A (perhaps obvious) tactic that has worked for me:
Clean one thing per day—Dust an end table, wipe off the TV screen, vaccuum the hallway. Tasks that take 30 seconds to 5 minutes to complete help curb the temptation to procrastinate. Plus, cleaning can be infectous—dusting one end table can turn into two; vacuuming a hallway can lead to vacuuming a whole floor of your home, etc. (Note: I’ve found the ” Just One Thing A Day Method” to be helpful in cleaning my house, changing my diet to be more healthy, getting rid of clutter over time, adding productive habits at work, etc.)
The effect I’ve observed is that my house stays clean—my roommate even says I’m “too clean”—but I feel as if I’m devoting very little time to “house cleaning”.
One thing worth considering in your search is how different peoples’ definition of “clean” is. Their is a wide spectrum in preferences, and I’d imagine that matters a great deal based on what you are after.
A (perhaps obvious) tactic that has worked for me:
Clean one thing per day—Dust an end table, wipe off the TV screen, vaccuum the hallway. Tasks that take 30 seconds to 5 minutes to complete help curb the temptation to procrastinate. Plus, cleaning can be infectous—dusting one end table can turn into two; vacuuming a hallway can lead to vacuuming a whole floor of your home, etc. (Note: I’ve found the ” Just One Thing A Day Method” to be helpful in cleaning my house, changing my diet to be more healthy, getting rid of clutter over time, adding productive habits at work, etc.)
The effect I’ve observed is that my house stays clean—my roommate even says I’m “too clean”—but I feel as if I’m devoting very little time to “house cleaning”.
One thing worth considering in your search is how different peoples’ definition of “clean” is. Their is a wide spectrum in preferences, and I’d imagine that matters a great deal based on what you are after.