There’s a particular kind of shame that comes with depression and a messy house. You know the kitchen needs doing. You can see the laundry. You’re aware of the post piling up. But the gap between knowing and doing feels like a canyon — and every day it gets a little wider.
I’ve lived this. Depression has been part of my life for decades. And one of the things I learned early is that the state of your home and the state of your mind are connected in both directions. When you’re low, the house slips. And when the house is chaotic, it makes the low worse.
Why depression makes cleaning feel impossible
It’s not laziness. It’s not a character flaw. There’s actual science behind it.
Depression affects executive function — the part of your brain that plans, prioritises, initiates, and follows through. When executive function is compromised, even simple tasks become genuinely difficult. Not “I don’t feel like it” difficult. More like “I’m standing in front of the sink and I cannot make my hands move” difficult.
Research on cortisol and cluttered environments shows the relationship works both ways. A disordered environment raises stress hormones. Elevated stress hormones deplete the energy needed to address the disorder. It becomes a cycle — and willpower alone doesn’t break it.
Add decision fatigue to the mix — every item on the counter is a micro-decision: keep, bin, move, wash, deal with later — and you can see why someone dealing with depression looks at a messy room and feels paralysed rather than motivated.
What people get wrong
“Just do a little bit each day.” This advice assumes a baseline of energy and motivation that depression takes away. On the worst days, getting out of bed is the accomplishment. Suggesting someone also tackle the bathroom is well-meaning but disconnected from reality.
“If you kept on top of it, it wouldn’t get this bad.” True in the same way that “if you weren’t depressed, you wouldn’t be depressed” is true. Not helpful.
“I cleaned my friend’s house for them.” Sometimes this works out. Often it doesn’t — because having someone clean around you while you sit there feeling useless can make the shame worse. The difference is whether the help is done to you or done with you.
What actually helps
Having someone alongside you. Not cleaning for you — cleaning with you. There’s a reason body doubling works for people with ADHD and depression: having another person in the room, calm, working alongside you, changes something in the brain. The task that felt impossible alone becomes manageable with company.
Starting with one surface. Not the whole kitchen. Not even one side of the kitchen. One surface. The feeling of seeing one clear worktop changes the energy in the room — and sometimes that’s enough to keep going. Sometimes it’s not, and that’s fine too.
No judgement from the person helping. If the person alongside you is radiating disapproval — even silently — your brain picks it up and adds it to the shame pile. The help needs to come from someone who genuinely understands what depression does, not someone who’s secretly thinking “how did it get this bad?”
Regularity over intensity. A five-hour blitz once feels dramatic, but regular two-hour sessions build habits and confidence. The goal isn’t a spotless house — it’s a home you can function in, maintained at a pace you can sustain.
The cycle can break
I’ve worked with people whose kitchens hadn’t been usable in months. People who hadn’t let anyone through the front door in a year. People who thought they were the only ones.
They’re not. This is more common than anyone talks about. And it doesn’t have to stay this way.
The first session is free — two hours, no commitment, no pressure. We’ll work together on whatever feels most urgent to you. Sometimes that’s a room. Sometimes it’s just opening the curtains.
Whatever it is, you’ll have someone calm beside you who’s been where you are. Sleeves up, no judgement.