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[personal profile] hrj
Left to my own devices, I'm a binge-and-bust housekeeper. I'll ignore the clutter (and let the clutter impeded cleaning) until I get the intersection of time and frustration, then it's Clean! All! The! Things! (Also: I do one complete top-to-bottom cleaning on New Year's Day, just because.)

Back in the Oakland house, I finally came up with a chore management system. I identified all the individual routine (or not so routine) cleaning chores for each room, assigned each a frequency, then set them up in a repeating-chore app so I could check them off each time I performed one. I also did time estimates and set my schedule so that I spent no more than 15 minutes a day on housekeeping.

Then  I moved. And I had a long commute that ate away at my time+energy on work days. And I had an entirely different house layout that required a different approach to chores. And I figured I'd just sort of float for a while while I figured out a new system that worked. Ten years later...

Working from home has not only meant having a bit more free time, but it's meant that fitting small tasks in around the work day is not only easy, but it's good ergonomics. However it took me most of the year to get around to applying this fact in a systematic function. Setting up the Roomba after my New Year's cleaning this year was the trigger for finally getting around to systematizing the rest of the tasks.

You see: it isn't even a matter of knowing what needs to be done, or of having the time and energy to do it. The big problem is the mental work of keeping track of what the specific task is that I should do *now*. This is what task checklists are ideal for. Plus: the physical joy of checking things off.

So I once again sat down and systematically identified all the routine tasks for each room, assigned each a frequency (weekly, monthly, bi-monthly, or annual), and drew up a matrix on a poster-sized post-it. My routine now is that at the end of each work day, I glance at the list and pick one task that hasn't been done yet for the current cycle and do it. Often I end up doing more. (The efficiency of doing all the similar tasks in all the rooms they apply to -- like wet-mopping floors--overwhelms the one-task-at-a-time theory.) If I wanted to, I could do all the tasks at the beginning of a cycle and get it over with, but I mostly stick to the idea that I should never do more than 15 minutes of housework on any given day.

Having set it up on a paper system this time (which works a lot better for triggering choosing a task than an app does) I now find I've identified additional tasks that need to be added, so I'll have to draw up a new matrix at some point. (The original draft covers 9 months and I don't want to wait that long to update it.)

It really *is* easy for me, in my current WFH status, to keep the place in a continuously presentable state by this method. But that doesn't mean I should beat myself up for not organizing this sooner, because the creative work of identifying and organizing the task list is nothing to sneeze at. And three factors are big contributors to the success. WFH means that the "15 minutes a day" is not a massive percentage of my at-home time on a workday. Having set up the Roomba, the need to keep the floors clear for it work is a big incentive for avoiding clutter. And having the Roomba take care of the basic vacuum+sweep aspect is a bit weight off the schedule. It also doesn't hurt that I'm the only person I'm responsible to for the results, so I can tailor my system to what works for my psychology. My sympathies to all those who have to coordinate housekeeping among multiple people with different psychologies and different tolerance levels. (I don't always clean to my own tolerance level, but at least there's no one to resent but me.)

Date: 2021-03-10 02:45 pm (UTC)
kareina: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kareina
The part about the app caught my attention--what app had you been using to keep on top of housework? I have tried using ToDoList to remind me to do things that need to be done occasionally, but what tends to happen is that I don't do them on the day that they come do, and then each day I need to reschedule everything "overdue" to "today", and the list just gets longer and longer, and I am still not doing it, but now, instead of being nicely spread across the calendar, all of the "do it every six weeks", "do it twice a year", "do it once a month" are now all supposed to be done today...

I would love a robot vacuum cleaner...

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