Put fruit in bag
The fruit bowl sits in the kitchen, the bag waits in the hallway, and five other morning steps fall in between. That's where the banana usually stays behind. The picture below puts that small transfer on the map so it doesn't drop out of order.
♀Putting fruit in bag
A person putting an apple and grapes into a blue cloth bag.
About this visual support
Putting a piece of fruit in the bag takes three seconds and still ends up being the most unreliable step of the morning. The action isn't tricky; it just sits between seven other things: shirt, trousers, breakfast, toothbrush, jacket, shoes. With so much running in parallel, short steps are the first to vanish. The fruit often gets noticed when the bag is already open at school.
A dedicated card for this micro-moment gives the fruit its own slot in the sequence instead of hitching a ride on memory. The child sees the step coming, does it, and clears it. The little picture does something big: it raises the priority of an act that's otherwise invisible.
One tip: place the fruit card between the jacket and the shoes rather than next to breakfast. The move then happens just before leaving the kitchen, and the banana doesn't get left on the counter. In Routined you can shuffle the step until it lands on the exact minute the move is actually possible.