Take out garbage
The garbage offers no instant reward, the smell is unpleasant and the bag is clumsy to carry through the door. The steps below make the chore graspable and show clearly where it ends.
♀Take out garbage
A girl places a black garbage bag into an outdoor bin.
About this visual support
What makes taking out the garbage drag is that it gives nothing back in the moment. Nobody sees the result, the smell is a reminder of why no one wants to touch the bag, and the carrying itself is fiddly because the bag tends to drag along the floor and can tear. For a child who needs a clear incentive, it easily becomes a task that gets put off.
Visual support helps by cutting the job into manageable parts and giving it a visible end. When the child sees it is only four steps, tie the bag, lift, walk out, drop it in, taking out the garbage feels smaller than a vague order. It becomes something to finish rather than a cloud of discomfort.
Add a small marker after the last picture, for example washing hands or ticking a weekly chart, so that finishing shows up somewhere. That stands in for the reward the chore itself lacks. You can put the household's recurring chores into the Routined app and share them out so the same child does not always get the bin bag.