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Hey y'. All. You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. Welcome back to our first podcast playlist of 2026. Today, we have dropped 10 talks from our archive onto the feed all at once to motivate you, to keep you going when things are hard, to inspire you as the weather shifts, to help kickstart that new project or idea, or if things are feeling good for you right now. Just to offer a different perspective, whatever type of motivation you might need, we have a TED Talk for that. Next up, laundry. It's a seemingly mundane task, but daily tasks like doing laundry, making lunch, brushing your teeth can be a lot more emotionally fraught than they seem. When you're burned out, taking care of yourself or your family can feel nearly impossible. Therapist Casey Davis gets it, and she's got a message for anyone struggling with daily tasks. You're not lazy. In her talk from 2022, she offers creative shortcuts and workarounds for everything from using wet wipes when you can't manage a shower to sealing dirty dishes in a giant Ziploc until you feel up to washing them. She reframes the conventional thinking about these tasks and shows how it can change the way we see ourselves. Coming up right after a break. Foreign. Today's episode is sponsored by NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast. Navigating your finances can be stressful, and sometimes you just need some advice from someone you can trust. Imagine if you could have that one money savvy friend on demand for the moments when you just need a little guidance before making a big decision. NerdWallet's Smart Money podcast can be like that, friend. Their team of trusted journalists breaks down financial decisions to give you research backed insights and clear pros and cons. Whether you're planning a big purchase or just want to grow your wealth, they explain the why behind tricky decisions like investing home buying and choosing the best credit cards, all while keeping it engaging and humorous. This podcast cuts through the jargon and misinformation that's so often wrapped up with financial advice. To get to the clear, research backed answers you're looking for, make your next financial move with confidence. Follow NerdWallet's Smart Money podcast on your favorite podcast app. This message is brought to you by Apple Card. Apple Card members can earn unlimited daily cash back on everyday purchases wherever they shop. This means you could be earning daily cash on just about anything, like a slice of pizza from your local pizza place or a latte from the corner coffee shop. Apply for Apple Card in the Wallet app to see your credit limit offer in minutes. Subject to credit approval. Apple Card issued by Goldman Sachs Bank USA, Salt Lake City branch terms and more@applecard.com this episode is brought to you by Planet Visionaries, a podcast in partnership with the Rolex Perpetual Planet Initiative. If you've been feeling overwhelmed by climate headlines lately, here's something worth your time. A show focused on solutions. It's called Planet Visionaries, hosted by Alex Honnold. Yes, the climber from Free Solo who recently completed an impressive skyscraper climb time in Taipei, now turning his attention to protecting the only planet we've got. What makes this show stand out is the people you'll hear from scientists, explorers and storytellers who are actually building a better future and making it feel tangible, human and possible. One conversation features coral restoration leader Tituan Bernacote along with legendary oceanographer Sylvia Earle sharing what it really takes to restore our oceans in partnership with the Rolex Perpetual Planet Initiative. This is Planet Visionaries. Listen or watch on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever. You're listening to this podcast. And now our TED Talk of the Day.
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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 for a book about how to clean. That's sort of odd.
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Yeah,
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but what if a new approach to cleaning could teach us a better approach to treating 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 Met postpartum plan for myself. My family would rotate in and shifts for the first 60 days. The cleaning crew would come once a month, the new moms group would drop off dinners and my toddler would go to preschool. I was so proud of this plan and it ended before it even began. Because 2020 is when the COVID lockdowns happened and all of that support disappeared overnight in a blur. My days turned into breastfeeding difficulties, toddler meltdowns and depression. The dishes stayed in the sink for days, the laundry pile reached impressive heights and there was often not a path to walk from room to room. And when I should have been catching up on sleep, I would lay in bed at night and think to myself, I'm failing Maybe I'm not capable of being a good mom to two kids. I decided to post a joke video on TikTok one day about my house turned disaster. Some funny shots of my clutter and my dishes and my enchilada pan to a nice beat. Sort of a laugh to keep from cry situation, surely. And I got a comment. Lazy. Yeah, that stung. But I must be a glutton for punishment because I kept posting videos about my messy house. Video after video of all of the weird tips and tricks that I was using to try and get it back in order while managing my feelings of being overwhelmed. And I braced myself for more criticism. But what happened was entirely different. In the comment sections of my videos, hundreds of stories came rolling in. Stories like Amanda, who, after losing her baby in the second trimester, was standing frozen at her sink because she forgot how to wash dishes. Stories like Lula, whose chronic health problems and depression made it difficult for her to brush her teeth. Story after story of people with depression, adhd, autism, burnout, bereavement, all struggling with these daily tasks. And it might seem odd to some of you that someone could struggle with tasks that are so simple. But are they simple? Let's think about what really goes into something like laundry. Everyone, picture your laundry pile right now, okay? How many clean clothes do you have left right now? Can you wash tomorrow or must it be today? Do you need to prioritize? Pre sort, pre treat, anything? Did you grow up with anybody that taught you how to do that? You're out of laundry detergent. If you work three jobs, when are you going to get to the store next? And if you get there, can you afford it? And if you can afford it, which one, you choose and you get it all home. Get it in there. Now pick a setting. Which one? I don't know. Google it. By the way, you have memory problems, so you'll remember that wash in about three days when it's mildewed into the washer. It's okay, it's okay. Just rewash it. Okay? And get it into the dryer. You'll forget that, too, and it'll wrinkle. Now dry it again. Now all you have to do is get it out and fold it. But also, you have three small children, and those three small children haven't given you a moment alone in quite some time. But when you finally get that, you have to decide. Are you going to finish the laundry? Are you going to eat a sandwich? Are you going to take a nap? Time's up. You didn't do any of it. You stared at the wall. You have decision fatigue because the burden of carrying a home all by yourself has burnt you out. You see, for some of you, all of the steps and the skills that go into care tasks run on autopilot. But for millions of people, the autopilot is broken. And what's worse, what if you had to do all of that when your mom just died, or your job just fired you, or you're using every ounce of strength that you have to just not kill yourself? Today, if you have access to therapy, it's unlikely your therapist will ever ask you about your laundry. I've worked in mental health for about a decade. I've been in therapy even longer. And the only time I ever had a provider talk to me about things like cooking and cleaning and brushing my teeth was when I was in a psych hospital as a teenager. Yet here were hundreds of thousands of people in my comment sections telling me that these daily care tasks were a major pain point in their life. And so I started to wonder, what if we started here? What if we started with these care tasks? Could making daily tasks easier improve mental health quicker? In the two years that I've been posting and writing about the intersection of mental health and care tasks, I've come up with a philosophy that does just this. And it all starts with one simple cooking, cleaning, laundry. It doesn't make you a good person or a bad person. Listen to me. Care tasks are morally neutral. Now, I know that if you've been watching Martha Stewart for decades and scrolling the perfect Pinterest aesthetic every day, that it can feel like struggling with these tasks is a moral failure. Like it's because we're lazy, or we're irresponsible, or we're immature. But having an organized closet doesn't make you a success, and living out of a pile of laundry on the floor doesn't make you a failure. You know where the shirt you want to wear is. It just. It might take you a bit of sifting to find it. The truth is, it's not about morality. It's about functionality. Does your homework for you, not some hypothetical house guest that is coming to inspect your closet. I mentioned Amanda, who had lost her baby and forgot how to wash dishes. She told me that when her husband would go to work, she would lay on the floor next to the empty crib and say to herself, what can I bring to my family if I can't even wash dishes? But that changed when she began to see care tasks as morally neutral. All of a sudden, the dishes in the sink weren't representations of her failure as a wife, but instead, she would look at the pile and think to herself, what do I need to function tomorrow morning? And then pull two coffee cups out of the pile to wash. She had her coffee the next morning and it was a little bit easier to get up off the floor. When we liberate ourselves from the idea that we are a good person or a bad person with care tasks, we can stop thinking about the right way to do about the way that things should be done, and instead start thinking about what we can do with our current barriers to improve our quality of life today. And this is the fun part, because you get to customize a life that works for you. When Lula realized that her problems with brushing her teeth were not moral failings, she gained the confidence to speak to her dental hygienist. And together they came up with solutions that work around her barriers. She now relies on pre pasted disposable toothbrushes that she keeps in her desk, floss she keeps in the living room, and a no rinse prescription toothpaste. Because by breaking down the component parts of a dental hygiene routine and ensuring that each step was accessible to her mental and physical needs for the first time in a year, she's done every step in that routine for two weeks straight. She says that now that her teeth are clean, she's a little less stressed about tomorrow's problems. And this approach can work with any care task that you struggle with. Simply ask yourself, what am I trying to achieve and how can I achieve it in my way? In a rare moment of folding clothes, I looked down at the baby onesie that I was folding, and I thought to myself, why am I folding this? Baby onesies don't really wrinkle, and even if they did, nobody cares if a baby's in a wrinkly onesie. Furthermore, I was probably going to change her four times before lunch. This doesn't need to be folded. I said it out loud and literally braced myself for the laundry police. I don't know. There are rules to laundry. But for the first time, I stopped thinking about the way that laundry should be done and instead started thinking about how I could make laundry functional for me. And I looked down at the fleece pajamas and the underwear and the athletic shorts and the tank tops and realized almost none of my clothes actually needed to be folded. And I haven't folded any of it since. I moved all of my family's clothes into one closet off the laundry room, and now I just toss things into organized bins unfolded. My new motto is good enough is perfect. And everything worth doing is worth doing half assed. You have to give yourself permission to do a little, to do it with shortcuts, to do it while breaking all of the rules. And replace that inner voice that says I'm failing with one that says I'm having a hard time right now. And people who are having a hard time deserve compassion. If it's too hard to shower today, grab the baby wipes. It may not be the normal way to do it, but you deserve to be clean. If it's too hard to cook dinner, get paper plates, heat up something frozen. You'll go back to cooking and washing another day. But the day is not today and in the meantime you deserve to eat. If you're too depressed to do your dishes, get a 2 gallon Ziploc bag and keep it in your bedroom. Because if you put a dirty plate into a two gallon Ziploc bag and seal it, it will keep the bugs away. And it'll be there for you when you're ready to go back to the kitchen because you deserve a sanitary environment even if you can't get out of bed. I could share with you hundreds of other genius solutions that people have come up with once they embrace the idea that care tasks are morally neutral. In my experience, people will exhibit mind blowing creativity when they are only taught how to speak compassionately to themselves. So what if mental health treatment started here by shifting the idea of care tasks as these external measurements of your worthiness to just being morally neutral tasks that you can customize to care for yourself? Because if it's true that regardless of what you struggle with, you are worthy of a functional space, what else might you be worthy of? Thank you.
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That was Casey Davis at Tedxmile High in 2022. This talk was originally published in January 20 thanks for listening to our Ted Talks Daily Playlist. 10 talks to motivate you. We've got many more talks that can motivate you, so if you have the time, head on over to Ted.com playlists to check out more curated playlists on a variety of topics. If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more@ted.com curation guidelines TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact checked by the TED Research team and produced and edited by our team. Martha Estefanos I'll Oliver Friedman, Brian Greene, Lucy Little and Tansika Sangmarni Vong this episode was mixed by Lucy. Little additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballarezo. I'm Elise Hu. Thanks for listening.
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With no fees or minimums on checking accounts, it's no wonder the Capital One bank guy is so passionate about banking with Capital One. If he were here, he wouldn't just tell you about no fees or minimums. He'd also talk about how most Capital One cafes are open seven days a week to assist with your banking needs. Yep, even on weekends, it's pretty much all he talks about. In a good way. What's in your wallet? Terms apply. See capitalone.com Bank Capital One NA Member FDIC
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hey, it's Paige from Giggly Squad. You already know once I'm in my jammies, I'm in my final form. And lately my last step before fully clocking out is the covergirl Jammy Lip Sleeping Mask. I just twist, apply with the mess free applicator and let the dreamy lavender scent literally tuck me in. By morning, my lips feel smooth, revitalized and baby soft while I'm doing absolutely nothing. Iconic behavior. So shop covergirl Jammy Lip Sleeping Mask at your nearest retailer now only from Easy, breezy, beautiful covergirl.
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Episode: Talks to Motivate You Playlist (4/10)
Speaker: KC Davis, Therapist and Author
Date of TEDx Talk: 2022
Release Date (Podcast): April 10, 2026
Host/Intro by: Elise Hu
In this episode, therapist KC Davis tackles the emotional burden of mundane daily tasks—like laundry, dishes, and brushing your teeth—especially for those struggling with depression, burnout, ADHD, or grief. Drawing from personal experience and stories shared by her online community, Davis reframes "care tasks" as morally neutral, offers creative workarounds, and advocates for self-compassion as the key to overcoming feelings of failure.
"The dishes stayed in the sink for days. The laundry pile reached impressive heights... When I should have been catching up on sleep, I would lay in bed and think to myself, I'm failing." (06:46)
"Stories like Amanda, who, after losing her baby in the second trimester, was standing frozen at her sink because she forgot how to wash dishes." (08:17)
"For some of you, all of the steps and the skills that go into care tasks run on autopilot. But for millions of people, the autopilot is broken." (10:32)
"Cooking, cleaning, laundry. It doesn't make you a good person or a bad person. Listen to me: care tasks are morally neutral." (11:56)
"Why am I folding this? ... This doesn't need to be folded. For the first time, I stopped thinking about the way that laundry should be done and instead started thinking about how I could make laundry functional for me." (14:58)
"My new motto is 'good enough is perfect.' And everything worth doing is worth doing half-assed." (15:45)
On the impact of her work:
"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, for a book about how to clean, that's sort of odd." (04:04)
On societal expectations:
"If you've been watching Martha Stewart for decades and scrolling the perfect Pinterest aesthetic every day, it can feel like struggling with these tasks is a moral failure." (12:26)
On creative solutions:
"If you're too depressed to do your dishes, get a 2-gallon Ziploc bag and keep it in your bedroom... it'll be there for you when you're ready, because you deserve a sanitary environment even if you can't get out of bed." (16:25)
On compassion:
"Replace that inner voice that says I'm failing with one that says I'm having a hard time right now. And people who are having a hard time deserve compassion." (16:02)
| Timestamp | Segment Description | |-----------|---------------------------------------------------------| | 04:04 | Personal story: Email from a reader “you saved my life” | | 06:46 | Pandemic postpartum struggles and household overwhelm | | 08:17 | Community stories: Amanda & Lula | | 10:32 | Breaking down the invisible complexity of care tasks | | 11:56 | The concept of “care tasks are morally neutral” | | 14:58 | Realization: “Why am I folding this?” | | 15:45 | “Good enough is perfect”—embracing imperfection | | 16:02 | Self-compassion and breaking the cycle of self-criticism| | 16:25 | Creative hacks for coping when depressed |
KC Davis’s talk empowers listeners to stop equating their self-worth with how well they manage life’s smallest tasks, and instead extend themselves compassion, creativity, and flexibility, especially when mental health makes the basics feel impossible.