Monday Chores
Monday often means several chores stacked into the same morning: laundry baskets, the vacuum and unsorted shelves all at once. The visual support below gives you one entry point and a settled order to start from.
♀Woman doing Monday Chores
A woman points to a calendar showing 'MON' (Monday), holding a bucket and cloth. Beside her are a stack of folded laundry, a broom, and a vacuum cleaner, symbolizing Monday cleaning tasks.
About this visual support
The trouble on a Monday is rarely any single chore — it is the stack. When laundry, vacuuming and sorting sit there as three equally weighted tasks with none marked first, half the morning can go to standing and choosing. For children helping out, but also for adults with heavy Mondays, it is the start that drags the most.
Visual schedules do not shrink the pile, but they fix the entry point. When the cards sit in a chosen order — say folding the laundry first, then vacuuming, then tidying the shelf — the decision disappears. You do not have to weigh what matters most, you just follow the next card. As each task is finished, the card comes off, which makes progress visible instead of leaving only the feeling of still having work left.
A concrete tip for Monday: pair each chore with a clear ending on its card, for example the button on the washing machine, the vacuum going back into the closet, or a shelf counted as done when it matches the photo. Then the child knows what finished means for that exact task. To reuse the Monday list week by week, you can save it in Routined and try the app for 14 days at no cost.