brain function or environment.

7. Shift to a Journey of Care

Instead of pursuing self-improvement from a place of proving worthiness, approach it as a journey of care, recognizing you are already worthy. This fosters sustainable, organic change that increases joy and quality of life.

8. Adopt ‘Anti-Diet’ Approach to Home

Apply principles similar to the anti-diet movement to home care by letting go of external measures of ‘goodness’ (like perfect aesthetics) and prioritizing self-care and functionality. This shifts focus from proving worthiness to simply caring for yourself.

9. Prioritize Functionality Over Norms

When approaching care tasks, ask what is functional for you and your lifestyle, rather than adhering to traditional or ’normal’ ways of doing things. This allows for customization, like a no-fold laundry system, to better suit your needs.

10. Deserve Self-Care Through Tasks

Reframe care tasks (dishes, laundry, making meals) as acts of caring for yourself because you deserve to be cared for. This shifts motivation from moral obligation to self-worth and self-nurturing.

11. Start with Worthiness for Functional Space

Begin by believing you are worthy of a functional home environment, such as a kitchen where you can easily make meals. This foundational belief can unlock motivation and guide practical changes.

12. Evaluate Space by Function, Not Morality

Assess your home environment based on whether it is ‘working’ or ‘functioning’ for you, rather than judging it as ‘right’ or ‘wrong,’ ‘good’ or ‘bad.’ This objective lens helps identify areas for improvement without shame.

13. Develop Mindful Curiosity About Self-Talk

Practice non-judgmental curiosity about your inner critical messages, asking where they came from. This mindful awareness is a crucial first step before attempting to change those messages.

14. Reframe Mess with Compassionate Questions

When confronted with a messy area, intentionally ask yourself, ‘What else could this mean about me?’ to reframe the situation with compassion. This helps acknowledge efforts or challenges rather than immediately defaulting to self-criticism.

15. Embrace Cyclical Nature of Care Tasks

Recognize that care tasks exist in a continuous cycle, not just ‘done’ or ’not done,’ and it’s okay for things to be in various states. The goal is to turn these cycles at a pace that keeps your home functional, rather than striving for constant perfection.

16. Balance Task Cycles with Rest

Aim to complete care task cycles at a pace that ensures functionality (e.g., clean dishes for eating) without rushing so much that you sacrifice time for rest, enjoyment, and recreation. This promotes a sustainable approach to home care.

17. Assess Functionality of Current Systems

Evaluate if your current systems, even unconventional ones like living out of a clean laundry pile, are truly functional for you. If they are, that’s fine; if not, then consider how to make them functional.

18. Customize Laundry for Functionality

Adapt your laundry system to fit your current life stage and needs, such as moving all family clothes to one closet or using a no-fold bin system for clothes that don’t require folding. This can significantly reduce stress and increase routine completion.

19. Implement Category Cleaning Method

When tidying a messy room, focus on one category at a time (trash, dishes, laundry, items with a place, items without a place) to reduce overwhelm and decision-making fatigue. This systematic approach makes cleaning more manageable and efficient.

20. Break Down Overwhelming Tasks

When overwhelmed by a large task like a pile of dishes, break it down into smaller, manageable parts, focusing on what’s immediately necessary. This avoids an all-or-nothing mindset and promotes consistent progress.

21. Address Task Initiation Barriers

If you struggle with task initiation, view it as a brain function issue, not a character flaw. Seek to learn new skills, gain support, or make your environment more accessible to overcome these barriers, rather than labeling yourself as lazy.

22. Identify Value for Motivation

If struggling with motivation for a task, explore the underlying reasons, such as not recognizing its value or feeling undeserving. Addressing these core beliefs can help build intrinsic motivation.

23. Optimize Fridge for Produce Visibility

Reorganize your refrigerator by moving condiments to drawers and placing produce in easily visible door shelves, perhaps in cups with water or jars. This makes healthy items more accessible and reminds you to eat them before they spoil.

24. Ruthlessly Declutter Mail & Papers

Be aggressive in discarding mail and papers, keeping only essential documents (e.g., bills, invitations, financial statements) and relying on online resources for manuals. This minimizes paper clutter effectively.

25. Sort Mail into Actionable & Fun

Create two distinct spots for incoming mail: one for ‘actionable’ items like bills and RSVPs, and another for ‘fun’ items like letters or magazines. This helps prioritize and manage paper flow efficiently.

26. Organize Important Documents by Category

Use a single accordion file with specific tabs (e.g., birth/death/marriage, home/car, pets, family/children, taxes, school, career) to store long-term, essential paper documents. This creates a centralized and organized system.

27. Accept Imperfection in Some Areas

Recognize that you don’t have to fix every messy area of your life at once; some things, like a messy car, can be accepted as morally neutral and prioritized at another time. This reduces self-imposed pressure and stress.

28. Schedule Daily House Reset Time

Instead of trying to ‘clean as you go’ if it causes stress, schedule a dedicated short period (e.g., 25 minutes) at the end of each day to reset the house. This allows for focused tidying without constant interruption throughout the day.

29. Have Explicit Labor Division Talks

Engage in clear, explicit conversations with your partner about the division of labor, rather than vague criticisms, especially since socialization can lead to different perceptions of tasks. This helps address specific needs and expectations.

30. Ensure Equitable Division of Rest

When discussing division of labor with a partner, shift the focus from who works ‘more’ or ‘harder’ to ensuring the ‘rest is fair.’ This means actively taking labor off your partner’s plate if they lack time autonomy or sufficient rest, regardless of their paid work.

31. Utilize Fair Play Method for Tasks

Implement the Fair Play Method by Eve Rodsky: explicitly list every household task, agree on minimum standards of care for each, and then divide these tasks equitably between partners. This ensures clear responsibilities and shared understanding.