Install
openclaw skills install seasonal-declutter-frameworkA seasonal decluttering workflow to decide what to keep, donate, or discard without overwhelm. Repeatable, time-boxed, shame-free.
openclaw skills install seasonal-declutter-frameworkTarget pain: You know you have too much stuff. But the thought of a massive decluttering marathon — spending an entire weekend pulling everything out of closets, making piles, feeling decision fatigue — is so overwhelming that you never start. Or you start, burn out halfway, and the half-sorted piles sit for weeks.
Why generic advice fails: Most decluttering advice frames it as a one-time purge: "Get rid of everything that doesn't spark joy!" This creates an all-or-nothing pressure that makes people freeze. It also ignores the reality that stuff accumulates continuously — decluttering must be a recurring practice, not a single event.
How this skill is different: It turns decluttering from a crisis into a rhythm. Four seasonal sessions per year, each time-boxed to 1-4 hours. A flexible decision framework (not a rigid rule system). Progress builds — what you learn in spring makes summer easier. The "decision muscle" concept means it gets easier with practice, not harder.
Why users reuse it: Every season brings a natural trigger (wardrobe change, holiday prep, back-to-school). The framework adapts — spring is deep clean + lighten, summer is gear + outdoor, fall is wardrobe + routine, winter is cozy + indoor projects. Users come back because each session has a different flavor, and the cumulative lightness is genuinely rewarding.
Use this skill when:
Do not use this skill to:
Before starting, have ready:
The assistant will help you define the session:
The assistant presents a flexible decision framework. No single question works for everything — use the question that fits the item:
| Decision Test | Best For | Ask Yourself |
|---|---|---|
| Last-year test | Clothing, gadgets, hobby supplies | "Have I used this in the last 12 months?" |
| Joy test | Decor, books, sentimental items | "Does this add energy or drain energy when I see it?" |
| Duplicate test | Kitchen tools, office supplies, linens | "How many of these do I actually need?" |
| Fantasy-self test | Aspirational purchases | "Am I keeping this for who I am, or who I wish I were?" |
| Just-in-case test | Random cables, spare parts, old tech | "If I needed this and didn't have it, how would I solve it?" |
| Repair test | Broken items | "Will I actually fix this within 30 days? Be honest." |
Key rule: Start easy. Begin with the least emotionally charged category (expired food, worn-out towels, obsolete papers). Build decision confidence before tackling sentimental items.
For a 2-hour session:
| Time Block | Action |
|---|---|
| 0:00-0:10 | Set up: containers labeled, space cleared, music/podcast on |
| 0:10-0:50 | Sort phase: Pull everything out. Make decisions fast — 30 seconds per item max |
| 0:50-1:00 | Break: water, stretch, celebrate progress |
| 1:00-1:30 | Decide phase: Review borderline items. Apply decision tests |
| 1:30-1:50 | Remove phase: Donate bag to car/door. Discard to bin. Do it NOW |
| 1:50-2:00 | Reset phase: Put keep items back. Enjoy the space. Note what you learned |
The assistant provides a simple tracker to maintain motivation:
Session: [Spring / Summer / Fall / Winter] [Year]
Category: __________________
Time spent: ___ hours
Items donated: ___
Items discarded: ___
Items kept: ___
One thing I learned: __________________
One category for next time: __________________
After each session, the assistant prompts reflection:
Schedule the next session now while momentum is high. A rough date in the next season is enough. The assistant will note your preferred next category.
| Season | Theme | Focus Categories |
|---|---|---|
| Spring | Deep Clean & Lighten | Winter gear, heavy bedding, tax documents, anything that accumulated over winter |
| Summer | Gear & Outdoor | Outdoor equipment, travel items, summer wardrobe, kids' outgrown items |
| Fall | Wardrobe & Reset | Summer clothes, school supplies, garden tools, pre-holiday kitchen cleanout |
| Winter | Cozy & Indoor | Books, media, indoor hobby supplies, end-of-year paper purge, holiday decor post-holiday |
## Seasonal Declutter Session — [Season] [Year]
### Scope
Category: ________ | Time box: ___ hours | Date: ________
### Decision Framework Applied
[Which tests you used, any rules you set for yourself]
### Results
- Donated: ___ items
- Discarded: ___ items
- Kept: ___ items
### Reflection
- Hardest decisions: ________
- Surprising keeps: ________
- Most satisfying discards: ________
### Next Session
- Season: ________ | Tentative date: ________
- Next category: ________
- What to do differently: ________
For sentimental items: Create a "sentimental box" with a fixed size. When it's full, you must choose what to remove before adding. This contains sentimentality without suppressing it.
For shared items: Never declutter someone else's things without their presence and consent. For shared household items, agree on decision rules together first.
For items with disposal restrictions: Electronics, batteries, chemicals, medications, and paint require special disposal. Check your municipality's hazardous waste guidelines before discarding.
When you feel stuck: If you cannot decide on more than 3 items in a row, stop. The decision muscle is fatigued. Either switch to an easier category or end the session.
For digital decluttering: This skill focuses on physical items. For digital files, photos, and subscriptions, see digital-declutter-guide and subscription-audit-toolkit.
home-organization-blueprint — The overall spatial system that decluttering maintains. Blueprint designs where things live; this skill manages the inflow/outflow.storage-maximizer — When you keep items but need smart ways to store them.seasonal-home-refresh — The broader seasonal transition (cleaning, routine shifts, supply rotation).digital-declutter-guide — The digital counterpart for files, inboxes, and app clutter.