Spring Cleaning: Where Weekends Go To Die (And Closets Go To War)
Spring Cleaning isnāt about Cleaningāitās about Relocating your Mess with Confidence

Every year, like clockwork, something strange happens.
The weather warms up. The sun shines a little longer. And suddenlyāsuddenlyāwe all become wildly optimistic about our ability to get organized.
We make plans. We open closets. We look at that one junk drawer like, āTodayās the day.ā
And yet⦠somehow⦠it never quite happens. Because if weāre being honest:
Spring cleaning: where weekends go to die.
š± The Annual Burst of False Confidence
At the start, it feels different this time.
You walk into a room with purpose. Maybe you even grab a trash bag. You mean business.
You tell yourself:
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āIām going to knock this out in a couple hours.ā
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āThis wonāt be that bad.ā
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āIāll just start small.ā
And thatās where the trouble begins.
Because āstarting smallā somehow turns into pulling everything out of a closet that hasnāt been touched since the early 2000s.
And now?
Now itās not a project.
Itās a situation.
š§ŗ The āOne Drawerā Trap

It always starts with one drawer.
Just one.
You open it, thinking: āIāll organize this real quick.ā
But then you find:
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Old batteries (none of which work)
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Instruction manuals for appliances you no longer own
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Three pens⦠that all stopped writing in 2014
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A mystery key that unlocks absolutely nothing
At that point, youāre no longer cleaning.
Youāre conducting an archaeological dig.
And somehowāsomehowāthat one drawer expands into:
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The entire kitchen
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The hallway closet
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Your sense of control
š Cleaning With Kids: A Losing Battle

Now letās take it to the next level.
Add kids into the mix.
Because if youāve ever tried to clean with kids in the house, you already know:
You pick something up⦠they put something down.
You organize a space⦠they redecorate it in under 90 seconds.
You create order⦠they bring chaos with enthusiasm.
And the wild part?
Theyāre not even trying to sabotage you.
Theyāre just⦠existing.
Energetically.
Loudly.
Relentlessly.
šļø The Emotional Support Pile

Now letās talk about the most important part of spring cleaning:
The pile.
You know the one.
Itās not trash.
Itās not keep.
Itās⦠undecided.
This is where items go when you say:
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āI might need this.ā
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āThis could be useful someday.ā
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āI paid good money for this in 2008.ā
And just like that, the pile becomes permanent.
It moves from room to room.
It evolves.
It grows.
It becomes what experts call: āNot my problem right now.ā
š¤ The Great Identity Crisis: Organized vs. Realistic

At some point during spring cleaning, you hit a moment of reflection.
You stop.
You look around.
And you ask yourself: āAm I actually an organized person⦠or just someone who owns bins?ā
Because letās be honestābuying storage containers feels like progress.
But all weāve really done is:
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Put clutter into nicer-looking clutter
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Given chaos a label
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Created the illusion of control
And oddly enough⦠that feels like a win.
š§ Fun Fact (That Explains Everything)
Hereās something that might make you feel better:
The average American home contains over 300,000 items.
Three. Hundred. Thousand.
So if your house feels overwhelming, itās not just you.
Itās math.
š š¾āāļø The Honest Truth About Cleaning
At some point, we all reach a conclusion.
A very honest one.
A freeing one.
And you know what?
Thatās okay.
Because the goal was never perfection.
The goal was progress.
(Or at least finding your floor again.)
š What Spring Cleaning Really Is
Letās reframe this.
Spring cleaning isnāt about:
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Having a perfectly spotless house
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Organizing every drawer
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Becoming a different person overnight
Instead, itās about:
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Resetting your space a little
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Letting go of what you donāt need
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Creating just enough order to breathe
Because even small wins count.
Clearing one surface? Win.
Throwing out expired junk? Win.
Finding something you thought you lost? Huge win.
š” Final Thought: Lower the Bar, Keep Your Sanity

So this year, instead of chasing perfection, try something different.
Set realistic expectations.
Laugh at the mess.
And remember:
You donāt have to clean everything.
You just have to clean something.
Because at the end of the day, spring cleaning isnāt about transforming your homeā¦
Itās about surviving the attempt.
š Closing Line
And if all else fails?
Just close the closet door.
That counts too.
Make cleaning a breeze (well almost a breeze) with these five spring cleaning tips for the entire family and organize your home for the new season.




