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Clutter Free Academy

Clutter Free Academy

De : Kathi Lipp
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Have you always known you could change the world - if only you could find your car keys on the regular? Clutter Free Academy is for you. If you want to live clutter free, organized and prepared for anything, this is to podcast you must listen to. With practical ideas and tons of hope, humor and how-tos, host Kathi Lipp with teach you to live with Less Cutter, More Life.(c) 2022 Kathi Lipp Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • When Pushing Harder Makes the Clutter Worse: Discipline, Capacity, and the Shame Spiral
      Feb 27 2026

      Have you ever wondered why your decluttering systems only seem to work for a week before falling apart? Why you can't seem to stick with routines that work perfectly for everyone else? The answer might surprise you—and it has nothing to do with your willpower.

      It's Not a Discipline Problem—It's a Capacity Problem

      In this eye-opening episode, Kathi Lipp and Tenneil Register explore the crucial difference between discipline and capacity—and why confusing the two leads to shame spirals that make clutter worse, not better. Inspired by a powerful video from Dr. Raquel Martin, this conversation will change how you think about your decluttering struggles.

      What You'll Learn in This Episode

      • The fundamental difference between discipline (habits, consistency, systems) and capacity (energy, margin, health, emotional bandwidth)
      • Why you can't shame or discipline yourself into success when your capacity is depleted
      • How to assess the real "size of your plate" before loading it up with expectations
      • What discipline needs to work: simple routines, clear space, and repetition
      • What capacity needs to be restored: sleep, stillness, fewer commitments, nutrition, and grace
      • Why grief—including grieving lost capacity—plays a bigger role than you might think

      The Question That Changes Everything

      If you're constantly asking yourself "Why can't I keep up with my house?" or "Why do I always feel behind?"—stop. The real question isn't "What's wrong with me?" It's "What is my current capacity?"

      As Tenneil shares from her own experience recovering from an accident and loss, sometimes God's answer is simply: rest. Sleep. Stillness. Fewer commitments. And that's not giving up—that's giving yourself what you actually need to move forward.

      Key Takeaways

      • Your goals aren't bad—your systems might just be built for a capacity you don't currently have
      • When capacity shrinks, you need more support, curated priorities, and restored energy—not more willpower
      • Exhaustion isn't a character flaw; it's information about your current circumstances
      • Stop trying to put 10 pounds of potatoes into a five-pound bag

      This is part one of an important series on capacity, shame, and practical tools for maintaining your energy. Don't miss next week's continuation of this life-changing conversation.

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      17 min
    • The 15-Minute Company Plan: What Actually Matters When Someone's Coming Over
      Feb 19 2026

      Do you long to invite people into your life but feel like your house just isn't ready? Maybe you're mid-project, mid-clutter, or mid-life chaos, and the thought of having someone over feels overwhelming. If that's you, this episode offers the permission and practical strategies you need to start practicing hospitality right where you are.

      What You'll Discover in This Episode

      Sue Donaldson, author of Never Alone: Stories of Invitation and Connection, joins Kathi Lipp to share how she maintained a life of hospitality even during a 13-year home remodel—complete with Tyvek paper windows and mice running down the hall. Her stories will make you laugh, tear up, and most importantly, feel empowered to open your door.

      The Difference Between Hospitality and Entertaining

      There's a crucial distinction that changes everything: entertaining focuses on impressing people, while hospitality focuses on meeting their needs. When we understand that hospitality is about the guest—not our perfectly styled home—we're free to invite people in regardless of our circumstances.

      Why Planning Creates Freedom

      Sue Donaldson shares how simple preparation (like keeping frozen cookie dough logs ready) allows her to focus on guests rather than frantically preparing. When the food and basics are planned, you have the mental space to truly connect with the people at your table.

      The 15-Minute Company-Ready Plan

      What can you realistically accomplish when a friend texts that they're stopping by? Sue Donaldson and Kathi Lipp break down the essentials: clean bathrooms and kitchen counters, folded afghans, fluffed pillows, and coffee brewing. That's it. Your guests truly don't notice the 15 things you wish you'd gotten to.

      Hospitality Beyond Your Home

      When your house simply isn't in a hosting space, there are beautiful alternatives: porch hospitality, third-place connections, offering to sit together at church, dropping soup on a friend's porch, or simply texting "I can pray right now." Connection doesn't require a dining room table.

      Key Takeaways

      • Hospitality is a commandment—and God provides the strength when we obey
      • The more you practice hospitality, the more at ease you become
      • Your 15-minute prep is more about making YOU comfortable than impressing guests
      • Chocolate helps make a friend (keep frozen cookie dough ready!)
      • Create the invitation that matches who you are right now

      Whether you're in a season of renovation, health challenges, or just everyday chaos, you can still live a life of invitation. Your imperfect home might be exactly the place someone needs to feel seen and welcomed.

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      34 min
    • Why Your Morning Is Failing: The Night-Before Routine That Changes Everything
      Feb 10 2026

      Do you ever wake up to a sink full of dishes, no plan for dinner, and a morning that feels like it's already behind before it's begun? You're not alone. For those of us who struggle with clutter and chaos, mornings can feel like an uphill battle—but what if a simple 15-minute routine the night before could change everything?

      In this episode, Kathi and Roger Lipp dive into the concept of the "closing shift"—a short, intentional nighttime routine designed to set you up for success the next day. This isn't about deep cleaning or overhauling your entire home. It's about crisis prevention: doing a few small things tonight so tomorrow doesn't spiral into chaos.

      What You'll Learn in This Episode

      • What the closing shift is and why it matters for cluttery people
      • Five simple tasks that take just minutes but make a huge impact
      • Why "out of sight, out of mind" works against us—and what to do about it
      • Dopamine-friendly tweaks to make boring routines actually enjoyable
      • How to use habit stacking and room mapping to save energy
      • Tech tips like alarms and shared checklists to keep you on track
      • Why systems that only work at 100% energy aren't really systems at all

      The Five Closing Shift Tasks

      Kathi shares five go-to tasks for an effective closing shift. You don't need to do all five—just pick three that fit your life:

      • Load or unload the dishwasher – An empty dishwasher in the morning is like winning the lottery
      • Prep food for tomorrow – Pull meat from the freezer, check ingredients, or prep a salad
      • Do a 10-item put-away sprint – Clear items that have been "hanging out" too long
      • Start a load of laundry – Towels, sheets, and basics can wash overnight
      • Set up breakfast or coffee – There's nothing better than waking up to coffee that's ready to go

      Making It Fun: Dopamine-Friendly Tweaks

      Let's be honest—there's no natural dopamine hit in the closing shift. Nobody claps when you wipe down counters at 9 PM. But Kathi and Roger share creative ways to make it more rewarding:

      • Reward yourself afterward (Roger's reward? Mario Kart!)
      • Play energizing music during your routine
      • Use a sticker chart—yes, even as an adult
      • Make it a game: Can you unload the dishwasher before your oatmeal timer goes off?

      Key Takeaways

      This is not cleaning—this is crisis prevention. The closing shift isn't about having a perfect home. It's about being kind to your future self, saving money (no drive-through coffee!), and starting tomorrow from a place of calm instead of chaos.

      Remember: If your system only works when you're at 100%, it's not a system—it's a fantasy. Build routines that work even on your tired days, and give yourself grace when you need to restart.

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      22 min
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