Skip to content
Home » How To Do Laundry When You’re Depressed: KC Davis (Transcript)

How To Do Laundry When You’re Depressed: KC Davis (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of KC Davis’ talk titled “How To Do Laundry When You’re Depressed” at TEDxMileHigh conference.

In her talk “How To Do Laundry When You’re Depressed,” KC Davis, a therapist with ADHD, discusses the profound impact her book had on individuals facing mental health challenges, particularly those contemplating suicide. She shares her personal struggles with postpartum anxiety and the collapse of her support system during the COVID-19 lockdowns.

Through her humorous TikTok videos about her messy house, Davis found a community of people struggling with similar issues, including depression and ADHD, who found daily tasks overwhelming. She emphasizes the importance of viewing care tasks like laundry as morally neutral, rather than measures of personal success or failure. Davis argues that reframing these tasks can improve mental health by making them seem less daunting and more manageable.

She advocates for personalized approaches to daily tasks, using her own experience and others’ creative solutions as examples. Ultimately, Davis proposes a shift in mental health treatment to incorporate a compassionate perspective towards oneself in managing daily care tasks.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Life-Changing Philosophy of Cleaning and Mental Health

Shortly after I published my book, I got an email. It said, “Your book was the only thing that saved me from suicide. You saved my life.” Now, my book is about how to clean, so that seems kind of weird, right? But what if a new philosophy on cleaning could teach us a better approach to mental health?

I’m not an interior designer or a lifestyle influencer. I’m just a therapist with ADHD. And in February of 2020, I had my second baby. Because with the first one I had some postpartum anxiety, and my husband had just taken a very demanding job that was going to keep him busy, I developed a meticulous postpartum plan for myself.

My family would rotate in shifts for the first 60 days.