Or ways to remove that accumulation fast?

Non-vacuum cleaner tips would be more actionable for me currently, but please do share your ways.

  • GroundedGator@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I also suck at this. There is a lazy way though you’ll have to accept a certain look. My great grandmother had doilies everywhere. Every surface was covered. Most nearly completely, a few of the bigger tables just had a small one. Once a week she would collect them all and wash them. I didn’t realize till much later in life that the purpose they served was to collect dust to keep it off your surfaces.

    I wonder if something more aesthetically passing to the modern eye would be as effective or if the intricate lace is important to the function.

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    As someone with ADHD I actually keep a broom leaning against my standing desk and sweep to busy my hands whenever I’m thinking or on a call. Dusting/washing walls simply doesn’t happen in our household due to how many steps are involved - but for most other cleaning we build it into tasks - so as I cook I clean cookware as I go - when I finish showering I squeegee the glass, and there’s cleaning fluid within reach if I notice build up.

    These are all really exploits designed to help ADHD people do shit but maybe they’ll help you!

  • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    I wipe my floor with a damp cloth/mop every two weeks or so. That removes a lot of the dust with relatively little effort.

  • iii@mander.xyz
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    2 months ago

    I have dust mite allergies. 2 most important changes I did were:

    (1) no carpets, no curtains, only tile floors.

    (2) and I love my robot vaccuum. They do 80% of the work, daily, whilst I’m away.

  • dragnucs@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    As @xmunk said, cleaning needs to be embedded in other tasks. If you cannot figure out how to embed a given task then you can set it for a fixed schedule. For example, you say that you clean your desk or office on Saturday morning and you have a given set of steps you accomplish.

    Another trick I learned from corporate world is to delegate the tasks. It is more manageable to follow up on someone doing it for you than you actually doing it. This can be someone else living with you, or someone you can hire to do. For example, you can hire someone to clean the house every Sunday. This later option could be expensive.

    If you want to embed tasks and do it yourself, then you need to make them easy for you, for example, you can overstock cleaning products. Let’s say you have a kitchen microfiber towel that hangs nearby and a dedicated cleaning product at reach. You consider that a meal (launch or dinner) equals, fetching the ingredients, cooking, eating and cleaning dishes, putting away dishes, and finally cleaning them. If you don’t clean dishes then you consider you did not finish your dinner.

    Same thing for the bathroom, you need cleaning tools at reach when you are in the bathroom, don’t reuse kitchen stuff to clean the bathroom. Then when you shower, you clean the bathtub, the mirror, the sink, your underwear, wipe the floor, etc.

    • keepcarrot [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago

      Same thing for the bathroom, you need cleaning tools at reach when you are in the bathroom, don’t reuse kitchen stuff to clean the bathroom.

      Bleh, this reminded me of a housemate who insisted that buying two of a cleaning product was a waste of money and space and then routinely lose them. Very annoy. Big fan of keeping stuff for cleaning a space around that space instead of the other side of the house.

  • Leeks@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If you have HVAC, make sure the filter is replaced regularly and try running a higher MERV filter.

  • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    I run my robot vacuum every day, just because it’s possible and it always manages catch some amount of dust every day.

    A large part of why robot vacuums are great is because they decouple basically all effort from the task, making it easy to do it frequently and hence keep up with it. The same applies for dishwashers.

    • fixmycode@feddit.cl
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      2 months ago

      the problem I have worth my robo vacuum is hair, I live with a long haired human and a long haired cat, so the vacuum needs constant maintenance. I normally resort to a broom…

      • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        I have to occasionally remove hair from my robot vacuum as well due to my partners long hair, but this is far less time consuming than either sweeping the floors or vacuuming manually.

        Maybe the cat complicates things? I only have to remove them like at most once a month, probably less.

  • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I clean 2ce a month. I know what kind of cleaning I value and I just do that. I don’t dust often… but I use an air filter.

  • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I would like to say I use a heavy-duty dry swiffer on the floor (wood) every other day, but honestly maybe twice a week. It gets tons of dust and cat hair and it’s quiet and fast. I have an old fashioned feather duster that does a decent job on shelves of books and knickknacks without moving them, and fascinates the cat. I have a wet mop but don’t use it often. I put MERV13 filters in my HVAC, but I realized the suction was lifting the nearby ceiling tiles instead, so I taped them down.

    Consider what contributes to dust in your home: I don’t go out much, and can’t track in mud, but I live over the garage in my apartment building, over a very busy street, and have sliding-glass balcony doors for windows, so a lot of my dust is tires and exhaust. Also pollen year-round because SoCal, and of course cat and myself shedding. Litterbox dust too, at least she’s not a big digger. I don’t have laundry machines in my unit but I imagine they’d make lint dust. You might not be able to change things that add grime, but it helps you feel less like it’s your fault.

    When I worked in a china shop, we wiped down every item on every shelf with Windex (spray your paper towels, not what you’re cleaning) every day. But I was getting paid for that. It makes a huge difference, along with knowing someone else will notice.

    • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      But I was getting paid for that. It makes a huge difference, along with knowing someone else will notice.

      This is where we struggle. We are both tidy as can be at work. I go to new places all the time and leave them in much better shape than I found them. Anyone who has been in a lot of data/comm closets and server rooms can tell you that they are often neglected to the point of ridiculousness. My wife does pretty much all the cleaning at the physical therapy clinic where she works, even though that is not in her job description.

      But our house is a mess. We have four cats, two with long hair. I’m usually gone all week so that leaves most of the work to my wife. I try to clean the bathroom when I’m home (toilet and sink at least). I’ve turned the “dining room” table into my resupply stockpile between trips. Most of the stuff there is used but it looks terrible.

      Being paid makes such a difference in our attitudes towards cleaning.

      • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Four cats and your jobs, you guys are definitely doing this on Hard Mode!

        Maybe you could figure out some sort of rewards system, like cleaning the home => delivery dinner. And of course if you notice something is clean and you didn’t do it, voice your joy!

        • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Absolutely, I thank her all the time for cleaning. It’s pretty fair I think. I work a lot more hours, she works pretty much 40 a week. And when I’m home I do dishes, laundry, clean litter boxes, etc.

          We considered a cleaning service but we’re trying to put a down payment on a house so her mom can come live with us. We spent a lot of money on Christmas for the kids (her sister’s), but we always do. We’re getting there.

          Once we have something that we’re working to own, not rent, maybe we will feel differently about cleaning.

          • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            That’s all good! From experience, owning vs. renting doesn’t help much to make cleaning any more enjoyable, at least not after the first week. But at least if you decide you just can’t deal with some aspect, you can change it.

  • juliebean@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    we’ve got a super tiny apartment.i clean constantly, and dust isn’t much of an issue cause just about every surface sees constant use.

  • brlemworld@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m thinking about hiring a cleaning service. I’m lazy and some things haven’t been cleaned properly in years.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 months ago

    I pay for a cleaning service to come through quarterly. My partner does most of the home maintenance stuff. I’ll do dishes when I cook, but she likes to handle it when she cooks and I’m ok with that because she got mad at me enough times for asking her not to do them before she moved in and they were my dishes. Otherwise, if you see a mess, clean it up. This applies to stuff that got forgotten the night before, vomit from the kitty who sometimes pukes, etc.

    The quarterly deep cleaning take care of mopping the hard floors, dusting everything, whatever else.